US lifts curb on Cambodia, Laos trade highly criticized by US-based ethnic Hmong groups
BANGKOK – The removal of Cambodia and Laos from a United States blacklist that limits government support for US companies doing business with the two countries represents the latest strategic move by Washington to counterbalance China’s rising influence in mainland Southeast Asia. The new designation will open the way for more American investment in two of Southeast Asia’s poorest nations, both US adversaries during the Cold War era.
President Barack Obama has determined that Cambodia and Laos have both shown commitment to open markets, including through more liberal investment laws and fewer market controls, and should no longer be considered “Marxist-Leninist” countries as defined by the 1945 Export-Import Bank Act, the White House announced on June 12…
Obama’s decision was highly criticized by US-based ethnic Hmong groups, comprised of people who fled Laos after the 1975 communist takeover and claim their relatives continue to be persecuted by the authoritarian regime. Several thousand Hmong remain in a refugee camp in northern Thailand with another 158 Hmong recognized by the United Nations as refugees with real concerns for their safety if repatriated to Laos held in an immigration detention center in northeastern Thailand.
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