Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Xam Neua

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Country
  
Laos

Time zone
  
ICT (UTC+7)

Population
  
46,800 (2002)

Admin. division
  
Houaphan Province

Local time
  
Friday 1:48 PM

Xam Neua httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Weather
  
29°C, Wind W at 11 km/h, 49% Humidity

Xam Neua (ຊຳເໜືອ [sám nɨ̌ə], Vietnamese: Xâm Neua or Sầm Nưa, sometimes transcribed as Sam Neua or Samneua, literally "northern swamp", is the capital city of Houaphan Province, Laos, in the northeast of the country. Xam Neua is one of the country's least visited provincial capitals by Western tourists.

Contents

Map of Sam Nuea, Laos

Demographics

Residents are mostly Lao, Vietnamese, and Hmong, with some Tai Dam, Tai Daeng, and Tai Lu. The predominant language is Lao with minorities of Vietnamese and Hmong. French is spoken by a minority of people as a legacy of the French colonial era; it is taught in schools and used in public works and government.

Tourism

Several guesthouses are in Xam Neua.

There are irregular flights into/from Vientiane to Xam Neua; presently operated by Lao Skyway, flying a small Cessna Caravan EX.

Daily life

Xam Neua is in a valley in Houaphan Province. In the early morning hours women wash clothes in the river flowing through the city. An elementary school is near the main bridge crossing this river. At 5:45 and 17:45 each day there are public addresses from loudspeakers atop a tower on the school playground, expounding on communist life and philosophy. These addresses are usually accompanied by Lao music.

It is reputed there is a Communist re-education camp in Xam Neua and that it was the Pathet Lao capital during the Laotian Civil War Battle of Lima Site 85 (LS-85) 11 March 1968. It is near the Pathet Lao refuges in the Viengxay caves, which the Lao government hopes to promote as a tourism destination similar to the Củ Chi tunnels near Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam and the Killing Fields Memorial near Phnom Penh in Cambodia. It is near Nam Et-Phou Louey National Protected Area (pronounced “naam et poo loo-ee”).

References

Xam Neua Wikipedia