Difference between revisions of "Laos" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[category:countries]]
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{{Paid}}{{Approved}}{{Submitted}}{{Images OK}}{{Copyedited}}
[[category:Geography and demographics]]
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{{Infobox Country
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|native_name              = ''Sathalanalat Paxathipatai<br>Paxaxon Lao''
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|conventional_long_name  = Lao People's Democratic Republic
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|common_name              = Laos
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|image_flag              = Flag of Laos.svg
 +
|image_coat              = Coat_of_arms_of_Laos.svg
 +
|symbol_type              = Emblem
 +
|image_map                = LocationLaos.png
 +
|map_caption =
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|national_motto          =  "ສັນຕິພາບ ເອກະລາດ ປະຊາທິປະໄຕ ເອກະພາບ ວັດທະນາຖາວອນ"<br/>"Peace, independence, democracy, unity and prosperity"
 +
|national_anthem          = ''[[Pheng Xat Lao]]''<br/> "Hymn of the Lao People"
 +
|official_languages      = [[Lao language|Lao]]
 +
|languages_type          = [[Official script]]s
 +
|languages                = [[Lao script]]
 +
|demonym                  = [[Lao people|Laotian]], Lao
 +
|capital                  = [[Vientiane]]
 +
|latd=17 |latm=58 |latNS=N |longd=102 |longm=36 |longEW=E
 +
|largest_city            = capital
 +
|government_type          = [[Unitary state|Unitary]] [[Communist state|communist]] and
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[[single-party state|single-party]] [[Sovereign state|state]]
 +
|leader_title1            = [[President of Laos|President]]
 +
|leader_name1            = [[Choummaly Sayasone]]
 +
|leader_title2            = [[Prime Minister of Laos|Prime Minister]]
 +
|leader_name2            = {{nobr|[[Thongsing Thammavong]]}}
 +
|leader_title3            = [[National Assembly of Laos|President of Lao National Assembly]]
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|leader_name3            = [[Pany Yathotu]]
 +
|leader_title4            = [[Lao Front for National Construction|President of LFNC]]
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|leader_name4            = {{nobr|[[Sisavath Keobounphanh]]}}
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|leader_title5            = [[General Secretary of the Lao People's Revolutionary Party|LPRP General Secretary]]
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|leader_name5            = [[Choummaly Sayasone]]
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|sovereignty_type        = [[Independence]]
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|sovereignty_note        = from [[France]]
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|established_event1      = Autonomy
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|established_date1        = 19 July 1949
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|established_event2      = Declared
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|established_date2        = 9 Nov 1953
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|area_rank                = 83<sup>rd</sup>
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|area_magnitude          = 1 E11
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|area_km2                = 236,800
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|area_sq_mi              = 91,428.991 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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|percent_water            = 2
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|population_estimate      = 6,800,000 <ref name="Background notes - Laos">{{cite web|url=http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2770.htm |title=Background notes – Laos|publisher=US Dept. of State|date= |accessdate=December 8, 2011}}</ref>
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|population_estimate_year = 2009
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|population_estimate_rank = 104<sup>th</sup>
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|population_census        = 4,574,848
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|population_census_year  = 1995
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|population_density_km2  = 26.7
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|population_density_sq_mi = <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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|population_density_rank  = 177<sup>th</sup>
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|GDP_PPP_year            = 2010
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|GDP_PPP                  = $15.693 billion<ref name=imf2>{{cite web|url=|title=Laos|publisher=International Monetary Fund}}</ref> <!--Do not edit!-->
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|GDP_PPP_rank            = 130<sup>th</sup>
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|GDP_PPP_per_capita      = $2,435<ref name=imf2/> <!--Do not edit!-->
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|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank  = 48<sup>th</sup>
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|GDP_nominal_rank        = 137<sup>th</sup>
 +
|GDP_nominal              = $6.341 billion<ref name=imf2/> <!--Do not edit!-->
 +
|GDP_nominal_year        = 2010
 +
|GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = 147<sup>th</sup>
 +
|GDP_nominal_per_capita  = $984<ref name=imf2/> <!--Do not edit!-->
 +
|HDI_year                = 2010 <!--Please use the year in which the HDI data refers to and not the publication year—>
 +
|HDI                      = {{increase}} 0.497<ref name="UN">{{cite web|url=http://hdr.undp.org/en/media/HDR_2009_EN_Complete.pdf|title=Human Development Report 2009. Human development index trends: Table G|publisher=[[The United Nations]]|accessdate=5 October 2009}}</ref>
 +
|HDI_rank                = 122<sup>nd</sup>
 +
|HDI_category            = <span style="color:#fc0;">medium</span>
 +
|Gini                    = 34.6
 +
|Gini_year                = 2008
 +
|Gini_category            = <span style="color:#fc0;">medium</span>
 +
|currency                = [[Lao kip|Kip]]
 +
|currency_code            = LAK
 +
|time_zone                =
 +
|utc_offset              = +7
 +
|time_zone_DST            =
 +
|utc_offset_DST          =
 +
|drives_on                = right
 +
|cctld                    = [[.la]]
 +
|calling_code            = 856
 +
}}
  
{| border=1 align=right cellpadding=4 cellspacing=0 width=300 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"
 
|+<big>'''Sathalanalat Paxathipatai Paxaxon Lao<br>Lao People's Democratic Republic'''</big>
 
|-
 
| style="background:#efefef;" align="center" colspan="2" |
 
{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
 
| align="center" width="135px" | [[Image:Flag of Laos.png|125px|]]
 
| align="center" width="135px" height="120px" | [[Image:Laos_coa.png|125px]]
 
|-
 
| align="center" width="135px" | Flag of Laos || Coat of Arms of Laos
 
|}
 
|-
 
| align="center" colspan=2 | '''National motto''': <br><small>''Peace, Independence, Democracy, Unity and Prosperity''</small>
 
|-
 
| align=center colspan=2 style="background: #ffffff;" | [[image:LocationLaos.png]]
 
|-
 
| '''Official language'''
 
| Lao
 
|-
 
| '''Capital'''
 
| Vientiane
 
|-
 
| '''President'''
 
| Khamtai Siphandon
 
|-
 
| '''Prime minister'''
 
| Boungnang Vorachith
 
|-
 
| '''Area'''<br>&nbsp;- Total <br>&nbsp;- % water
 
| [[Ranked 80th]] <br> 236,800 km&sup2; <br> 2%
 
|-
 
| '''Population'''<br>&nbsp;- Total (2005)<br>&nbsp;- Density
 
| [[Ranked 101st]]<br> 6,217,141<br> 24/km&sup2;
 
|-
 
| '''Independence'''
 
|1949
 
|-
 
| '''Currency'''
 
| Kip
 
|-
 
| '''Time zone'''
 
| Universal Time +7
 
|-
 
| '''National anthem'''
 
| ''Pheng Xat Lao''<br><small>(''Hymn of the Lao People'')
 
|-
 
| '''Internet TLD'''
 
| .la
 
|-
 
| '''Country Calling Code'''
 
