A Change of Guard

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Thursday 28 May 2015

More Montagnards pour in


A van transporting Montagnards seeking asylum arrives at the General Department of Immigration in Phnom Penh in December after travelling in a convoy from Ratanakkiri.Hong Menea

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School of Vice: The SCS [South China Sea] disputes should not be allowed to deflect the world community's attention from Hanoi's continuing rights violations and persecutions of indigenous peoples of Vietnam, whose existence it does not even recognise! These peoples, including the ethnic Khmers of the Mekong Delta and the Montagnards of central Vietnam are [and have been] paying the price for simply being in the way of Vietnam's age-old, genetic expansion. Check out Cambodia's receding border line to find out! And where is the UN Special Rapporteur to Vietnam? Are these victims of Vietnamese abuses not human enough? Is this not state-driven ethnic cleansing or racialist ill-treatment of ethnic minorities in its most inhumane form?    

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Thu, 28 May 2015 ppp
Alice Cuddy and Phak Seangly

“If Cambodia doesn’t want the Montagnards to come, then [Prime Minister] Hun Sen needs to go to Hanoi and persuade the leaders there to change the abusive way they are treating the Montagnards.”

The number of Montagnard asylum seekers from Vietnam awaiting processing in Phnom Penh has jumped dramatically, with 67 now stuck in limbo, according to the United Nations.

Vivian Tan, a spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), said that 22 more ethnic Jarai Montagnards from Vietnam’s Central Highlands have arrived in the capital in the past two weeks, having fled alleged religious and political persecution.

But the asylum seekers – some of whom arrived in January – have been left in limbo, with the Interior Ministry’s refugee department apparently refusing to process their claims.

“We have alerted the authorities on these arrivals and received no explanation on the delay in registration,” Tan said yesterday.

“The Vietnamese police make up stories and accuse them [of being] a criminal . . . and arrest them easily,”

She added that UNHCR was unable to provide details about the new asylum seekers.

Khun Sambou, deputy head of the ministry’s General Department of Immigration, declined to comment yesterday.

Other government officials could not be reached.

Since October, well over 100 Christian Montagnards have travelled to Cambodia seeking refuge from alleged abuses.


Dozens have been arrested and deported, and, so far, just 13 have been granted provisional refugee status with the intention of resettling them in a third country.

In late April, 1,000 troops were stationed along the Vietnamese border in Ratanakkiri province to stop further arrivals.

But despite the risks, Rong Nay, executive director of the Montagnard Human Rights Organization, said the asylum seekers have no choice but to flee.

“The Vietnamese police make up stories and accuse them [of being] a criminal . . . and arrest them easily,” he said by email.

“The Montagnard Indigenous Peoples are the first occupants, the original peoples, and the rightful owners [of] the land of the Central Highlands. The land is the heart of the Montagnard people. If someone takes their land they will die. Today our land has been stolen and exploited by the government of Vietnam.”

An ethnic Jarai villager in Ratanakkiri, who has been assisting the asylum seekers, said more are waiting to cross.

“They are calling me, asking about the situation here and whether I can help them more or not. I said no, because soldiers are at the border. If I help them and it is successful, it is OK; but if it fails, I will be blamed,” he said.

The helper, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisals, added that, in addition to the 67 asylum seekers in Phnom Penh, more are still hiding out in the forest in Ratanakkiri.

Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia division, said continued abuses in Vietnam mean “it’s entirely natural that the number of asylum seekers will continue to rise”.

“If Cambodia doesn’t want the Montagnards to come, then [Prime Minister] Hun Sen needs to go to Hanoi and persuade the leaders there to change the abusive way they are treating the Montagnards.”

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The SCS [South China Sea] disputes should not be allowed to deflect the world community's attention from Hanoi's continuing rights violations and persecutions of indigenous peoples of Vietnam, whose existence it does not even recognize!
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Unfortunately in this cruel world it's all about interest... You want to extract the attention or seeking intervention about these 'suffering people'!? Fine, what do you have to offer back? What US or other superpowers gain if they help these people and bashing Vietnam which are at the forefront again China's hegemony over one of the most important Maritime of the world?

The world are ignoring these 'suffering people' (or are they really suffering would be another story?) just like how the entire world widely choose to ignore Cambodia genocide or siding with the genocidal Khmer Rogue.

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These peoples, including the ethnic Khmers of the Mekong Delta and the Montagnards of central Vietnam are [and have been] paying the price for simply being in the way of Vietnam's age-old, genetic expansion.
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They're paying the price for not strong enough to withstand the other power just like the Native American and many other people who was wiped out.

Also we can easily see the different between Vietnamese and these 'suffering people'. Vietnamese was and still are being oppress by almost all of the most powerful and aggressive superpowers in the history of mankind (naming China, Mongol, French, Japan, America and even British Empire). Yet Vietnamese tried to fight back and defeat the oppressors despite any cost and any odd which was the key for Vietnamese success, outside help are welcome but it's not permanent. For these 'suffering people' they just crying for outside help or ironically begging for another bad guy to bully the current bad guy

And once with basic knowledge of Vietnamese's history would probably realize almost all of their history was about resiting invaders not invading. Perhaps only some Cambodian Ultra Nationalist screaming about 'invading Vietnamese'.

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And where is the UN Special Rapporteur to Vietnam?
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They don't care or busying with something else maybe, they didn't show up when Khmer Rogue killed 1/4 of Cambodia's population anyway!

Anonymous said...

Vietnam is a Southeast Asian country on the South China Sea known for its beaches, rivers, Buddhist pagodas and bustling cities. Hanoi, the capital, pays homage to the nation’s iconic Communist-era leader, Ho Chi Minh, via a huge marble mausoleum. Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon) has French colonial landmarks, plus Vietnamese War history museums and the Củ Chi tunnels, used by Viet Cong soldiers.