Project Phongsali 2011: We evaluate hospital services in the event that our team encounters accident victims.

February 9, 2011
Project Phongsali 2011: We evaluate hospital services in the event that our team encounters accident victims.

Week One Day Five: We arrive in the town of Oudomxai about 4:30 PM, too late to chance making it to our ultimate destination, Muang Khoua, before dark. In addition to wanting the safety of daylight driving, we are worried that arriving in Muang Khoua late may leave us without a place to spend...
Read more »

Project Phongsali 2011: Minor police corruption causes minor delay but we’re soon back on the road.

February 8, 2011
Project Phongsali 2011: Minor police corruption causes minor delay but we’re soon back on the road.

Week One Day Four Continued While we were in the Luang Prabang morning market, a police officer spotted our truck parked beside the road and immediately applied a “boot” to a front wheel, immobilizing it. (There went our early start to Oudomxai!) Yai had no trouble finding the officer who had applied the boot....
Read more »

Project Phongsali 2011: What happened to Pome? Why didn’t he return for follow-up treatment?

February 8, 2011
Project Phongsali 2011: What happened to Pome?  Why didn’t he return for follow-up treatment?

Week One Day Four: We took advantage of having over-nighted in Luang Prabang to drop by the COPE (Cooperative Orthotics and Prosthetics Enterprise) rehabilitation center located on the grounds of the provincial hospital. The Luang Prabang center is a satellite of the COPE clinic in Vientiane, and is one of several branches located strategically...
Read more »

Project Phongsali 2011: Finally underway, we make slow time but enjoy sights and scenery.

February 7, 2011
Project Phongsali 2011: Finally underway, we make slow time but enjoy sights and scenery.

Week One Day Three: Our planned departure at the crack of dawn was, of course, delayed until 8:00 a.m., … then 8:30 a.m., … then 10:00 a.m., … then Yai asked for another hour, maybe an hour and a half. In the end, we left town in the early afternoon. We drove slowly uphill...
Read more »

Project Phongsali 2011: Phongsali might not be the end of the world, but you can see it from there!

February 6, 2011
Project Phongsali 2011: Phongsali might not be the end of the world, but you can see it from there!

Week One Day Two: We are packing for the trip north. Metal detectors, radios, bull horns, and a mile of firing cable. Everything we will need to search for ordnance and then destroy it. Well…everything except a sizable load of TNT. That will come up by special transport under the care of Vilasak, our...
Read more »

Project Phongsali 2011: With transport secured, our team and equipment will soon head for Phongsali Province.

February 5, 2011
Project Phongsali 2011: With transport secured, our team and equipment will soon head for Phongsali Province.

Week One Day One: As was the case last year, the starting date of our project hinged on our finding proper transport for our team and equipment.  Our work in Laos occurs seasonally and never for more than three months at a crack.  Given the fact that we don’t operate here year-round, it makes...
Read more »

Treatment technique for Lao children with clubfoot was pioneered by doctor in Iowa

February 3, 2011
Treatment technique for Lao children with clubfoot was pioneered by doctor in Iowa

Earlier this year we posted on this website a video that features a Lao toddler that we met while our UXO clearance team was working in Phongsali. The youngster, named Pome, was born with a birth defect called “congenital talipes equinovarus” (CTEV) a condition more commonly known as “club foot”. (See our posting for...
Read more »

The Guardian: “WikiLeaks cables- Secret deal let Americans sidestep cluster bomb ban”.

December 18, 2010
The Guardian: “WikiLeaks cables- Secret deal let Americans sidestep cluster bomb ban”.

British and American officials colluded in a plan to hoodwink parliament over a proposed ban on cluster bombs, the Guardian can disclose. According to leaked US embassy dispatches, David Miliband, who was Britain’s foreign secretary under Labour, approved the use of a loophole to manoeuvre around the ban and allow the US to keep...
Read more »

Few options for Lao children born with birth defects. Fortunately there is hope at C.O.P.E

December 14, 2010
Few options for Lao children born with birth defects.  Fortunately there is hope at C.O.P.E

One-year old Pome faced a bleak future if he could not get treatment for his foot.  He was born with a birth defect known as “club foot” (talipes equinovarus) but had never received medical care.  People in his village knew him as the boy “with his foot on sideways”.  His parents had no knowledge...
Read more »