| 856
 
|}
 
  
The '''Lao People's Democratic Republic''' is a landlocked country in [[Southeast Asia]], bordered by [[Myanmar]] (commonly known in the West as Burma) and the [[People's Republic of China]] to the northwest, [[Vietnam]] to the east, [[Cambodia]] to the south, and [[Thailand]] to the west. From the 14th to the 18th century, the country was called [[Lan Xang]] or ''Land of A Million Elephants''.  
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'''Laos''', officially the '''Lao People's Democratic Republic''', is a landlocked [[Socialism|socialist]] republic in [[Southeast Asia]]. Laos traces its history to the Kingdom of [[Lan Xang]] or ''Land of a Million Elephants,'' which existed from the fourteenth to the eighteenth century. After a period as a [[France|French]] colony, it gained independence in 1949. A long civil war ended when the [[Communism|communist]] Pathet Lao came to power in 1975.
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On taking power, the communist government imposed a Soviet-style command economy. Because these policies prevented, rather than stimulated, growth and development, in 1986 the government announced a range of reforms designed to create conditions conducive to private sector activity.
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{{toc}}
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Development has been hampered by poor communications in the heavily forested and mountainous landscape, where 80 percent of those employed practice subsistence [[agriculture]]. Foreign investment and foreign aid led to corruption in the elite of this one-party state.
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== Geography ==
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[[Image:WatPhouwholesite.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Wat Phou: from left, the south palace, the tiers leading to the central sanctuary, the mountain peak shrouded in mist, and the north palace.]]
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[[Image:La-map.png|thumb|left|Map of Laos]]
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The country's name in the Lao language is "Muang Lao." The [[France|French]] spelled it with the "s" which is usually retained in the English name (pronounced as one syllable). The usual adjectival form is "Lao" (as in "the Lao economy"). The term "Laotian," is commonly used to describe the people of Laos, to avoid confusion with the Lao ethnic group.
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Laos is a landlocked country in [[Southeast Asia]] bordered by [[Myanmar]] (Burma) and the [[People's Republic of China]] to the northwest, [[Vietnam]] to the east, [[Cambodia]] to the south, and [[Thailand]] to the west.  
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The thickly forested landscape consists mostly of rugged mountains, the highest of which is [[Phou Bia]] at 9242 feet (2817 meters), with some plains and [[Plateaus and Basins|plateaus]]. The [[Mekong River]] forms a large part of the western boundary with Thailand, whereas the mountains of the Annamite Chain form most of the eastern border with [[Vietnam]].
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Only about 4 percent of the total land area is classified as arable. The area of forested land has declined significantly since the 1970s as a result of commercial logging and expanded swidden, or slash-and-burn, farming.
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The climate is tropical and characterized by monsoons. There is a distinct rainy season from May to November, followed by a dry season from December to April. Temperatures range from highs around 104°F (40°C) along the Mekong in March and April to lows of 41°F (5°C) or less in the uplands of Xiangkhoang and Phôngsali in January.
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In 1993, the government set aside 21 percent of the nation's land area as national [[biodiversity]] conservation areas, which may be developed into national parks.
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A number of animal species have been discovered or re-discovered in Laos in recent years. These include the striped or Annamite rabbit, the ''saola,'' and most recently the Laotian rock rat or ''kha-nyou.''
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The Laotian rock rat ''(kha-nyou)'' (''Laonastes aenigmamus''), sometimes called the "rat-squirrel," was first placed, in 2005, in a new family. Others claimed that it belongs to the ancient fossil family ''Diatomyidae,'' that was thought to be extinct for 11 million years.
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Environmental issues include unexploded ordnance, deforestation, soil erosion, and the fact that most of the population does not have access to potable water.
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The capital and largest city of Laos is [[Vientiane]], and other major cities include Luang Prabang, Savannakhet and Pakse.
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== History ==
 
== History ==
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The Tai (also spelled Dai) are a linguistic group originating in southern [[China]], which includes the Lao, the Siamese, the people of the [[Shan]] region of north-eastern [[Myanmar]], the [[Zhuang]] people of [[Guangxi Province]] in China and the [[Tho]] and [[Nung]] people of northern [[Vietnam]]. Under pressure from the expansion of the [[Han Chinese]], the Tai began to migrate into South-East Asia during the first millennium C.E. They displaced earlier peoples (including the [[iron age]] culture who made the great stone jars from which the ''Plain of Jars'' in central Laos takes its name).
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The [[Mekong River]], which flows through what is now Laos, was a migration route. The Khmer Empire ([[Cambodia]]) prevented the Tai from dominating the Mekong Valley, so the Tai settled further south in the [[Chao Phraya River|Chao Phraya]] Valley, where they formed a series of kingdoms ancestral to modern [[Siam]] and [[Thailand]].
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[[Image:Viangchan1.JPG|thumb|left|200px|The 16th century [[Pha That Luang|That Luang]] temple in [[Viang Chan]], symbol of the Lao state and the continuity of Lao history]]
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Most of the Tai were converted to a form of [[Hinduism]]. Between the sixth and ninth centuries C.E. [[Buddhism]] was introduced into the Tai-speaking lands and became the dominant [[religion]]. But the Lao retain many [[animism|animist]] religious practices from the pre-Buddhist era.
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The Tai peoples divided into a number of linguistic sub-groups. These included the Tai-Lao, who during the eleventh and twelfth centuries C.E., spread along the middle [[Mekong River|Mekong]] Valley until blocked by the Khmers, who built the great temple at [[Wat Phou|Wat Phū]].
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The Lao in turn divided into the Lao-Lum (Lao of the valley floor), the Lao-Thoeng (Lao of the mountain slopes) and the Lao-Sūng (Lao of the mountain tops). The Lao-Lum, having the best farming land and the best access to river transport, became the wealthiest. These divisions have haunted Lao history and still exist today, with many Lao-Thoeng and Lao-Sūng people having only a tenuous loyalty to a Lao-Lum dominated state.
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The earliest historically identifiable Lao leader is [[Khun Lo|Khun Lô]], who probably conquered the Luang Phrabāng area in the twelfth century.
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The [[Mongol]]s invaded in 1253. Part of [[Kublai Khan]]'s army advanced down the Mekong to attack the Khmers. After the Mongols withdrew, a new kingdom was founded by the Siamese at [[Sukhothai kingdom|Sukhothai]], which was later succeeded by a more powerful Siamese state with its capital at [[Ayutthaya]] (founded in 1351). The kingdom of [[Lan Na|Lān Nā]], based at [[Chiang Mai]] and containing both Siamese and Lao elements, was founded at this time.
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[[image:Fangum.JPG|thumb|200px|Idealised image of [[Fa Ngum|Fā Ngum]], founder of the Kingdom of Lān Xāng (National History Museum, Viang Chan)]]
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The Tai-Lao rulers of Luang Phrabāng formed a new state which, from about 1271 was ruled by a dynasty called the Phrayā. In about 1350 a prince of this dynasty, [[Fa Ngum|Fā Ngum]], fled with his father after a dispute and sought refuge with the Khmers at [[Angkor]], where he married a royal princess. In 1353 he returned with an army, and founded a new Lao state which covered the whole Lao-speaking Mekong valley. This was Lān Xāng, the Kingdom of a Million Elephants.
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This kingdom lasted until the eighteenth century, when [[Thailand|Siam]] invaded. To avoid a costly war with the French, the Siamese king ceded lands now known as Laos to them, and these were incorporated into [[French Indochina]] in 1893. The French saw Laos as a useful buffer state between the two expanding empires of [[France]] and [[Great Britain|Britain]]. Under the French, the capital (Vieng Chan) was changed to Vientiane.
  
The early history of Laos was dominated by the wider [[Nanzhao]] kingdom, which was succeeded in the 14th century by the local kingdom of [[Lan Xang]] that lasted until its decline in the 18th century, after which [[Thailand]] assumed control of the separate principalities that remained. These then came under French influence during the 19th century and were incorporated into [[French Indochina]] in 1893. Following a Japanese occupation during [[World War II]], the country became independent in 1949 as the [[Kingdom of Laos]] under the leadership of King [[Sisavang Vong]].
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Following a brief [[Japan|Japanese]] occupation during [[World War II]], the country declared its independence in 1945, but the French re-asserted their control and only in 1950 was Laos granted semi-autonomy as an "associated state" within the French Union. Moreover, the French remained in control until 1954, when Laos gained full independence as a constitutional monarchy. A French military training mission continued to support the Royal Laos Army. In 1955, the U.S. Department of Defense created a special ''Programs Evaluation Office'' to supplant French support of the Royal Laos Army against the [[Communism|communist]] Pathet Lao as part of the U.S. containment policy.
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[[Image:that_luang1.jpg|thumb|left|Pha That Luang in Vientiane, the national symbol of Laos.]]
  
Political unrest in neighbouring [[Vietnam]] dragged Laos into the greater [[Indochina War|Second Indochina War]] (<i>see also [[Secret War]]</i>) which was a destabilising factor that contributed to [[civil war]] and several [[coup d'état|coups d'état]]. In 1975 the [[communist]] [[Pathet Lao]] backed by the Soviets and communist Vietnamese overthrew the royalist government of King [[Savang Vatthana]] who were backed by the US and France. After taking control of the country, they promptly renamed it the ''Lao People's Democratic Republic''. Initial closer ties to Vietnam and socialisation were replaced by a relaxation of economic restrictions in the late 1980s and the admission into [[ASEAN]] in 1997.
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In 1968, while the U.S. was mired in the [[Vietnam War]], the North Vietnamese Army launched a multi-division attack against the Royal Lao Army. The attack resulted in the army largely demobilizing and leaving the conflict to irregular forces raised by the [[United States]] and Thailand. Significant aerial bombardment by the United States occurred by that country's attempt to eliminate North Vietnamese bases in Laos and disrupt supply lines on the Ho Chi Minh trail.  
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After the Saigon government had fallen to the North Vietnamese forces in 1975, the communist Pathet Lao, backed by the [[Soviet Union]] and the [[North Vietnam]]ese Army (justified by the communist ideology of "proletarian internationalism"), overthrew the royalist government, forcing King [[Savang Vatthana]] to abdicate on December 2, 1975. He later died in captivity. The [[North Vietnam]]ese army, with its heavy weapons including heavy artillery and tanks was the real power behind the Pathet Lao insurgency.  
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After taking control, the Pathet Lao's government renamed the country as the "Lao People's Democratic Republic" and gave [[Vietnam]] the right to station military forces there and to appoint advisors. In the late 1970s, Vietnam ordered Laos to end relations with the People's Republic of China, which then cut the country off from trading with any country but Vietnam. Slowly economic restrictions were relaxed in the 1980s. Laos was admitted to [[ASEAN]] in 1997. Although control by Vietnam has decreased, Vietnam still wields political and economic influence in Laos.
  
