Lao dam collapse survivors homeless a year on

This file photo shows flood survivors looking out from the back of a truck as they are transported from a hydro power plant through a village in Sanamxai, Attapeu province on 28 July, 2018, after they were affected by a dam collapse that resulted in widespread flooding. (AFP Photo)

Thousands are languishing in displacement camps in Lao a year after a dam break unleashed floodwaters and killed dozens of people in the impoverished state, a new report on the anniversary of the disaster said Tuesday.

For the past decade, Lao has been on a dam-building spree to serve as the "battery of Asia", but experts have long warned about environmental dangers and the breakneck construction pace.

An auxiliary dam at the Xe Pian Xe Namnoy hydroelectric project in southern Lao collapsed on 23 July last year under the pressure of rising monsoon waters, sending floods downstream and killing an estimated 71 people though the official toll is lower.

The disaster is believed to be the deadliest dam accident in Lao’s history and allegations have pointed to construction flaws by the builder.

The report by conservation groups said nearly 5,000 people are living "hand to mouth" in camps without adequate food and housing while firms behind the US$1 billion project have yet to adequately compensate victims.

International Rivers, which released the findings, said the disaster should serve as a lesson for the hundreds of other dams planned in Lao and other countries along the Mekong river.

"For too long, repeated warnings from scientists, communities and civil society have been disregarded," International Rivers Southeast Asian programme director Maureen Harris said.

The displaced residents in Lao are living in stuffy prefabricated structures and subsisting on meagre rations, according to the report.

Insurance money

Families of victims have received government pay-outs but the new report is calling on developers to step up and use insurance money to address claims.

An official from the South Korean builder SK E&C, one of the firms involved in the consortium managing the project, said it is "willing to actively cooperate" once the Lao government investigation findings are released.

Lao is an authoritarian one-party state unused to the outside scrutiny brought by the collapse.

Its prime minister said in rare comments last year that the communist country will press on with its ambitious hydropower strategy but vowed to intensify oversight.

The Xe Pian Xe Namnoy project is expected to send most of its electricity to Thailand and may be operational later this year.

Experts say the sprint to build dams in the power-hungry region threatens the flow of the Mekong, disturbing fish migration and seasonal flooding patterns for millions living along its banks in neighbouring countries.

The river starts in China and crawls down along eastern Myanmar, Lao, Thailand and Cambodia, ending in Vietnam. - AFP