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Relative burns down
The house on a tree that Ho Van Thanh and his son Ho Van
Lang had been living for around 40 years in a forest in
central Vietnam. Ho Van Lam,
the nephew and cousin respectively of the former soldier and his son
claimed Saturday he has burnt down the makeshift hut after he was criticized
for charging curious people including journalists for the service of being
taken to the dwelling of the “jungle people.” PHOTO: VNEXPRESS
The headlines-grabbing story of a former soldier who fled into the jungle with a year-old son and lived there for 40 years took an angry turn Friday with the former’s nephew claiming he had burnt their jungle dwelling down.
Ho Van Lam, 44, a
resident of the mountainous district of Tay Tra in the central
On Friday morning,
several news websites had reported Lam had charged visitors, including
reporters, VND4 million (US$190) each time he took a group to the tree house
where Ho Van Thanh, 82, and his son, Ho Van Lang, 41, had lived, as well as
VND500,000-1 million for each interview with him and his “wild” relatives.
The reports said
Lam even threatened to attack other locals who wanted to take visitors to the
jungle and was planning to increase his charges.
The reports
generated considerable criticism, with many people blaming Lam and other
relatives for commercially exploiting the “jungle men.”
Lam told the Tuoi
Tre (Youth)
newspaper via phone Saturday afternoon that he had set fire to the house
since he had earned a very bad reputation over the issue.
“I took them [to
the tree house] and demanded only a little money but reporters wrote too many
bad things about me.
“Upset, I burned
it down so that no one will ever ask me to take them there,” he said.
On Friday, Lam had
told Tuoi Tre that it’s “reasonable”
to charge each person 500,000 dong per trip since the route was very
long and dangerous.
He and two
other men helped visitors carry clothes and equipment, prepared meals and
drinks, and protected them in the jungle, Lam said.
He also said that
day he had not received money from anyone for interviews with him, his uncle
and cousin.
“I told a reporter
this [that he was charging money for the interview] because he was hateful.
He came and without making any request, started the interview. It was as if
he was torturing us,” he said.
He said his family
has been “severely disturbed” since Thanh and Lang were brought back to the
family by the authorities and the family on August 7, as many groups of
people, including reporters, had come to take photos, conduct interviews and
have him take them to the jungle house.
Meanwhile, he, Ho
Van Tri, Thanh’s other son, and some other family members, have had to take
turns to cook meals for Thanh and Lang, and watch over them to prevent them
from going back into the jungle.
Lam said his
family members have not been able to work in their fields since the return of
their relatives from the jungle.
Fateful night
Over the last two
weeks, local and international newspapers have been reporting on Thanh and
his son Lang, calling them “jungle men”.
Thanh’s house was
bombed one night in 1972 during the Vietnam War when he was serving in the
army. His mother and two older sons were killed in the bombing.
Thanh, his wife,
and two younger sons Lang (a year old) and Tri (three months old) survived
the attack.
Tri was quoted by
news website VnExpress as saying that locals told him that
his father was in shock and seemed to have lost his mental balance after the
bombing and the deaths, so he did not rejoin the army.
Thanh moved to
other house with his wife and two sons. Once, after beating up his wife so
badly she had to be hospitalized, he fled into the forest with Lang.
When he returned
after a few days, the locals lied to him, saying his wife and youngest son
had died, since they were afraid that he would beat her again.
Thanh never
returned to the village since.
Tri said it was
only when he was 12, his mother, then on her deathbed, told him to find his
father and brother in the forest.
But his father did
not recognize him, believing he was dead, Tri said.
In the jungle,
Thanh and Lang lived in a house that looked like a bird’s nest, built with
sticks and dry leaves on a big tree five to six meters from the ground, and
near a stream, and wore dry bark as clothing.
Two made their own
tools like combs, mugs, knives, hammers, axes, and had a field of nearly one
hectare (2.47 acres) on which they grew cassava, corn, sugarcane, sesame,
rice and tobacco.
They fed on the
food they grew, wild vegetables and animal meat, used quills and animal skin
as medicine.
Both have
forgotten to speak the main Vietnamese language (tiếng Việt) and can only speak a few words of the language
spoken by the Kor ethnic minority that they belong to.
News reports say
that residents of Tay Tra District and relatives visited the jungle dwellers
several times over the last four decades, but failed to persuade them to
return home.
They even ran away
to hide on seeing strangers, the reports said.
The ‘rescue’
Since they were
brought back in what local media have called a “rescue” operation, the father
and son have been supported by the authorities, people and their family to
reintegrate into the community.
Lang has tried to
get used to modern life with cell-phones, cigarettes, clothes, footwear,
motorbike, soft drinks and television, but Thanh has refused to use modern
stuff. He is only able to eat very little rice and drink a little milk.
Thanh and Lang
have received medical treatment for depression and fever respectively at the
Thanh has been
undergoing treatment since he was brought back from the jungle in a hammock.
Thanh and Lang are
still scared of the strangers, the paper reported.
Both father and
son have said that they want to return to their jungle house.
It is not clear if
they are aware of Lam’s claim to have burnt their house down.
Thanh Nien News
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Chủ Nhật, 18 tháng 8, 2013
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