5 years after disappearance of Ramon Magsaysay Awardee, 122 groups ask, ‘Where is Sombath?’

December 16, 2017 - 11:39 AM
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The 2005 Ramon Magsaysay Awardees: Sombath Somphone of Laos (left to right), Yoon Hye-ran of Korea, Jon Ungphakorn of Thailand, V. Shanta of India, Matiur Rahman of Bangladesh and Teten Masduki of Indonesia. (Reuters file)

MANILA, Philippines — More than a hundred civil society organizations have slammed the government of Laos for its “failure to independently, impartially, effectively, and transparently investigate” the enforced disappearance of Sombath Somphone, a social activist who worked to promote sustainable development for the rural poor, and return him to his family.

“The Lao government’s continued silence and obfuscation of the facts around Sombath’s enforced disappearance have subjected his family to five years of fear and uncertainty over his fate and whereabouts, which remain unknown to this day,” the groups said in a statement released Saturday, December 16.

Sombath, a 2005 recipient of the Ramon Magsaysay Award, often called “Asia’s Nobel Prize,” disappeared the night of December 15, 2012.

According to the statement, he “was last seen at a police checkpoint on a busy street of the Lao capital, Vientiane, on the evening of 15 December 2012. His abduction was captured on a CCTV camera near the police checkpoint. The footage strongly suggests that police stopped Sombath’s vehicle and, within minutes, unknown individuals forced him into another vehicle and drove him away in the presence of police officers.”

Early this week, a United Nations human rights official also accused Laos of showing “no political will to solve” the disappearance of Sombath.

Laurent Meillan of the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights said the abduction had created “a culture of fear” among workers of non-government organizations in Laos, one of Southeast Asia’s poorest countries.

“We are not aware of any progress since the government’s commitment at the U.N. Human Rights Council,” Meillan told a news conference in Bangkok, referring to an assurance by Laos to bring the perpetrators of the crime to justice.

The U.N. and International Commission of Jurists said Laotian police refused to view new footage of the abduction of Sombath.

Human Rights Watch said Laos’ human rights record had grown worse since Sombath’s disappearance.

“A veil of silence has fallen over Sombath’s case,” said Phil Robertson, the group’s deputy Asia director. “International NGOs working in Laos say they are sympathetic but they can’t talk about it.”

READ THE STATEMENT OF THE 122 ORGANIZATIONS ON THE 5TH ANNIVERSARY OF SOMBATH’S DISAPPEARANCE: