Hmong Refugees Prepare For New Life In The U.S.

THAM KRABOK, THAILAND - AUGUST 8: A Hmong refugee waves goodbye to friends and relatives leaving the military-run Wat Tham Krabok refugee camp for the last time as she heads to Bangkok International airport to board a commercial flight to Sacramento, California, on August 8, 2004 in Tham Krabok, Thailand. Thousands of Hmong refugees who fled Laos for Thailand 30 years ago are preparing for a new life in America after the U.S government announced it was launching a resettlement program for up to 15,000 Hmong living in a refugee camp northeast of Bangkok. The Hmong who often live on the margins of society in Thailand have had many problems with food, health and education because of lack of money. Since the migration started, almost 900 Hmong have departed to the USA in small groups on commerical aircraft. The medical screening, cultural orientation and movement of Hmong from Wat Tham Krabok camp northeast of Bangkok to the United States is being facilitated by the International Organization for Migration according to American standards and laws set in place by the U.S Department of State, U.S Refugee Admissions. The historical migration to the USA will finally close a painful chapter for many of the refugees who had sought safety in Thailand after the Vietnam war where as many as 40,000 Hmong were fighting for the Americans in Laos. (Photo by Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)
THAM KRABOK, THAILAND - AUGUST 8: A Hmong refugee waves goodbye to friends and relatives leaving the military-run Wat Tham Krabok refugee camp for the last time as she heads to Bangkok International airport to board a commercial flight to Sacramento, California, on August 8, 2004 in Tham Krabok, Thailand. Thousands of Hmong refugees who fled Laos for Thailand 30 years ago are preparing for a new life in America after the U.S government announced it was launching a resettlement program for up to 15,000 Hmong living in a refugee camp northeast of Bangkok. The Hmong who often live on the margins of society in Thailand have had many problems with food, health and education because of lack of money. Since the migration started, almost 900 Hmong have departed to the USA in small groups on commerical aircraft. The medical screening, cultural orientation and movement of Hmong from Wat Tham Krabok camp northeast of Bangkok to the United States is being facilitated by the International Organization for Migration according to American standards and laws set in place by the U.S Department of State, U.S Refugee Admissions. The historical migration to the USA will finally close a painful chapter for many of the refugees who had sought safety in Thailand after the Vietnam war where as many as 40,000 Hmong were fighting for the Americans in Laos. (Photo by Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)
Hmong Refugees Prepare For New Life In The U.S.
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72480460
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Getty Images News
Date created:
08 August, 2004
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51145199PB001_Hmong