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Post Info TOPIC: Shocked !!! Vang vieng is a center for NARCO-TOURISM IN LAOS !
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Shocked !!! Vang vieng is a center for NARCO-TOURISM IN LAOS !
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I was surprised to discover recently that Rough Guides directly refer to Vang Vieng, Laos as a centre for narco-tourism. A comment that seems grossly irresponsible for such a mainstream publisher.



In their 'First Time Around the World' book:

"This hangout, a modern-day Manali, is one of the budding centres of narco-tourism. Discount opium and weed beckon travellers (over 35 guesthouses full of them) to this otherwise easily missed hideaway. Muang Sing, another Laotian centre for delirium, gets plenty of narco-traffic as well."

Although this may be true, is it helpful in anyway to the development of tourism in Laos to refer to it in this way?



I visited Vang Vieng back in 2000 and remember it as a small, quiet, laid back town of two streets with a sprinkling of guesthouses. The Nam Song river borders the town, separating it from small rice fields backed by towering limestone karsts on the otherside. For a few dollars you can hire an inflatable tube and float down river through the countryside surrounded by tranquility and nature. Across the river from the town a small tractor and trailer carries groups of backpackers along a dusty dirt road to the fabled turquoise stream, and the entrance to some of the many cave systems that extend beneath the karstic landscape are guarded by locals, requesting money for a guided tour through the limestone labyrinths. Provison of a leaking wet cell battery powered headlamp was indicative of the amateur nature of business and the embryonic stage of tourism development. Places and activities not yet scarred by disaster or subject to external scrutiny have no reason to implement health and safety measures. This apparent lawlessness is perhaps the greatest attraction of places like Vang Vieng for western backpackers who are stiffled back home by endless restrictions and legislation.

Inevitably perhaps, with all its charms Vang Vieng may have spiralled into another 'backpacker utopia', much like many other destinations that have come before it. Impressively enterprising residents eager to profit from a growing market open cafes that screen back-to-back Friends episodes, serve refreshments laced with narcotics and fill the air with Bob Marley tunes, creating a liberal travellers' nirvana. A nirvana with no sense of place. Unfortunately such unmanaged, consumer driven development often dominates any commitment to conservation, and the eradication of another once sleepy backwater ensues. The darker side of tourism also always manages to find its way in, be it sex-tourism, human trafficking, environmental exploitation, or in the case of Vang Vieng narco-tourism. Opium production and distribution in Laos has a long history. It is part of the Golden Triangle, and is the world's third largest producer of opium - the parent product of the heroin sold on streets worldwide.

The ethnic Hmong people are the largest producers of opium in Laos. They became an integral part of the CIA-trained militia during the Vietnam War in the fight against communism, helping rescue downed US pilots and disrupting North Vietnamese use of the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The huge importance of opium trade to the Hmong economy was recognised by the US and they took advantage of this by paying them for their work as mercenaries by purchasing opium. Air America aircraft would set-down on local landing sites, buy the opium for cash and fly off to distribute it.

The Americans weren't the first though to exploit the opium economy of the Hmong. In the last few years of the First Indochina War (1946-1954) the French were desperate for a way to finance their clandestine operations and decided to use military aircraft to link Laotian poppy fields with opium dens in Saigon, Vietnam. The mountainous landscape makes the transport of opium through the country extremely difficult, and once the war ended in 1954 the French withdrew, the aircraft stopped flying and Lao's opium trade fell away.

There is a strong drive by the Laotian and U.S. government to eradicate opium production. The Lao Government often accuses the Hmong of being the cause of the country's problems, with the high levels of deforestation their slash and burn lifestyle causes, and the widespread cultivation of opium. Narco-tourism contributes to an already complex problem, encourages the spread of opium addiction amongst villagers, and a whole range of social problems.

Since the end of the Vietnam War the Hmong have been subjected to a campaign of genocide by communist Laos and Vietnam. The Hmong general (Vang Pao), who led the secret army in 1961 against the communists fled to the US at the end of the war and now resides in California where he leads the United Lao Liberation Front (ULLF), demanding democracy and a reinstatement of the monarchy in Laos. Plans for a coup in Laos organised by the ULLF were recently uncovered by the US Government. The charge being brought against them is laudable - conspiracy to violate the federal Neutrality Act by planning a military invasion of Laos, a nation at peace with the United States. They're also charged with conspiracy to kill, kidnap, maim and injure people in a foreign country.

Source: http://www.thisisby.us/index.php/content/narco_tourism_in_laos


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Anonymous

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nothing to be shocked about.

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Anonymous

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As idiotic a piece of writing as I've seen lately.

Where to begin? There aren't 35 guest houses in Vang Vien, there are 80. Try smoking some marijuana and walking down the street, you will be arrested in about 3 seconds. I think the person who wrote this is high on some kind of drug and living in the US or Europe. There were a lot of drugs in Vang Vien about ten years ago, now the big drug is Beer Lao.

Laos is no longer the third largest opium producer, they now produce a fraction of a percent, read the 2007 UN report, dumb ass might I add. Opium blah blah blah, genocide hmong, blah blah.

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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

As idiotic a piece of writing as I've seen lately.

Where to begin? There aren't 35 guest houses in Vang Vien, there are 80. Try smoking some marijuana and walking down the street, you will be arrested in about 3 seconds. I think the person who wrote this is high on some kind of drug and living in the US or Europe. There were a lot of drugs in Vang Vien about ten years ago, now the big drug is Beer Lao.

Laos is no longer the third largest opium producer, they now produce a fraction of a percent, read the 2007 UN report, dumb ass might I add. Opium blah blah blah, genocide hmong, blah blah.



Please provode us the 2007 UN report.



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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

 

Anonymous wrote:

As idiotic a piece of writing as I've seen lately.

Where to begin? There aren't 35 guest houses in Vang Vien, there are 80. Try smoking some marijuana and walking down the street, you will be arrested in about 3 seconds. I think the person who wrote this is high on some kind of drug and living in the US or Europe. There were a lot of drugs in Vang Vien about ten years ago, now the big drug is Beer Lao.

Laos is no longer the third largest opium producer, they now produce a fraction of a percent, read the 2007 UN report, dumb ass might I add. Opium blah blah blah, genocide hmong, blah blah.



As idiotic as this piece is, it is even more idiotic to completely deny the existence of hard drugs in Vang Vieng (or military action taken against Hmong clans). If you balance out your reading time with a bit of fieldwork time, you will find that while drugs are not being taken in full public view they are being sold and consumed in large quantities in more private guesthouse and restaurant settings in Veng Vieng. Yes, the local police have 'cracked down' but all this means is that drugs are pushed underground, the trade is not stopped. Vang Vieng remains the place to go in Laos for opium and marijuana. You have too much faith in the words of the government. Don't mistake policy for action. They are not the same thing.

 



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Anonymous

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http://www.unodc.org/pdf/research/icmp/south_east_asia_report_2007_web.pdf

Above is United Nations report for 2007.

Yes there are some drugs in Vang Vien, very few. I've sat on that street more than a few nights lately watching the bars who have permision, (bribes) to sell, they have very few buyers. The original travel piece sounded like some kind of drug orgy, not true at all. No where near like at a typical European University or any city in the developed world. No where near like in Vientiane come to think of it, ok, Vientiane is all ya ma, is that any better?

As for Hmong, yes there are quite a few being killed but certainly not any kind of "genocide" masacre maybe. Look up the word genocide in the dictionary.

Vang Vien and Muang Sing were druggy in the late 90s, no longer. The writer is sensationalizing.

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