 
== Politics ==
 
== Politics ==
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[[Image:Patuxay.JPG|thumb|250px|The Victory Arch ([[Patuxay]]) in Viang Chan, built during the years of the Indochina war. The arch is known as "the vertical runway," because it was built with concrete donated by the United States for a new airport. It was never completed and even the official plaque describes it as "a monster of concrete."]]
  
The only legal [[political party]] is the [[Lao People's Revolutionary Party]] (LPRP). The [[head of state]] is a [[president]] elected by parliament for a five-year term. The [[head of government]] is a [[prime minister]] appointed by the president with parliamentary approval. Government policies are determined by the party through the all-powerful nine-member [[Politburo]] and the 49-member Central Committee. Important government decisions are vetted by the Council of Ministers.
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The politics of Laos' takes place in a framework of a single-party [[Socialism|socialist]] republic. The only legal political party is the Lao People's Revolutionary Party.
  
Laos adopted a new [[constitution]] in 1991. The following year, elections were held for a new 85-seat National Assembly with members elected by secret ballot to 5-year terms. This unicameral [[parliament]], expanded in 1997 elections to 99 members, approves all new laws, although the [[executive branch]] retains authority to issue binding decrees. The most recent elections took place in February 2002 when the assembly was expanded to 109 members.
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The head of state in 2007 was President Choummaly Sayasone, also secretary-general of the party, elected by parliament for a five-year term.
  
Remnants of the group of ethnic [[Hmong]]s that were allied with the United States during the Vietnam War have been in armed conflict with the communist regime since 1975. With recent surrenders reported in the international media, this conflict appears to be on the wane.  Most Hmong are integrated into or at least at peace with society, with some occupying high-ranking positions in the state system.
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The head of government was Prime Minister Bouasone Bouphavanh, who with the council of ministers was appointed by the president with the approval of the national assembly for a five-year term.
  
Attacks continue to take place sporadically throughout the country, but are difficult to attribute to a specific political movement.  All dissent in Laos is suppressed, so information is difficult to obtain.
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The national assembly of 115 members, elected for a five-year term, essentially acts as a rubber stamp for the party, approving all new laws, although the executive branch retains authority to issue binding decrees.
  
== Geography ==
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The party determines government policies through the all-powerful nine-member politburo and the 49-member central committee. Important government decisions are vetted by the council of ministers.
[[Image:La-map.png|thumb|Map of Laos]]
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Laos adopted a constitution in 1991.
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The most recent elections took place in April 2006, when 175 candidates in sixteen electoral areas competed for 115 seats. The assembly was expanded to 99 members in 1997 and in 2006 elections had 115.
  
Laos is a landlocked country in Southeast Asia and the thickly forested landscape consists mostly of rugged mountains, the highest of which is [[Phou Bia]] at 2,817 m, with some plains and plateaus. The [[Mekong]] River forms a large part of the western boundary with [[Thailand]], whereas the mountains of the [[Annamite Chain]] form most of the eastern border with [[Vietnam]].
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Regarding the judiciary, the president of the People's Supreme Court is elected by the national assembly, on the recommendation of the national assembly standing committee. The vice president of the People's Supreme Court and the judges are appointed by the national assembly standing committee.
  
The local [[climate]] is tropical and characterised by [[monsoon]]s.  There is a distinct rainy season from May to November, followed by a dry season from December to April. The capital and largest city of Laos is [[Vientiane]], other major cities include [[Luang Phrabang]], [[Savannakhet (city)|Savannakhet]] and [[Pakse]].
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Bomb attacks against the government have occurred, coupled with small exchanges of fire, across Laos. A variety of different groups have claimed responsibility including the Committee for Independence and Democracy in Laos, and the Lao Citizens Movement for Democracy. The United States has warned about the possibility of further attacks during the [[ASEAN]] summit in November.
  
In 1993, the government set aside 21% of the nation's land area as [[National Biodiversity Conservation Areas]] (NBCA), which may be developed into a national park system. If completed, it is expected to be the most comprehensive and one of the finest national park systems in [[Southeast Asia]].
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Remnants of a [[Hmong]] group allied with the [[United States]] during the [[Vietnam War]] have been in armed conflict with the communist regime since 1975. Most Hmong are integrated into or at least at peace with society, with some occupying high-ranking positions in the state system.
  
A number of new animal species have been discovered or re-discovered in Laos in recent years. These include the striped or [[Annamite rabbit]], the [[saola]], and most recently the [[Laotian rock rat]] or ''kha-nyou''.
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Laos is divided into 16 provinces ''(kang),'' one municipality ''(kumpang nakon),'' and one special zone ''(ketpisade).'' The country is further divided into districts ''(muang).''
  
 
== Economy ==
 
== Economy ==
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[[Image:Markt Luang Prabang.jpg|thumb|A street market in [[Luang Prabang]].]]
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Laos has an inadequate infrastructure and a largely unskilled work force. The country's per capita income in 2005 was estimated to be $2124 on a purchasing power parity-basis, and ranked 138 on a list of 181 countries.
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[[Agriculture]], mostly subsistence [[rice]] farming, dominates the economy, employing an estimated 85 percent of the population and producing 51 percent of gross domestic product. Domestic savings are low, forcing Laos to rely heavily on foreign assistance. In 1999, foreign grants and loans accounted for more than 20 percent of GDP and more than 75 percent of public investment. In 1998, the country's foreign debt was estimated at $1.9-billion.
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On taking power in 1975, the [[Communism|communist]] government imposed a Soviet-style [[command economic system]], replacing the private sector with state enterprises and cooperatives; centralizing investment, production, trade, and pricing; and creating barriers to internal and foreign trade.
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But the Lao Government realized these policies prevented, rather than stimulated, growth and development. In 1986, the government announced its "new economic mechanism." Initially timid, the package was expanded to include a range of reforms designed to create conditions conducive to private sector activity. Prices set by the market replaced government-determined prices. Farmers were permitted to own land and sell crops on the open market. State firms were granted increased decision-making authority and lost subsidies and pricing advantages. The government set the exchange rate close to real market levels, lifted trade barriers, replaced import barriers with tariffs, and gave private sector firms direct access to imports and credit.
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In 1989, the government agreed with the [[World Bank]] and the [[International Monetary Fund]], to expand fiscal and monetary reform, promote [[private enterprise]] and [[foreign investment]], privatize or close state firms, and strengthen banking. It also agreed to maintain a market exchange rate, reduce [[tariff]]s, and eliminate unneeded trade regulations. A liberal foreign investment code was enacted and appeared to be slowly making a positive impact.
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The "Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge," built between Vientiane Prefecture and Nong Khai Province, [[Thailand]], with [[Australia]]n help, was inaugurated in April 1994. Although the bridge has created additional commerce, the Lao Government does not yet permit a completely free flow of traffic.
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[[Image:nam_ou_2.jpg|thumb|left|A ferryboat on the [[Nam Ou]] river. Rivers are an important means of transport in Laos.]]
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The Asian financial crisis, coupled with the Lao Government's own mismanagement of the economy, resulted in spiraling [[inflation]] and a steep depreciation of the currency, known as the ''kip,'' which lost 87 percent of its value from June 1997 to June 1999. Tighter monetary policies brought about greater macroeconomic stability in 2000, and monthly inflation, which had averaged about ten percent during the first half of 1999, dropped to an average one percent over the same period in 2000.
 +
 +
The economy continues to be dominated by an unproductive agricultural sector operating largely outside the money economy and in which the public sector continues to play a dominant role. Also, economic development is hampered by the fact that 37 percent of educated Laotians lived abroad, putting the country in fifth place for worst "brain drain," a 2005 World Bank study reported.
 +
 +
In late 2004, Laos gained normal trade relations status with the [[United States]], allowing Laos-based producers to face lower tariffs on their exports. This was expected to spur growth.
  
