Showing posts with label Filipinos in Laos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Filipinos in Laos. Show all posts

18 July 2009

Operation Brotherhood in Kengkok

We are passing on two inquiries from former workers in Laos, regarding a reported 1972 incident at the village of Kengkok. If anyone has any information, you may e-mail the parties directly. Their contact information is included.

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The first request comes from MacAlan Thompson, who worked with the Refugee Relief Operations of USAID, supplying airdrops of food and other materials to the northern provinces. He used to visit OB Ban Houie Sai. During his last visit there five years ago, he reports that the OB Hospital still stood there, and that OB is well remembered. (NVA is North Vietnamese Army; IVS is International Voluntary Service).

Mac can be reached via e-mail at mactbkk@gmail.com

The report he is inquiring about has been floating on the Internet (It references NVA: North Vietnamese Army; and IVS: International Voluntary Service):


28 October 1972

That morning an NVA patrol of about a dozen men entered the village of Keng Kok - located about 35 miles east of the airport - and taken some prisoners.

There was a Filipino medical mission called Operation Brotherhood, s well as a Canadian Christian mission located there.

Back at Savannakhet we learned that 4 Canadians (2 women, then 2 men who'd gone looking for them) had been abducted by the NVA, and were last seen tied up and held in one of the houses.

An Air America helicopter from Savannakhet picked up 16 members from both missions in a rice field nearby.

Around noon the Lao Army attacked the village, set a few houses on fire, and the NVA escaped to the east.

A day or two later we heard that the bodies of the two men had been recovered, but there was still no account of what had happened to the women.

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The second information request comes from Judy Porter, who sends along a photo taken in 1973:




















She's wondering if anyone can identify those who are in the photo.

From her e-mail to Mekong Circle:

I was an Air America wife living in Udorn but doing free lance photography and writing articles for Asia Magazine in Hong Kong. I talked USAID into letting me photograph their entire project in Laos from North of Houi Sai to South of Pakse.

I did that in 1973 and while in Kengkok I heard about that terrible NVA attack and the loss of two women. I'm now Editor of the Air America Newsletter and one of my contributors came up with a story about being called to Kengkok in 1972 to rescue those who escaped the attack. I told him what I heard and we made inquiries and have learned much more. He's a good writer and will tie it all together. I thought those in the picture might offer even more.

If anyone has any information, Judy can be contacted at:
JudyinanRV@aol.com

19 June 2009

Filipinos in Laos

Released during our 5th reunion, the book is a history describing the non-combat service of more than 900 Filipinos in Laos during the Indochina war years of 1950s to the 1970s can now be ordered.

The 231-page, soft-cover volume has several parts to it -- the 1957-1960 beginnings of Operation Brotherhood in Laos; the events since then up to the termination of its operations in 1975; the exploits of Filipinos who served with Air America, USAID Laos, Bird & Sons, and Continental Air Services.

Also included are chronologies of major events during the 18-year stay (1957-1975) of the Filipinos in the Kingdom. A 12-page index lists all the names -- Filipino, Lao, Americans and Thai mentioned in the book. A selection of black and white photos of Filipinos at work is also in the book.

"Filipinos in Laos" is authored by a Filipino Jesuit, Fr. Miguel Bernad and J. "Pete" Fuentecilla who produced the Mekong Circle reunion newsletters. It is so far the only record in book form of our work in Laos that you can offer to your children, parents and associates who need a full understanding of what we did in our youth in a country they have never heard before.

"Filipinos In Laos" is $20 plus shipping and handling

To order, contact:
Long Dash Books
368 Stratford Road, Brooklyn, New York 11218
T: (718) 940-0450
F: (201) 621-4497

Our book is produced by a "print-on-demand" technology. The printer can turn out bound, softcover copies in any number of copies you want, including just one copy. Price is $20 (excluding shipping). Five dollars is set aside as donation to Mekong Circle.

For more information on the book, e-mail Pete Fuentecilla or call (718) 468-3038.

Members may also contact any member of the Mekong Circle Board of Directors for information on how to obtain your copy of this book.