Hotels in Laos
Laos is the least developed and most enigmatic of the three former French Indochinese states. A ruinous sequence of colonial domination, internecine conflict and dogmatic socialism finally brought the country to its knees in the 1970s, and almost ten per cent of the population left. Now, after a decade and a half of isolation from the outside world, this landlocked, sparsely populated country is enjoying peace, stabilising its political and economic structures and admitting foreign visitors.
The lack of foreign influence offers travellers an unparalleled glimpse of traditional South-East Asian life. From the fertile lowlands of the Mekong River valley to the rugged Annamite highlands, travellers who have made it to Laos tend to agree that this country is the highlight of South-East Asia.
Laos has suddenly come over all bomb-happy and travellers are advised to avoid heavily-populated public places that might appeal to terrorists and tourists; the morning market in Ventiane for instance.
Travel in rural areas, particularly Xieng Khouang Province, is complicated by ethnic conflict and banditry; generally speaking, any route that has 'special' in its name, such as the road through Xaysomboune Special Zone, has to be treated with caution.
Taking drugs in foreign countries is always going to be iffy, but it's especially high-risk in Laos. Reports have begun to filter back of tourists dying from opium overdoses.
Full country name: Lao People's Democratic Republic
Area: 236,000 sq km (92,040 sq m)
Population: 4.75 million (growth rate 2.9%)
Capital city: Vientiane (pop 300,000)
People: 50% Lao Loum (lowland Lao), 30% Lao Theung (lower-mountain dwellers of mostly proto-Malay or Mon-Khmer descent), 10-20% Lao Sung (Hmong or Mien high-altitude hill tribes) and 10-20% tribal Thais
Language: Lao and Lao dialects (closely related to Thai), French
Religion: 85% Buddhist, 15% animist and spirit cults
Government: Socialist republic
President: Khamtai Siphandon
Prime Minister: Sisavat Keobounphan
GDP: US$9.7 billion
GDP per head: US$2071
Annual growth: 7%
Inflation: 6%
Major products/industries: Rice, tobacco, coffee, tin mining, timber, and opium
Major trading partners: Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, Japan