The government of Laos - one of the few remaining official [[communist state]]s - began decentralising control and encouraging private enterprise in 1986. The results, starting from an extremely low base, were striking - growth averaged 6% in 1988-2004 except during the short-lived drop caused by the [[Asian financial crisis]] beginning in 1997. As in many developing countries, the major urban centers have experienced the most growth.  The economies of Vientiane, Luang Prabang and Savannakhet, in particular have experienced significant booms in recent years.
+
Exports totalled $271-million in 1999, increased to almost one billion dollars by 2007. Exports commodities included wood products, garments, [[electricity]], [[coffee]], and [[tin]]. Export partners included [[Vietnam]], [[Thailand]], the [[People's Republic of China]], [[Germany]], [[France]], and [[Belgium]].
Pakxe has also experienced some growth as well.
 
  
Much of the country, however, lacks adequate [[infrastructure]].  Laos still has no railroads, although a short link is planned to connect Vientiane with Thailand over the [[Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge]]. The major roads connecting the major urban centers, namely Route 13, have been significantly upgraded in recent years, but villages that are far from major roads are accessible only through unpaved roads that may not be accessible year round. There is limited external and internal [[telecommunication]]s, particularly the wireline sort, but cell phone usage has become widespread in urban centers. Electricity is not available in many rural areas or only during scheduled periods. Subsistence [[agriculture]] still accounts for half of [[Gross Domestic Product|GDP]] and provides 80% of total employment. The economy receives aid from the [[IMF]] and other international sources and from new foreign investment in food-processing and mining, most notably of copper and gold.  [[Tourism]] is the fastest-growing industry in the country. Economic develoment in general is hampered by a serious case of [[brain drain]].  A 2005 World Bank study reported that 37% of its educated citizens lived abroad, putting it in 5th place for worst brain drain.  
+
Imports totalled $497-million in 1999, and jumped to over 1.3 billion dollars by 2007. Import commodities included machinery and equipment, vehicles, fuel, and consumer goods. Import partner included Thailand, [[Japan]], the [[People's Republic of China]], Vietnam,[[Singapore]], and [[Hong Kong]].
  
In late 2004, Laos gained Normal Trade Relations status with the US, allowing Laos-based producers to face lower tariffs on their exports; this may help spur growth.
+
[[Tourism]] is being promoted to increase the number of service jobs available to Laotians.
  
 
== Demographics ==
 
== Demographics ==
 +
[[Image:PICT3655.JPG|left|thumb|Wat [[Ho Pra Keo]], Vientiane.]]
 +
[[image:plainofjars_2.jpg|thumb|Plain of Jars: Site 1]]
  
68% of the country's people are ethnic Lao, the principal lowland inhabitants and the politically and culturally dominant group. The Lao are descended from the [[Tai people]] who began migrating southward from [[China]] in the first millennium AD. Hill people such as the [[Hmong]] (Miao), [[Yao people|Yao]] (Mien), [[Black Thai]], [[Dao]], [[Shan]], and several [[Tibeto-Burman]] speaking peoples, have lived in isolated regions of Laos for many years. Mountain tribes of mixed ethnolinguistic heritage are found in northern Laos. Collectively, they are known as [[Lao Sung]] or highland Laotians. In the central and southern mountains, [[Mon people|Mon]]-[[Khmer people|Khmer]] tribes, known as [[Lao Theung]] or midslope Laotians, predominate. Some [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]] and [[ethnic Chinese|Chinese]] minorities remain, particularly in the towns, but many left in two waves; after independence in the late 1940s and again after 1975.
+
In 2007, the population was estimated at 6.1 million. Urban dwellers made up 23 percent of the population. About 70 percent of the population was under 30 years old in 1995. Laos is one of the least densely populated countries in [[Asia]].
  
The term ''Laotian'' does not necessarily refer to the ethnic Lao language, ethnic Lao people, language or customs, but is a political term that also includes the non-ethnic Lao groups within Laos and identifies them as "Laotian" because of their political citizenship. In a similar vein the word "Lao" can also describe the people, cuisine, language and culture of the people of [[Northeast Thailand]] ([[Isan]]) who are ethnic Lao.
+
About 69 percent of the population are ethnic Lao, the principal lowland inhabitants, who belong to the Tai linguistic group. A further eight percent belong to other "lowland" groups, which together with the Lao people make up the Lao Loum. Hill people and minority cultures such as the [[Lua]], [[Hmong]], [[Yao]], Tai dumm, Dao, Shan, and several Tibeto-Burman speaking peoples have lived in isolated regions for many years. Mountain tribes of mixed heritage are found in northern Laos and are known as ''Lao Soung'' or highland Laotians. In the central and southern mountains, [[Mon-Khmer]] tribes, known as ''Lao Theung'' or mid-slope Laotians, predominate. Some Vietnamese and Chinese minorities remain, particularly in the towns. Many left in two waves; after independence in the late 1940s and again after 1975. Of the estimated 100,000 Chinese residents in Laos in 1975, only ten percent remain, identified as the ''Sino-Lao.''<ref>Florence Rossetti, "The Chinese in Laos-
 +
Rebirth of the Laotian Chinese Community as peace returns to Indochina." [http://www.cefc.com.hk/uk/pc/articles/art_ligne.php?num_art_ligne=1305]. ''China Perspectives'' 13 (September - October 1997): 26. ''cefc.com''. Retrieved May 14, 2008. </ref>
  
The predominant religion is [[Theravada|Theravada Buddhism]] which, along with the common [[Animism]] practiced among the mountain tribes, coexists peacefully with spirit worship. There also is a small number of [[Christianity|Christians]] and [[Islam|Muslims]]. However, religion is strictly controlled, and the government will generally side with Buddhism over a minority religion.  In 2004, [[Open Doors]] ranked Laos as the fourth worst persecutor of Christians, behind North Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Vietnam.
+
The predominant religion is [[Theravada|Theravada Buddhism]]. There are also [[animism|animist]] and [[shamanism|shamanist]] beliefs that involve house spirits (''phi''), village spirits, district spirits, and city spirits, which overlap with Buddhism. There also are a small number of [[Christianity|Christians]], mostly restricted to the Vientiane area, and [[Islam|Muslims]], mostly restricted to the [[Myanmar]] border region. Christian missionary work is regulated.
The largest Christian denominations are the [[Roman Catholic Church]], the [[Eglise évangélique du Laos]] and the [[Mission évangélique au Laos]].
 
  
The official and dominant language is Lao, a tonal language of the Tai linguistic group. Midslope and highland Lao speak an assortment of tribal languages. French, once common in government and commerce, has declined in usage, while knowledge of English - the language of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) - has increased in recent years.
+
Monks are the main religious practitioners, and most young men are expected to become a monk for a short period to prepare them for marriage. Monks are in charge of Buddhist ceremonies and function as dream interpreters, traditional medical practitioners, and counselors. Other religious practitioners include spirit mediums and shamans, most of whom are women.
 +
 
 +
Among the Lao, [[cremation]] is generally practiced. The remains normally are placed in a small “stupa” inside the temple fence. The remains are deemed to have spiritual power, and offerings are made to them to achieve fulfillment of one's wishes.
 +
 
 +
Laos remains a [[peasant]] society, with an estimated 85 percent of the population engaged in subsistence agriculture. There are a few professionals, including lawyers, working in the capital. There is a substantial foreign aid community that provides a body of professionals. The [[Vietnam]]ese have tended to work as tradesmen and laborers in the cities.
 +
[[Image: lao_bus.jpg|thumb|right|Buses connect the major cities.]]
 +
Ethnic Lao may choose their spouse, and there is some preference for cousins. Parents may propose a spouse and must be consulted about [[marriage]] partners. A payment like a bride-price is made. The marriage ceremony usually takes place in the bride's family home. A spirit-calling ceremony is central. [[Divorce]] can be initiated by either party and is not uncommon. There is some [[polygyny]] (a form of [[polygamy]]) among highland groups.
 +
 
 +
The oldest daughter and her husband move out of the family home after the marriage of the next daughter but try to live nearby. The youngest daughter, who must care for aging parents, inherits the main house. These groups of related [[nuclear families]] create the appearance of extended families, although new family units eventually separate from the original main house and become main houses. Highland patrilineal groups feature large houses containing extended families of related brothers. Men are recognized as the household head for religious and political purposes.
 +
 
 +
[[Image:Songthaew_laos.jpg|thumb|left|''Songthaews'' are pick-up trucks with benches. They are used for long-distance and local public transport.]]
 +
After the revolution, property was nationalized, yet after the economic reforms of the 1990s, private ownership was recognized. A land-titling program now grants 99-year leases and allows for commercial transfer. Most land is subject to recognition of rights through use.
 +
 
 +
The official and dominant language is Lao, a tonal language of the [[Tai languages|Tai]] linguistic group. Mid-slope and highland Lao speak an assortment of tribal languages. French, once common in government and commerce, has declined in usage, while knowledge of English, the language of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), has increased.
 +
 
 +
The aristocracy was abolished in the 1975 revolution. Many members of the aristocracy fled, as did members of the state-based elite. A new elite appeared, composed of the upper echelons of the communist state apparatus. [[Foreign investment]] and [[foreign aid]] led to corruption in these upper echelons, which became pervasive. A small urban-based middle class appeared. Most people belong to the peasantry and are powerless and poor.
 +
 
 +
Before the revolution, formal dress for all groups imitated courtly style and included the ''sampot'' (''dhoti''-like trousers) for men and the ''sinh'' skirt for women. After the revolution egalitarian dress was emphasized. In the 1990s much of the older dress style came back as the new rich elite flaunted their wealth. Elite men now wear business suits.
  
