Hillary Clinton will become the first US secretary of state to visit
Hillary Clinton will become the first US secretary of state to visit communist-run Laos in 57 years on a brief trip focusing on the legacy of the Vietnam War and a controversial dam project.
Pointing to the historic nature of the trip, a senior US official said: “It’s a pretty big deal for the Laotians, and we will underscore a number of areas that we’re working on together.”
These include left over ordnance from the war as well as the continuing effects of the defoliant Agent Orange, used by US forces to try to flush out the Vietnamese communist forces.
But one of the main thrusts of the trip will be talks on controversial plans by Laos to build a massive dam on the Mekong River, which governments and environmentalists warn could have a devastating effect on millions of people.
Clinton, who will arrive from a brief visit to Hanoi, will be only the second secretary of state to visit Laos after John Foster Dulles, who spent a day in the then-monarchy in 1955.
She was invited to Laos by Foreign Minister Thongloun Sisoulith in 2010 who was the first top Laotian official to visit Washington since the Soviet-backed communist rebels swept to power, ousting the monarchy, in 1975.
The $3.8 billion hydroelectric project at Xayaburi, led by Thai group CH Karnchang, has sharply divided the four Mekong nations — Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand — who rely on the river system for fish and irrigation.
State media said last week Laos has pledged to stall the construction of the dam until its neighbors’ environmental concerns have been answered.
Laos is one of the poorest nations in the world, with just 6.5 million people, and sees hydropower as vital to its potential future as the “battery of Southeast Asia”, selling electricity to its more industrialised neighbors.
Source AP