Montagnards Elect To Return to Vietnam, Despite Quest For Asylum in Cambodia
2015-10-07 rfa
A van with Vietnamese Montagnards arrives in northeastern Cambodia's Ratanakri province, Oct. 7, 2015. |
wo
dozen ethnic Montagnard Christians who fled Vietnam earlier this year
to seek refuge in Cambodia from alleged persecution have volunteered to
return home, frustrated with long waits and the dim prospects of being
granted asylum, a police official and rights activist in northeastern
Cambodia said Wednesday.
Immigration
officers from the Cambodian Ministry of Interior escorted the 24
Montagnards as they were transported in four vans from Phnom Penh to
remote Ratanakiri province, where they had crossed the border from
Vietnam, provincial deputy police chief Chea Bunthoeun told RFA’s Khmer
Service.
The group reached the province around 6 p.m. and will cross the border back into Vietnam on Thursday, he said.
“They
volunteered to return,” he said, adding that he did not know the
identities of the members of the group. “They will sleep here one night,
and tomorrow morning we will send them back through an international
border checkpoint.”
Chhay
Thi, provincial coordinator for the domestic rights group Adhoc who is
monitoring the repatriation of the group, told RFA that he is concerned
about the fate of the Montagnards.
The
Montagnards decided to return to Vietnam in disappointment with the
results of their asylum requests, because Cambodian immigration
officials always regard them as illegal refugees, he said.
“More
Montagnards will decide to go back because they have waited for about
one year, and they still haven’t gotten any decisions regarding their
requests for refugee status and to settle in a third country,” he said. “These failures are forcing them to return home.”
Chhay Thi said he did not have a chance to interview the Montagnards yet because of tight security.
At present, there are about 180 Montagnards still in Cambodia, only 13 of whom have been granted refugee status, he said.
In
July, a dozen other Montagnards who sought refugee status in Cambodia
willingly returned to their homes in Vietnam after Hanoi gave assurances
it would not punish or discriminate against them.
About
200 Montagnards have entered Cambodia illegally from Vietnam’s Central
Highlands since late last year, claiming they are fleeing political and
religious persecution in their home country.
Scores
of Montagnards have emerged from their jungle hideouts in Ratanakiri
province with the assurance of protection from the United Nation refugee
agency (UNHCR), which is helping them to gain asylum, but others have
been caught by local authorities and deported back to Vietnam.
Reported by Ratha Visal and Samean Yun for RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.
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