Southeast Asians oust Indochinese refugees BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - In leaky boats at sea, in steamy camps in the Thai jungle, in makeshift barracks in the shadow of Hong Kong's skyscrapers, the rising tide of refugees fleeing Indochina threatens to over- whelm the resources of other Southeast Asian nations. Angry governments are retaliating. Thailand is busing tens of thousands back into Cambodia. Malaysia and In- donesia say they will allow no more "boat people" to land on their shores. The exodus was spawned by the 1975 communist victories in Vietnam, Cam- bodia, and Laos, and Associated Press reports from Southeast Asian capitals indicate that the refugee problem has now reached crisis proportions. " Official statistics show that more than 350,000 Indochinese are living in limbo in Southeast Asia and Hong Kong. " The United Nations reports more than 51,000 Vietnamese boat people landed on other Asian shores in May alone, while only 8,500 were resettled in the United States and elsewhere during the month. " Seaborne refugees from Vietnam have been arriving in Hong Kong at a rate of 800 a day. The overcrowded British colony is already sheltering more than 50,000 Vietnamese, most of them of Chinese descent. * Refugee officials estimate that one- half to three-quarters of those who set out by sea from Vietnam never make it, drowning in shipwrecks or dying from exposure, thirst, or starvation. * Since last week, the Thai army has forced some 45,000 refugees to return to Cambodia and plans to send an ad- ditional 30,000 back across the border. Many are Chinese-descended Cam- bodians fearful of the Vietnamese in- vasion force in their war-torn country. SOUTHEAST ASIAN leaders have lathed out at theinternational com- munity for what they consider inadequate relief efforts and have ac- cused Vietnam of opening the refugee floodgates for its own cynical political motives. The United Nations, the International Red Cross, and Western governments protested Thailand's new policy of for- ced repatriations, but Prime Minister Kriangsak Chomanan rejected- their protests and accused international agencies of "too much tlk, not enough action." Thailand has borne the brunt of the burden in the past four years, receiving some 200,000refugees. See SOUTHEAST, Page 11 You Wouldn't Believe The Crowds We Get! BILLIARDS at the UNION Open 11:30 A.M. The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 15,;1979-Page 9 STARTS TONIGHT ! The FIRST Certified Crazy Person 's Comedy. PETER FALK : : .: . ' . r . : f;:r l 'r i. $' 'f, f f:i . r {. .. .. ;. .f ": ', i. ALAN ARKIN While the Father of the Bride was extracting a molar from Mrs. Cohen, The Father of the Groom was extracting $20 Million from the U.S. Mint. And.this was only the beginning. PETER FALK - ALAN ARKIN in An ARTHUR HILLER Film "THE IN-LAWS" Music by JOHN MORRIS - Executive Producer ALAN ARKIN - Written by ANDREW BERGMAN Produced by ARTHUR HILLER and WILLIAM SACKHEIM - Directed by ARTHUR HILLER READ THE FAWCETT PAPERBACK PARENTAL GUIOAICE SUGGESTED TECHNICOLOR O PGME 7 [W-mit MAI tMAL FRAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR CHILI)REN I A Warner Communications Company *Affl I Upper Level Starting Times may be delal Mon.-Tues.-Thurs.-Fri. 7:35-9:55 "E l 6Sat.-Sun. -Wed. 1:05-3:15-5:25-7:35-9:55