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"There was no resistance from the repatriated Hmong because we used psychological tactics to talk with them, to assure them that they will have a better life in Laos as the Lao government has confirmed," he told reporters. Journalists and independent observers were barred from the camp and were allowed no closer than a press center about 7 miles (12 kilometers) away. The Hmong were driven out of the camp in military trucks and were then to be put on 110 buses going to the Thai border town of Nong Khai, and then across to Laos, heading to the Paksane district in the central province of Bolikhamsai, Thana said. Laos Foreign Ministry spokesman Khenthong Nuanthasing rejected international concerns, saying the government has a "humanitarian policy" for resettling the Hmong. He told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that the group would initially be placed in a temporary shelter and then housed in two "development villages"
-- in Bolikhamsai province and in Vientiane province -- where each family will receive a house and a plot of land that international observers will be welcome to inspect. New York-based Human Rights Watch on Monday called the deportation "appalling" and a low point for Abhisit's government. "As a result of what Thailand has done to the Lao Hmong today, Prime Minister Abhisit sinks Thailand's record on contempt for human rights and international law to a new low," said Sunai Phasuk, a Thai representative for Human Rights Watch.
[Associated
Press;
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