 
== Culture ==
 
== Culture ==
 +
[[Image:Lao_cuisine_laomeal_1.jpg|thumb|200px|A Lao meal.]]
 +
Lao food is distinct from other [[Southeast Asia]]n cuisines. Sticky rice is the staple, and there are many traditions and rituals associated with its production. Galangal and fish sauce are important ingredients. The Lao national dish is “laap” (sometimes also spelled ''larb''), a spicy mixture of marinated meat and/or fish that is sometimes raw  with a variable combination of green vegetables, herbs, and spices. Another characteristic dish is ''tam mak houng,'' green papaya salad. Lao cuisine has many regional variations, according to the fresh foods local to each region. A French influence is apparent in the capital city, [[Vientiane]], where baguettes are sold on the street, and French restaurants are common and popular. Vietnamese cuisine is also popular.
  
[[Theravada]]n [[Buddhism]] has contributed greatly to the Lao culture. It is reflected throughout the country both in its language to the temple as well as art, literature, performing arts, etc. Laotian [[music]] is dominated by its national [[musical instrument|instrument]], the [[khaen]] (a type of [[bamboo]] [[pipe]]). Bands typically include a singer/rapper (''[[mor lam]]'') and a khaen player (''mor khaen'') alongside [[fiddle]]rs and other musicians. [[Lam saravane]] is the most popular genre of Laotian music, but ethnic Lao in [[Thailand]] have developed an internationally-best selling form called [[mor lam sing]].
+
The typical Lao stove, or brazier, shaped like a bucket, with room for a single pot or pan to sit on top, is called a ''tao-lo'' and is fueled by charcoal. The wok, ''maw khang'' in Lao, is used for frying and stir frying. Sticky rice is steamed inside of a bamboo basket, a ''huad,'' which sits on top of a pot, which is called the ''maw nung.'' A large, deep mortar called a ''khok'' is used for pounding ''[[som tam|tam mak hung]]'' and other foods, and is indispensable in the Lao kitchen.
 +
[[Image:Lao_cuisine_khok.jpg|thumb|left|150px|A Lao-style [[mortar and pestle]].]]
 +
The traditional manner of eating was communal, with diners sitting on a reed mat on the wooden floor around a raised platform woven out of rattan called a ''ka toke.'' Dishes are arranged on the ''ka toke,'' which is of a standard size. Where there are many diners, multiple ''ka tokes'' will be prepared. Each ''ka toke'' will have one or more baskets of sticky rice, which is shared by all the diners at the ''ka toke.''
  
The country has two [[World Heritage site]]s &mdash; [[Luang Prabang]] and [[Wat Phou]] &mdash; while the government is seeking the same status for the [[Plain of Jars]].
+
Lao [[coffee]] is often called ''[[Pakxong]]'' coffee, which is grown around the town of Pakxong. Both robusta and arabica are grown in Laos. Most of the arabica in Laos is consumed locally and most of the robusta is exported to [[Thailand]], where it goes into ''Nescafe.'' The custom in Laos is to drink coffee in glasses, with condensed milk in the bottom, followed by a chaser of green tea.  
  
== Media ==
+
There are two general types of traditional alcoholic beverages, both produced from rice. ''Lao hai'' means ''jar alcohol'' and is served from an earthen jar. Likened to Japanese sake, it is communally and competitively drunk through straws at festive occasions. ''Lao lao'' or ''Lao alcohol'' is more like a whiskey. There is also a popular variant of ''lao lao'' made from purple rice, which has a pinkish hue.
  
All newspapers are published by the government, including two foreign language papers: the English language ''[[Vientiane Times]]'' and the French language ''[[Le Rénovateur]]''. Additionally, the [[Khao San Pathet Lao]], the official news agency of the Lao P.D.R., publishes English and French versions of its eponymous paper. Internet cafes, serving the tourist market, are now common in the major urban centers. However, the government strictly censors content and controls access.
+
Parents raise and support their children, creating strong family bonds. A key rite of passage for [[Buddhism|Buddhist]] males is to enter the monastery. Government-run primary schools have eclipsed temple education for boys. An awareness of the importance of higher education has increased, but most higher education is pursued abroad. A national university was established in the early 1970s, but it was dismantled by the revolution. In the mid-1990s a national university was reestablished. Restrictions on reading material and [[censorship]] have discouraged the emergence of a culture of reading among adults. Only 57 percent of the total population aged 15 and over can read and write.
  
Satellite television dishes, beaming content from Thailand, are common throughout Laos. Many Laotians access the outside world through Thai television programs.
+
The most distinctive Lao musical instrument is a bamboo mouth organ called a ''khene.'' Lao folk music, known as ''Lam,'' is extemporaneous singing accompanied by the ''khene.'' The Lao classical orchestra can be divided into two categories, ''Sep Nyai'' and ''Sep Noi.'' The ''Sep Nyai'' is ceremonial and formal music and includes: two sets of gongs ''(kong vong),'' a xylophone ''(lanat),'' an oboe ''(pei or salai),'' two large kettle drums and two sets of cymbals ''(xing).''
 +
 
 +
The country has two World Heritage Sites: Luang Prabang and Wat Phou. Luang Prabang, formerly the capital of a kingdom of the same name, is located in north central Laos, on the [[Mekong River]] about 425 km north of Vientiane. It has a population of about 22,000. Until the communist takeover in 1975, it was the royal capital, the seat of the kingdom of Laos.
 +
[[image:Watphu1.JPG|thumb|right|250px|The ruins of the Khmer temple at [[Wat Phou|Wat Phū]], near [[Champasak]] in southern Laos]]
 +
 
 +
Wat Phou, a ruined Khmer temple complex in southern Laos, is located at the base of Mount Phu Kao. There was a temple on the site as early as the fifth century, but the surviving structures date from the eleventh to thirteenth centuries. The temple has a unique structure, with a shrine where a symbol of [[Hindu]] worship, or ''linga,'' was bathed in water from a mountain spring. The site later became a centre of [[Theravada Buddhist]] worship, which it remains today.
 +
 
 +
The government is seeking the same status for the ''Plain of Jars,'' a large group of historic cultural sites containing thousands of stone jars, which lie scattered throughout the Xieng Khouang plain in the Laotian Highlands at the northern end of the Annamese Cordillera, the principal mountain range of [[Indochina]].
 +
 
 +
The government publishes all newspapers, including two foreign language papers: the [[English language]] ''Vientiane Times'' and the [[French language]] ''Le Rénovateur.'' Additionally, the Khao San Pathet Lao, the country's official news agency, publishes English and French versions of its eponymous paper. Internet cafes, serving the tourist market, are now common in the major urban centres. However, the government strictly censors content and controls access.
 +
 
 +
Satellite television dishes, beaming content from [[Thailand]], are common. Many Laotians access the outside world through Thai television programs.
 +
 
 +
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
 +
 
 +
== References ==
 +
 
 +
* Clewley, John, "Beyond Our Khaen," In Simon Broughton and Mark Ellingham, with James McConnachie, and Orla Duane, (Eds.) ''World Music, Vol. 2: Latin & North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific.'' Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books, 2000. ISBN 1858286360.
 +
* Fredenburg, P. and B. Hill. ''Sharing Rice for Peace and Prosperity in the Greater Mekong Subregion.'' Victoria, AUS: Sid Harta Publishers, 2006. ISBN 192120608X.
 +
* Freeman, M. ''A Guide to Khmer Temples in Thailand and Laos.'' Weatherhill, 1996. ISBN 0834804506.
 +
* Stuart-Fox, Martin, ''A History of Laos.'' Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0521592356.
 +
*Stuart-Fox, Martin. ''The Lao Kingdom of Lan-Xang: Rise and Decline.'' White Lotus Co. Ltd, 1998. ISBN 9748434338.
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
{{commonscat|Laos}}
+
All links retrieved October 22, 2022.
* [http://www.laoconnection.com/ Laoconnection.com] - country, culture, language info., gallery, advice column, and more.
+
 
