Laos says Christmas arrests of Christians for possessing "poisons"

Laos has denied claims that 11 Christians were arrested last month for holding religious services over Christmas, saying they were detained for possessing "poisons," Lao state media reported.

Lao foreign ministry spokesman Yong Chanthalangsy said the communist regime allowed complete freedom of worship and accused the foreign media, human rights groups and Lao exiles of seeking to create divisions within the country.

The Lao Movement for Human Rights claimed that 11 Christians, mostly from the Khmu and Oey ethnic minorities, were arrested on December 27 and 28 in the southern province of Attapeu for holding religious services on Christmas Day.

The Paris-based exile group also accused the government of persecuting Christians in the Buddhist-majority country and using "religious freedom as a currency exchange and a strategy to obtain international assistance".

In comments carried by Monday's state-run Vientiane Times newspaper, Yong said the allegations were false because "the Lao authorities only summoned and detained the people for questioning on charges of possession of poisons".

"The spokesman clarified that those people were not charged, but were detained for further investigation," it added.

Last month, the US State Department, in its annual report on international religious freedom, included Laos on a worst offenders list of totalitarian states which view religions as a threat to their dominant ideology.

Yong also rejected reports by Radio Free Asia that 10 Christians were arrested in the southern province of Savannakhet province on charges of organising a demonstration to protest the Attapeu arrests.

"He also regretted that some foreign news agencies and Radio Free Asia falsely reported on the so-called human rights movement because there is no such movement in Laos and this news is untrue," the newspaper said.

Yong said the "broadcasting of such unfounded news only aimed to agitate, destroy and divide the solidarity and coherence among the national community in the Lao PDR (People's Democratic Republic)" and misled the international community about the country.

The Lao government frequently accuses anti-communist exile groups in the United States of trying to derail efforts by the US government to extend Normal Trade Relations status to Laos.