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The Hmong of Laos, because of their strategic location, were cultivated by the US Central Intelligence Agency as a buffer against the neighbouring Vietnamese during the Vietnam War. After the US defeat in Vietnam 1975, the new government in Laos set out to exterminate the Hmong for their pro-American stance, employing chemical weapons, and Hmong refugees from Thailand were forcibly repatriated; around 100,000 Hmong perished.
The Hmong wear distinctive costumes and elaborate silver jewellery. Their villages are endogamous. They are relatively recent arrivals on the Southeast Asian peninsula, many having moved south in order to avoid harassment by Chinese imperial authorities. Today the Hmong live in China (Guizhou, Yunnan, Hunan), Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, and Myanmar (Burma).
Red stands for the warmth of the sun and of the population. Black represents fortitude and wealth. White symbolizes purity, hope, and the waves. Effective date: 31 August 1962.
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