* [http://www.laopdr.com Laos' Portal] - Directory of Laotian sites
+
* [http://www.laoconnection.com About all things Lao], ''Lao Connection''
* [http://www.mekongcenter.com/home.htm Mekong Center] - Official tourism site
+
* [http://www.na.gov.la The Lao People's Democratic Republic], ''The National Assembly of the Lao Peoples Democratic Republic''
* [http://wikitravel.org/en/article/Laos Wikitravel: Laos]
+
* [http://www.mofa.gov.la Laos], ''Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Lao PDR''
* [http://sticky-rice.com/essays.html Sticky-Rice.com] - Ever growing collection of articles on, and photos of, Laos.
+
* [http://www.everyculture.com/Ja-Ma/Laos.html Culture of Laos] ''Countries and Their Cultures''
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{{credit|104505253}}
  
{{credit|29144284}}
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[[Category:Geography]]
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[[Category:Countries]]
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[[Category:Asia]]

Latest revision as of 06:54, 4 March 2023

Sathalanalat Paxathipatai
Paxaxon Lao
Lao People's Democratic Republic
Flag of Laos Emblem of Laos
Motto"ສັນຕິພາບ ເອກະລາດ ປະຊາທິປະໄຕ ເອກະພາບ ວັດທະນາຖາວອນ"
"Peace, independence, democracy, unity and prosperity"
Anthem: Pheng Xat Lao
"Hymn of the Lao People"
Location of Laos
Capital
(and largest city)
Vientiane
17°58′N 102°36′E
Official languages Lao
Official scripts Lao script
Demonym Laotian, Lao
Government Unitary communist and single-party state
 -  President Choummaly Sayasone
 -  Prime Minister Thongsing Thammavong
 -  President of Lao National Assembly Pany Yathotu
 -  President of LFNC Sisavath Keobounphanh
 -  LPRP General Secretary Choummaly Sayasone
Independence from France 
 -  Autonomy 19 July 1949 
 -  Declared 9 Nov 1953 
Area
 -  Total 236,800 km² (83rd)
91,428.991 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) 2
Population
 -  2009 estimate 6,800,000 [1] (104th)
 -  1995 census 4,574,848 
 -  Density 26.7/km² (177th)
69.2/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2010 estimate
 -  Total $15.693 billion[2] (130th)
 -  Per capita $2,435[2] (48th)
GDP (nominal) 2010 estimate
 -  Total $6.341 billion[2] (137th)
 -  Per capita $984[2] (147th)
Gini (2008) 34.6 (medium
Currency Kip (LAK)
Time zone (UTC+7)
Internet TLD .la
Calling code +856


Laos, officially the Lao People's Democratic Republic, is a landlocked socialist republic in Southeast Asia. Laos traces its history to the Kingdom of Lan Xang or Land of a Million Elephants, which existed from the fourteenth to the eighteenth century. After a period as a French colony, it gained independence in 1949. A long civil war ended when the communist Pathet Lao came to power in 1975.

On taking power, the communist government imposed a Soviet-style command economy. Because these policies prevented, rather than stimulated, growth and development, in 1986 the government announced a range of reforms designed to create conditions conducive to private sector activity.

Development has been hampered by poor communications in the heavily forested and mountainous landscape, where 80 percent of those employed practice subsistence agriculture. Foreign investment and foreign aid led to corruption in the elite of this one-party state.

Geography

Wat Phou: from left, the south palace, the tiers leading to the central sanctuary, the mountain peak shrouded in mist, and the north palace.
Map of Laos

The country's name in the Lao language is "Muang Lao." The French spelled it with the "s" which is usually retained in the English name (pronounced as one syllable). The usual adjectival form is "Lao" (as in "the Lao economy"). The term "Laotian," is commonly used to describe the people of Laos, to avoid confusion with the Lao ethnic group.

Laos is a landlocked country in Southeast Asia bordered by Myanmar (Burma) and the People's Republic of China to the northwest, Vietnam to the east, Cambodia to the south, and Thailand to the west.

The thickly forested landscape consists mostly of rugged mountains, the highest of which is Phou Bia at 9242 feet (2817 meters), with some plains and plateaus. The Mekong River forms a large part of the western boundary with Thailand, whereas the mountains of the Annamite Chain form most of the eastern border with Vietnam.

Only about 4 percent of the total land area is classified as arable. The area of forested land has declined significantly since the 1970s as a result of commercial logging and expanded swidden, or slash-and-burn, farming.

The climate is tropical and characterized by monsoons. There is a distinct rainy season from May to November, followed by a dry season from December to April. Temperatures range from highs around 104°F (40°C) along the Mekong in March and April to lows of 41°F (5°C) or less in the uplands of Xiangkhoang and Phôngsali in January.

In 1993, the government set aside 21 percent of the nation's land area as national biodiversity conservation areas, which may be developed into national parks.

A number of animal species have been discovered or re-discovered in Laos in recent years. These include the striped or Annamite rabbit, the saola, and most recently the Laotian rock rat or kha-nyou.

The Laotian rock rat (kha-nyou) (Laonastes aenigmamus), sometimes called the "rat-squirrel," was first placed, in 2005, in a new family. Others claimed that it belongs to the ancient fossil family Diatomyidae, that was thought to be extinct for 11 million years.

Environmental issues include unexploded ordnance, deforestation, soil erosion, and the fact that most of the population does not have access to potable water.

The capital and largest city of Laos is Vientiane, and other major cities include Luang Prabang, Savannakhet and Pakse.

History

The Tai (also spelled Dai) are a linguistic group originating in southern China, which includes the Lao, the Siamese, the people of the Shan region of north-eastern Myanmar, the Zhuang people of Guangxi Province in China and the Tho and Nung people of northern Vietnam. Under pressure from the expansion of the Han Chinese, the Tai began to migrate into South-East Asia during the first millennium C.E. They displaced earlier peoples (including the iron age culture who made the great stone jars from which the Plain of Jars in central Laos takes its name).

The Mekong River, which flows through what is now Laos, was a migration route. The Khmer Empire (Cambodia) prevented the Tai from dominating the Mekong Valley, so the Tai settled further south in the Chao Phraya Valley, where they formed a series of kingdoms ancestral to modern Siam and Thailand.

The 16th century That Luang temple in Viang Chan, symbol of the Lao state and the continuity of Lao history

Most of the Tai were converted to a form of Hinduism. Between the sixth and ninth centuries C.E. Buddhism was introduced into the Tai-speaking lands and became the dominant religion. But the Lao retain many animist religious practices from the pre-Buddhist era.

The Tai peoples divided into a number of linguistic sub-groups. These included the Tai-Lao, who during the eleventh and twelfth centuries C.E., spread along the middle Mekong Valley until blocked by the Khmers, who built the great temple at Wat Phū.

The Lao in turn divided into the Lao-Lum (Lao of the valley floor), the Lao-Thoeng (Lao of the mountain slopes) and the Lao-Sūng (Lao of the mountain tops). The Lao-Lum, having the best farming land and the best access to river transport, became the wealthiest. These divisions have haunted Lao history and still exist today, with many Lao-Thoeng and Lao-Sūng people having only a tenuous loyalty to a Lao-Lum dominated state.

The earliest historically identifiable Lao leader is Khun Lô, who probably conquered the Luang Phrabāng area in the twelfth century.

The Mongols invaded in 1253. Part of Kublai Khan's army advanced down the Mekong to attack the Khmers. After the Mongols withdrew, a new kingdom was founded by the Siamese at Sukhothai, which was later succeeded by a more powerful Siamese state with its capital at Ayutthaya (founded in 1351). The kingdom of Lān Nā, based at Chiang Mai and containing both Siamese and Lao elements, was founded at this time.

Idealised image of Fā Ngum, founder of the Kingdom of Lān Xāng (National History Museum, Viang Chan)

The Tai-Lao rulers of Luang Phrabāng formed a new state which, from about 1271 was ruled by a dynasty called the Phrayā. In about 1350 a prince of this dynasty, Fā Ngum, fled with his father after a dispute and sought refuge with the Khmers at Angkor, where he married a royal princess. In 1353 he returned with an army, and founded a new Lao state which covered the whole Lao-speaking Mekong valley. This was Lān Xāng, the Kingdom of a Million Elephants.

