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On sale now - 'Laos: Legacy of a secret', by MAG photographer Sean Sutton

Laos: Legacy of a secret

Buy online here

£25 + £2.85 p+p (or £4.85 p+p outside UK)

Hardback, 154 pages, 272mm x 248mm

Published by Dewi Lewis Publishing

Documenting how the people of Laos are dealing with the legacies of a secret war and the courageous work of Lao men and women working for MAG, this book features the images of Sean Sutton, MAG photographer since 1997.



Buy online here

Between 1964 and 1973, during the war with the United States, the North Vietnamese used a network of supply lines, known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail, running from North Vietnam through the jungles and mountains of neighbouring Laos and Cambodia.

     
     
 

"It is the beauty in the detail that always homes one into Sean Sutton's work; it catches you unawares and demands restudying."

- Tim Page, photographer

 
     

In an effort to staunch the flow of troops and weapons, the US dropped more than two million tons of bombs on Laos, including more than 270 million cluster submunitions.

The US war effort in Laos was kept secret from Congress and the American people, full details of the scale of the bombing sorties only becoming declassified in the 1990s.

By the time the aerial campaign ended in 1973, more bombs had been dropped on Laos, since renamed Lao People’s Democratic Republic, than the Allies dropped on Germany and Japan combined during World War II.

Many of these bombs failed to explode when they hit the ground, leaving the landscape littered with hundreds of thousands – perhaps even millions – of unexploded bombs, as lethal today as when they fell from the sky three decades ago.

Dubbed “bombies” by Laotian villagers, these often brightly coloured cluster bomb submunitions are still found in the clefts of bamboo branches, by children playing in shallow dirt, and in the fields where farmers till the soil by striking the earth with a hoe.

Since 1974, more than 20,000 people have been killed or injured by bombs or other unexploded ordnance in Lao PDR. Today, the lives of about 300 Laotian people are still devastated each year by the deadly remnants of this war.






See also:

More about MAG's work in Lao PDR

MAG photo galleries

Online shop



Lao People’s Democratic Republic

Bomb craters in Laos

Lao PDR is per capita the most bombed country in the world.

The problem / How MAG is helping

Laos: Legacy of a Secret book

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MAG (Mines Advisory Group) saves and improves lives by reducing the devastating effects armed violence and remnants of conflict have on people around the world.
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