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Letting our friends down
townhall.com ^ | 05/19/05 | Chuck Colson

Posted on 05/19/2005 10:53:15 AM PDT by smoothsailing

Letting our friends down

Chuck Colson

May 19, 2005

You've seen on television in recent weeks the scenes of the helicopters evacuating Americans from the embassy rooftop in Saigon. Military action in Vietnam came to an end just thirty years ago last month. Unfortunately, for one loyal American ally, it marked just the beginning of even greater troubles.

In the 1960s, the United States needed a way to keep North Vietnam from re-supplying its troops in the South through neighboring Laos without violating Laotian neutrality. So, it recruited an ethnic group called the Hmong to fight the Communists. By 1969, more than 18,000 Hmong soldiers had been killed. They did this because they loved freedom and believed us when we said that we would always be there for them.

We weren't. After Vietnam and Laos fell to the Communists, their new governments vowed to wipe out the Hmong, and tens of thousands of Hmong died fleeing the Communists. Credible reports of chemical weapons usage were explained away in the Western press as "bee feces" raining down on the Hmong. Sure.

While 250,000 Hmong eventually made it to the United States, a similar number remained in Laos, and millions more are in Vietnam and Southern China. Their status as ethnic and political outsiders has made life especially rough.

Now, there are reports of yet another reason for these governments to persecute the Hmong: their faith. By some estimates, half of the Hmong in Vietnam have become Christians, with nearly all of the conversions coming in the last thirty years. This last part is important because, under Vietnamese law, only those Hmong who converted before the end of French rule in 1954 are officially recognized as Christians. The rest are regarded as subversives.

The persecution of the Hmong Christians starts with confiscating Bibles and quickly escalates from there. The fortunate Hmong are "only" fined the equivalent of four months' salary and have their livestock confiscated. Beatings, imprisonment, and torture are commonplace. For some, the torture includes drug injections. A witness said that "those that were injected said that they experienced symptoms of chest pains, headaches, and a loss of feeling in their limbs."

Even worse, there are reports of worshippers being attacked with chemical weapons. The chemical agent is said to cause "seizures and uncontrollable shaking." More than one hundred worshippers at two separate services required medical attention after the attacks. Given the history of the Hmong, and now adding their Christianity, it's not hard to believe these accounts.

Two weeks ago, the U.S. government announced an agreement that it had finally concluded with Vietnam on religious liberty. The announcement was accompanied by the release of six Hmong Christians from prison. Good.

In the agreement, the Vietnamese government promised an end to the "forced renunciation of Christian faith." Despite this commitment, Human Rights Watch reports that such forced renunciations are still occurring among the Hmong and other ethnic minorities. That highlights the real issue: Will Vietnam's "commitments" amount to more than words?

That's where we come in. Christians need to keep the pressure on our government to keep the pressure on Vietnam. This time, we should we keep our word to the Hmong.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: charlescolson; christians; hmong; vietnam

1 posted on 05/19/2005 10:53:15 AM PDT by smoothsailing
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To: smoothsailing

All Christians are being persecuted in Vietnam


2 posted on 05/19/2005 11:09:27 AM PDT by joesnuffy (The generation that survived the depression and won WW2 proved poverty does not cause crime)
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To: joesnuffy

Persecution Watch:

http://www.persecution.org/newsite/index.php


3 posted on 05/19/2005 12:50:21 PM PDT by The Spirit Of Allegiance (SAVE THE BRAINFOREST! Boycott the RED Dead Tree Media & NUKE the DNC Class Action Temper Tantrum!)
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To: smoothsailing; Paul Ross; DarkWaters; JohnOG; Frank_Discussion; TapTheSource; Jan Malina

Our biggest mistake was "respecting Laos' neutrality." Simply put, proclamations aside, Laos was NOT neutral. They were a de facto Vichy state in the face of Communist aggression. Sorry, but like France in 1944, we ought to have invaded their Vichy space, and occupied it with extreme prejudice. Overall, we ought to have occupied and utterly deCommunized everything from the Gulf of Tonkin to the Bay of Bengal, thereby inserting a zone of freedom in between Thailand and the PRC. And from that platform, onward with the roll back ... go North young man!


4 posted on 05/19/2005 5:48:17 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: GOP_1900AD
I agree.

All you state could have been accomplished. Unfortunately, the political will had been systematically drained away by the comsymps of that era.

5 posted on 05/19/2005 6:28:10 PM PDT by smoothsailing (Qui Nhon Turtle Co.)
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