Montagnards given three-month deadline
Sat, 12 September 2015 ppp
Shaun Turton
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Six Montagnards pose for a photo in Ratanakkiri in January. ADHOC |
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School of Vice:
Will Hanoi and Phnom Penh be as keen and tough on repatriating the
thousands of illegal Vietnamese migrants floating on the waters of Kg
Chhnang and Tonle Sap, and/or settling within the exclusive "Economic Land
Concessions" zones?
***
The
government has set a three-month deadline for Montagnards in Phnom Penh
to return home or face being forcibly expelled to Vietnam by
authorities, an Interior Ministry official said yesterday.
Interior
Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
has asked the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to
assist in repatriating the more than 200 members of the ethnic minority
in the capital to their homes in Vietnam’s central highlands before the
three-month deadline expired.
Sopheak
dismissed a recent Human Rights Watch report that stated the
highlanders faced systematic religious and political persecution in
Vietnam, saying Vietnam had “an open door”.
He
said the 13 Montagnards granted provincial refugee status in March
after being escorted to the capital by the UN, were not the same as the
scores who came to Cambodia in their wake, who he classed as economic
migrants.
“After
the 13 have been recognised by the government, other Montagnards came
to Cambodia and they illegally settled in Phnom Penh with assistance. I
can [call this] trafficking in persons,” Sopheak said.
“Nearly
100 of them are living in the suburban area of Phnom Penh, so we have
informed the UNHCR to help them to go back to their home towns within
three months after [the UNHCR] receive the notice from the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs.
“So
after three months, if those illegal immigrants have not gone back to
their hometowns in Vietnam, the authorities of Cambodia will be
implementing the immigration law of Cambodia. We will force them to go
back by law.”
Rights
groups have criticised the government – which has already deported
dozens of Montagnards– for refusing to register those in the capital as
asylum seekers while at the same time accepting refugees under a $A40
million resettlement deal with Australia.
Via
email, Denise Coghlan, director of the Jesuit Refugee Service in
Cambodia, said some of the Montagnards in Phnom Penh had suffered
imprisonment and beatings by Vietnamese authorities, while many had been
forced to sign documents promising not to practice their Christian
religion.
“Cambodia
must agree to register them and assess their cases,” she said, calling
the impending crackdown a breach of Cambodia’s obligations under the UN
Refugee Convention.
“[The] UNHCR will surely condemn this gross violation of the Refugee Convention.”
Wan-Hea
Lee, country representative for the UN’s Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights, added: “I have no doubt that, given the
relative care being given to those refugees being brought from Nauru,
the government fully understands its international obligations to
provide individual consideration to all persons claiming asylum.” The
UNHCR did not respond by press time.
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