Wartime
Haven Fights Poverty
"A Wartime Cave City
Opens to Tourists"
VIENGXAY, LAOS, March, 2007 -- A collection
of dramatic caves that provided shelter to 23,000 Laotians during
nine years of aerial bombardment in the Indochina War, has now
been opened to the public.
Between 1964 and 1973 Laos became caught up
in a secret war that remains largely ignored in world history.
Up to 480 caves in Viengxay district in Houaphanh province were
transformed into a de facto cave city. The caves were used to
house leaders and fighters of the Phathet Lao army. Many caves
had specialist functions such as hospital, shop, school, printing
house, government office, bakery and theatre. In the hospital
cave, patients were treated by Cuban doctors.
|
click on
map top enlarge view |
Today, five of the caves are open to the public.
More caves will open soon. The surrounding area is a remote
and scenic province of karst mountains, tall waterfalls, hot
springs and a protected forest that is home to tigers and leopards.
The area is rich in ethnic villages, silk weaving and archaeological
sites. In the surrounding hills villagers live in simple wooden
huts. Some still hunt with crossbows. Some weave intricate textiles
on elaborate looms. Many grow rice on steep hillsides or in
lush green paddies.
|
protected
forests and lush green paddies of Houaphanh |
"At the height of the bombing it was impossible
to imagine that tourists would one day wish to visit this place
to learn about our experience," says Mr Phonekeo Latsachanh,
who lived in one of the caves in Viengxay from 1964 to 1973.
At the time he worked as an official in the cave designated
as a trade office. "It's important that Lao people can
now tell foreigners their story," he says.
Houaphanh province is the poorest in a country
where 40% of the population survive on less than US$1 per day.
Locally, tourism is now being heralded as a vital tool in the
fight against poverty. The development of Viengxay has the support
of the Laotian government. The Prime Minister's office has a
permanent representative on the committee set up to oversee
developments at Viengxay, the physical birthplace and spiritual
cornerstone of modern-day Laos.
|
|
shops and houses in Viengxay |
The Lao government has asked the World Tourism
Organization (UNWTO), the Netherlands Development Agency (SNV)
and the Asian Development Bank to develop the location as a
tourist destination and world peace site that focuses upon poverty
reduction and the needs of local people.
Over 20 tourism and heritage trainers have
been brought in by international organisations to deliver practical
advice that will help villagers benefit from the expected growth
in tourism. Former war heritage sites such as the Cu Chi tunnels
near Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) in Vietnam and the Killing Fields
Memorial at Choeung Ek near Phnom Penh in Cambodia attract hundreds
of international visitors daily.
|
|
| |
 |
passage way inside the army cave |
The Lao government hopes to create similar
interest in Viengxay where the Lao National Tourism Administration
(LNTA) is recording oral histories that visitors can listen
to while they walk around the network of caves. The plan is
to develop Viengxay as a national heritage town to be explored
on foot.
"The Lao vision is to recreate the caves
and tell the people's story," says UNWTO's Dr Harsh Varma
who believes events at the cave system were remarkable. "Viengxay
was a triumph of ingenuity and comradeship in the face of what
many historians believe was the longest and most intensive aerial
bombardment in world history."
However, visitors to this remote corner of
northeast Laos must not expect an easy journey. While helicopters
can be hired to Viengxay's airstrip and the airport at Xam Neua,
29 kms away, the nearest airport with scheduled flights to Vientiane
is Xieng Khouang, a six-hour drive from Viengxay.
An increasing number of budget travellers have
been finding their way to Viengxay from both Luang Prabang and
Xieng Khouang on Laos' public bus system. Some visitors prefer
to be driven in from the Vietnamese border, 55 kms away. Viengxay
is a 300-km or eight-hour drive from Hanoi, and four hours from
Mai Chau in Vietnam - an increasingly popular mountain destination
with many hill-tribes.
|
|
the remote beauty rewards the dedicated traveler |
Accommodation in Viengxay reflects the township's
remote frontier status. There is one simple hotel with 16 rooms
and three basic guest houses with a combined total of 26 rooms.
Forty-five minutes away in Xam Neua, the provincial capital,
there are three hotels offering a total of 45 rooms. Xam Neua
has 16 guest houses.
"For tourists who take the time to reach
Viengxay and the nearby attractions throughout northeast Laos,
we can promise a very enriching and educational experience,"
says Mr Somphong Mongkhonvilay, Chairman of the LNTA. "Viengxay
will be an increasingly important part of the Northern Laos
Heritage Route," he says.
The Heritage Route Mr Somphong is referring
to links the World Heritage site of Luang Prabang to Houaphanh
and the mysterious Plain of Jars in Xieng Khouang.
|
Laos'
'Stonehenge': 2,000 year old standing stones at Hintang
between Xieng Khouang and Xam Neua. |
| |
 |
The LNTA is due to unveil plans for Viengxay's
'cave city' development to international travel agents during
the Lao Ecotourism Fair, July 26-29 in Vientiane. European film
and TV documentary makers have already visited Viengxay and
other programme makers are due to visit in the near future.
In May, the UNWTO and SNV will help fund familiarisation trips
for travel agents and foreign media.
With an average of only 10 visitors a day to
the five open caves, Mr Siphan Vangduayang, Director of the
Memorial Cave Office in Viengxay says: "We need more visitors.
We had over 20,000 people living here all those years ago. We
have room."
Information on UNWTO's Sustainable Tourism
- Eliminating Poverty (ST-EP)
programme: www.unwto.org/step/index.php.
Further reading: "The Secret War in Viengxay"
a three-page briefing document by Dr Paul Rogers is available
at www.ScottAsia.net/viengxay.
For personalized
travel arrangements please contact:
North
by North-East Travel
Tel: +66 (0) 4251 3572
Fax:+66 (0) 4251 3573
e-mail: info@ north-by-north-east.com
Web site: www.north-by-north-east.com