This kingdom lasted until the eighteenth century, when Siam invaded. To avoid a costly war with the French, the Siamese king ceded lands now known as Laos to them, and these were incorporated into French Indochina in 1893. The French saw Laos as a useful buffer state between the two expanding empires of France and Britain. Under the French, the capital (Vieng Chan) was changed to Vientiane.

Following a brief Japanese occupation during World War II, the country declared its independence in 1945, but the French re-asserted their control and only in 1950 was Laos granted semi-autonomy as an "associated state" within the French Union. Moreover, the French remained in control until 1954, when Laos gained full independence as a constitutional monarchy. A French military training mission continued to support the Royal Laos Army. In 1955, the U.S. Department of Defense created a special Programs Evaluation Office to supplant French support of the Royal Laos Army against the communist Pathet Lao as part of the U.S. containment policy.

Pha That Luang in Vientiane, the national symbol of Laos.

In 1968, while the U.S. was mired in the Vietnam War, the North Vietnamese Army launched a multi-division attack against the Royal Lao Army. The attack resulted in the army largely demobilizing and leaving the conflict to irregular forces raised by the United States and Thailand. Significant aerial bombardment by the United States occurred by that country's attempt to eliminate North Vietnamese bases in Laos and disrupt supply lines on the Ho Chi Minh trail.

After the Saigon government had fallen to the North Vietnamese forces in 1975, the communist Pathet Lao, backed by the Soviet Union and the North Vietnamese Army (justified by the communist ideology of "proletarian internationalism"), overthrew the royalist government, forcing King Savang Vatthana to abdicate on December 2, 1975. He later died in captivity. The North Vietnamese army, with its heavy weapons including heavy artillery and tanks was the real power behind the Pathet Lao insurgency.

After taking control, the Pathet Lao's government renamed the country as the "Lao People's Democratic Republic" and gave Vietnam the right to station military forces there and to appoint advisors. In the late 1970s, Vietnam ordered Laos to end relations with the People's Republic of China, which then cut the country off from trading with any country but Vietnam. Slowly economic restrictions were relaxed in the 1980s. Laos was admitted to ASEAN in 1997. Although control by Vietnam has decreased, Vietnam still wields political and economic influence in Laos.

Politics

The Victory Arch (Patuxay) in Viang Chan, built during the years of the Indochina war. The arch is known as "the vertical runway," because it was built with concrete donated by the United States for a new airport. It was never completed and even the official plaque describes it as "a monster of concrete."

The politics of Laos' takes place in a framework of a single-party socialist republic. The only legal political party is the Lao People's Revolutionary Party.

The head of state in 2007 was President Choummaly Sayasone, also secretary-general of the party, elected by parliament for a five-year term.

The head of government was Prime Minister Bouasone Bouphavanh, who with the council of ministers was appointed by the president with the approval of the national assembly for a five-year term.

The national assembly of 115 members, elected for a five-year term, essentially acts as a rubber stamp for the party, approving all new laws, although the executive branch retains authority to issue binding decrees.

The party determines government policies through the all-powerful nine-member politburo and the 49-member central committee. Important government decisions are vetted by the council of ministers.

Laos adopted a constitution in 1991.

The most recent elections took place in April 2006, when 175 candidates in sixteen electoral areas competed for 115 seats. The assembly was expanded to 99 members in 1997 and in 2006 elections had 115.

Regarding the judiciary, the president of the People's Supreme Court is elected by the national assembly, on the recommendation of the national assembly standing committee. The vice president of the People's Supreme Court and the judges are appointed by the national assembly standing committee.

Bomb attacks against the government have occurred, coupled with small exchanges of fire, across Laos. A variety of different groups have claimed responsibility including the Committee for Independence and Democracy in Laos, and the Lao Citizens Movement for Democracy. The United States has warned about the possibility of further attacks during the ASEAN summit in November.

Remnants of a Hmong group allied with the United States during the Vietnam War have been in armed conflict with the communist regime since 1975. Most Hmong are integrated into or at least at peace with society, with some occupying high-ranking positions in the state system.

Laos is divided into 16 provinces (kang), one municipality (kumpang nakon), and one special zone (ketpisade). The country is further divided into districts (muang).

Economy

A street market in Luang Prabang.

Laos has an inadequate infrastructure and a largely unskilled work force. The country's per capita income in 2005 was estimated to be $2124 on a purchasing power parity-basis, and ranked 138 on a list of 181 countries.

Agriculture, mostly subsistence rice farming, dominates the economy, employing an estimated 85 percent of the population and producing 51 percent of gross domestic product. Domestic savings are low, forcing Laos to rely heavily on foreign assistance. In 1999, foreign grants and loans accounted for more than 20 percent of GDP and more than 75 percent of public investment. In 1998, the country's foreign debt was estimated at $1.9-billion.

On taking power in 1975, the communist government imposed a Soviet-style command economic system, replacing the private sector with state enterprises and cooperatives; centralizing investment, production, trade, and pricing; and creating barriers to internal and foreign trade.

But the Lao Government realized these policies prevented, rather than stimulated, growth and development. In 1986, the government announced its "new economic mechanism." Initially timid, the package was expanded to include a range of reforms designed to create conditions conducive to private sector activity. Prices set by the market replaced government-determined prices. Farmers were permitted to own land and sell crops on the open market. State firms were granted increased decision-making authority and lost subsidies and pricing advantages. The government set the exchange rate close to real market levels, lifted trade barriers, replaced import barriers with tariffs, and gave private sector firms direct access to imports and credit.

In 1989, the government agreed with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, to expand fiscal and monetary reform, promote private enterprise and foreign investment, privatize or close state firms, and strengthen banking. It also agreed to maintain a market exchange rate, reduce tariffs, and eliminate unneeded trade regulations. A liberal foreign investment code was enacted and appeared to be slowly making a positive impact.

The "Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge," built between Vientiane Prefecture and Nong Khai Province, Thailand, with Australian help, was inaugurated in April 1994. Although the bridge has created additional commerce, the Lao Government does not yet permit a completely free flow of traffic.

A ferryboat on the Nam Ou river. Rivers are an important means of transport in Laos.

The Asian financial crisis, coupled with the Lao Government's own mismanagement of the economy, resulted in spiraling inflation and a steep depreciation of the currency, known as the kip, which lost 87 percent of its value from June 1997 to June 1999. Tighter monetary policies brought about greater macroeconomic stability in 2000, and monthly inflation, which had averaged about ten percent during the first half of 1999, dropped to an average one percent over the same period in 2000.

The economy continues to be dominated by an unproductive agricultural sector operating largely outside the money economy and in which the public sector continues to play a dominant role. Also, economic development is hampered by the fact that 37 percent of educated Laotians lived abroad, putting the country in fifth place for worst "brain drain," a 2005 World Bank study reported.

In late 2004, Laos gained normal trade relations status with the United States, allowing Laos-based producers to face lower tariffs on their exports. This was expected to spur growth.

Exports totalled $271-million in 1999, increased to almost one billion dollars by 2007. Exports commodities included wood products, garments, electricity, coffee, and tin. Export partners included Vietnam, Thailand, the People's Republic of China, Germany, France, and Belgium.

Imports totalled $497-million in 1999, and jumped to over 1.3 billion dollars by 2007. Import commodities included machinery and equipment, vehicles, fuel, and consumer goods. Import partner included Thailand, Japan, the People's Republic of China, Vietnam,Singapore, and Hong Kong.

Tourism is being promoted to increase the number of service jobs available to Laotians.

Demographics

Wat Ho Pra Keo, Vientiane.
Plain of Jars: Site 1

In 2007, the population was estimated at 6.1 million. Urban dwellers made up 23 percent of the population. About 70 percent of the population was under 30 years old in 1995. Laos is one of the least densely populated countries in Asia.

About 69 percent of the population are ethnic Lao, the principal lowland inhabitants, who belong to the Tai linguistic group. A further eight percent belong to other "lowland" groups, which together with the Lao people make up the Lao Loum. Hill people and minority cultures such as the Lua, Hmong, Yao, Tai dumm, Dao, Shan, and several Tibeto-Burman speaking peoples have lived in isolated regions for many years. Mountain tribes of mixed heritage are found in northern Laos and are known as Lao Soung or highland Laotians. In the central and southern mountains, Mon-Khmer tribes, known as Lao Theung or mid-slope Laotians, predominate. Some Vietnamese and Chinese minorities remain, particularly in the towns. Many left in two waves; after independence in the late 1940s and again after 1975. Of the estimated 100,000 Chinese residents in Laos in 1975, only ten percent remain, identified as the Sino-Lao.[3]

The predominant religion is Theravada Buddhism. There are also animist and shamanist beliefs that involve house spirits (phi), village spirits, district spirits, and city spirits, which overlap with Buddhism. There also are a small number of Christians, mostly restricted to the Vientiane area, and Muslims, mostly restricted to the Myanmar border region. Christian missionary work is regulated.

