Rights groups call for probe into shooting of Lao activist

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BANGKOK (AP) – Human rights groups on Wednesday called for an investigation into the shooting of a political and social activist in Laos whose posts on Facebook criticised the Southeast Asian nation’s communist government.

Initial reports, repeated by human rights groups, had said Anousa Luangsuphom, 25, was killed in the attack last Saturday night at a coffee shop in Vientiane, the capital.

But Human Rights Watch issued an update yesterday saying Anousa’s family and other sources provided evidence that he survived the shooting and was in a hospital receiving medical treatment.

Video from security cameras uploaded onto a state media website and then circulated on social media shows a gunman in a cap and mask make a tentative entrance into the cafe, step out, walk back in again, and brush past a woman to fire two shots from a handgun into the sitting victim.

Another video released online shows paramedics attending to him. Reports in Lao media and from fellow activists said Anousa later died.

But a Lao activist in exile in Paris who knew Anousa, Joseph Akaravong, said on Facebook that he was still alive.

A photo said to be of Anousa in the hospital, showing wounds in the spots cited in media reports, accompanied the post.

The Associated Press was unable to confirm Anousa’s condition and was not immediately able to contact Akaravong.

No evidence has emerged of the gunman’s identity or motive. Lao authorities could not immediately be contacted for comment.

Amnesty International described Anousa, also known as Jack, as a “vocal critic of the Lao government and society”.

The group said Anousa ran a Facebook page called “Driven by the Keyboard” which featured posts “on a wide range of social, environmental, economic and political issues in Laos, such as haze pollution and the human rights of school children”.

Human Rights Watch said Anousa “was among the few people in Laos who regularly and openly expressed views that were critical of the Lao government”, and described his “Driven by the Keyboard” page as “a popular platform for people in Laos and abroad to express dissenting views about the Lao government, including corruption and repression of fundamental freedoms”.