Monks are the main religious practitioners, and most young men are expected to become a monk for a short period to prepare them for marriage. Monks are in charge of Buddhist ceremonies and function as dream interpreters, traditional medical practitioners, and counselors. Other religious practitioners include spirit mediums and shamans, most of whom are women.

Among the Lao, cremation is generally practiced. The remains normally are placed in a small “stupa” inside the temple fence. The remains are deemed to have spiritual power, and offerings are made to them to achieve fulfillment of one's wishes.

Laos remains a peasant society, with an estimated 85 percent of the population engaged in subsistence agriculture. There are a few professionals, including lawyers, working in the capital. There is a substantial foreign aid community that provides a body of professionals. The Vietnamese have tended to work as tradesmen and laborers in the cities.

Buses connect the major cities.

Ethnic Lao may choose their spouse, and there is some preference for cousins. Parents may propose a spouse and must be consulted about marriage partners. A payment like a bride-price is made. The marriage ceremony usually takes place in the bride's family home. A spirit-calling ceremony is central. Divorce can be initiated by either party and is not uncommon. There is some polygyny (a form of polygamy) among highland groups.

The oldest daughter and her husband move out of the family home after the marriage of the next daughter but try to live nearby. The youngest daughter, who must care for aging parents, inherits the main house. These groups of related nuclear families create the appearance of extended families, although new family units eventually separate from the original main house and become main houses. Highland patrilineal groups feature large houses containing extended families of related brothers. Men are recognized as the household head for religious and political purposes.

Songthaews are pick-up trucks with benches. They are used for long-distance and local public transport.

After the revolution, property was nationalized, yet after the economic reforms of the 1990s, private ownership was recognized. A land-titling program now grants 99-year leases and allows for commercial transfer. Most land is subject to recognition of rights through use.

The official and dominant language is Lao, a tonal language of the Tai linguistic group. Mid-slope and highland Lao speak an assortment of tribal languages. French, once common in government and commerce, has declined in usage, while knowledge of English, the language of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), has increased.

The aristocracy was abolished in the 1975 revolution. Many members of the aristocracy fled, as did members of the state-based elite. A new elite appeared, composed of the upper echelons of the communist state apparatus. Foreign investment and foreign aid led to corruption in these upper echelons, which became pervasive. A small urban-based middle class appeared. Most people belong to the peasantry and are powerless and poor.

Before the revolution, formal dress for all groups imitated courtly style and included the sampot (dhoti-like trousers) for men and the sinh skirt for women. After the revolution egalitarian dress was emphasized. In the 1990s much of the older dress style came back as the new rich elite flaunted their wealth. Elite men now wear business suits.

Culture

A Lao meal.

Lao food is distinct from other Southeast Asian cuisines. Sticky rice is the staple, and there are many traditions and rituals associated with its production. Galangal and fish sauce are important ingredients. The Lao national dish is “laap” (sometimes also spelled larb), a spicy mixture of marinated meat and/or fish that is sometimes raw with a variable combination of green vegetables, herbs, and spices. Another characteristic dish is tam mak houng, green papaya salad. Lao cuisine has many regional variations, according to the fresh foods local to each region. A French influence is apparent in the capital city, Vientiane, where baguettes are sold on the street, and French restaurants are common and popular. Vietnamese cuisine is also popular.

The typical Lao stove, or brazier, shaped like a bucket, with room for a single pot or pan to sit on top, is called a tao-lo and is fueled by charcoal. The wok, maw khang in Lao, is used for frying and stir frying. Sticky rice is steamed inside of a bamboo basket, a huad, which sits on top of a pot, which is called the maw nung. A large, deep mortar called a khok is used for pounding tam mak hung and other foods, and is indispensable in the Lao kitchen.

A Lao-style mortar and pestle.

The traditional manner of eating was communal, with diners sitting on a reed mat on the wooden floor around a raised platform woven out of rattan called a ka toke. Dishes are arranged on the ka toke, which is of a standard size. Where there are many diners, multiple ka tokes will be prepared. Each ka toke will have one or more baskets of sticky rice, which is shared by all the diners at the ka toke.

Lao coffee is often called Pakxong coffee, which is grown around the town of Pakxong. Both robusta and arabica are grown in Laos. Most of the arabica in Laos is consumed locally and most of the robusta is exported to Thailand, where it goes into Nescafe. The custom in Laos is to drink coffee in glasses, with condensed milk in the bottom, followed by a chaser of green tea.

There are two general types of traditional alcoholic beverages, both produced from rice. Lao hai means jar alcohol and is served from an earthen jar. Likened to Japanese sake, it is communally and competitively drunk through straws at festive occasions. Lao lao or Lao alcohol is more like a whiskey. There is also a popular variant of lao lao made from purple rice, which has a pinkish hue.

Parents raise and support their children, creating strong family bonds. A key rite of passage for Buddhist males is to enter the monastery. Government-run primary schools have eclipsed temple education for boys. An awareness of the importance of higher education has increased, but most higher education is pursued abroad. A national university was established in the early 1970s, but it was dismantled by the revolution. In the mid-1990s a national university was reestablished. Restrictions on reading material and censorship have discouraged the emergence of a culture of reading among adults. Only 57 percent of the total population aged 15 and over can read and write.

The most distinctive Lao musical instrument is a bamboo mouth organ called a khene. Lao folk music, known as Lam, is extemporaneous singing accompanied by the khene. The Lao classical orchestra can be divided into two categories, Sep Nyai and Sep Noi. The Sep Nyai is ceremonial and formal music and includes: two sets of gongs (kong vong), a xylophone (lanat), an oboe (pei or salai), two large kettle drums and two sets of cymbals (xing).

The country has two World Heritage Sites: Luang Prabang and Wat Phou. Luang Prabang, formerly the capital of a kingdom of the same name, is located in north central Laos, on the Mekong River about 425 km north of Vientiane. It has a population of about 22,000. Until the communist takeover in 1975, it was the royal capital, the seat of the kingdom of Laos.

The ruins of the Khmer temple at Wat Phū, near Champasak in southern Laos

Wat Phou, a ruined Khmer temple complex in southern Laos, is located at the base of Mount Phu Kao. There was a temple on the site as early as the fifth century, but the surviving structures date from the eleventh to thirteenth centuries. The temple has a unique structure, with a shrine where a symbol of Hindu worship, or linga, was bathed in water from a mountain spring. The site later became a centre of Theravada Buddhist worship, which it remains today.

The government is seeking the same status for the Plain of Jars, a large group of historic cultural sites containing thousands of stone jars, which lie scattered throughout the Xieng Khouang plain in the Laotian Highlands at the northern end of the Annamese Cordillera, the principal mountain range of Indochina.

The government publishes all newspapers, including two foreign language papers: the English language Vientiane Times and the French language Le Rénovateur. Additionally, the Khao San Pathet Lao, the country's official news agency, publishes English and French versions of its eponymous paper. Internet cafes, serving the tourist market, are now common in the major urban centres. However, the government strictly censors content and controls access.

Satellite television dishes, beaming content from Thailand, are common. Many Laotians access the outside world through Thai television programs.

Notes

  1. Background notes – Laos. US Dept. of State. Retrieved December 8, 2011.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Error on call to template:cite web: Parameters url and title must be specified. International Monetary Fund.
  3. Florence Rossetti, "The Chinese in Laos- Rebirth of the Laotian Chinese Community as peace returns to Indochina." [1]. China Perspectives 13 (September - October 1997): 26. cefc.com. Retrieved May 14, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Clewley, John, "Beyond Our Khaen," In Simon Broughton and Mark Ellingham, with James McConnachie, and Orla Duane, (Eds.) World Music, Vol. 2: Latin & North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books, 2000. ISBN 1858286360.
  • Fredenburg, P. and B. Hill. Sharing Rice for Peace and Prosperity in the Greater Mekong Subregion. Victoria, AUS: Sid Harta Publishers, 2006. ISBN 192120608X.
  • Freeman, M. A Guide to Khmer Temples in Thailand and Laos. Weatherhill, 1996. ISBN 0834804506.
  • Stuart-Fox, Martin, A History of Laos. Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0521592356.
  • Stuart-Fox, Martin. The Lao Kingdom of Lan-Xang: Rise and Decline. White Lotus Co. Ltd, 1998. ISBN 9748434338.

External links

All links retrieved October 22, 2022.

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