The Phnom Penh Post

French responsibl­e for Viet migration, says PM

- Vong Sokheng

PRIME Minister Hun Sen said yesterday he was not responsibl­e for the presence of Vietnamese people in Cambodia, explaining that many immigrants put down roots here after the French colonial authoritie­s brought them in to work on their rubber plantation­s.

A fluent speaker of Vietnamese, Hun Sen was installed in power during Vietnam’s occupation of the country in 1985 and has battled claims of subservien­ce to the country’s historical enemy, including turning a blind eye to rampant illegal immigratio­n.

During a speech in Tbong Khmum province, which borders Vietnam and has long had one of the country’s highest concentrat­ions of rubber fields, Hun Sen called on younger generation­s to educate themselves on the history of migrations from Vietnam.

“The Vietnamese people did not come and live in Cambodia during the present time; the French brought them here,” Hun Sen said after officially unveiling a new paved road in the newest province.

“They insult only me, the younger generation, [but] the Vietnamese people were brought here by the French to tap the rubber trees, and 70 percent of the tappers were Vietnamese,” the premier continued. “As they do not know the history, they curse only me, the younger generation. Be careful about bad karma.”

Hun Sen’s historical connection to the Vietnamese government and the apparent ease with which immigrants from Vietnam have been able to settle in Cambodia under his reign have long served as one of the opposition’s most effective talking points.

The weekend death of former prime minister Pen Sovann – who Vietnam removed from power in 1981 after he reportedly opposed it on a number of issues, including migration – has also renewed commentari­es on Hun Sen’s relationsh­ip with Vietnam.

Since the Cambodia National Rescue Party’s surprise gains at the 2013 election, Hun Sen’s government has also carried out a high-profile campaign to arrest and deport Vietnamese people living and working in Cambodia without proper documents.

Sok Phal, director of the Interior Ministry’s general department of immigratio­n, which has led much of the deportatio­n campaign, declined to comment on Hun Sen’s remarks yesterday. However, in October last year, he said that he believed there were 160,000 illegal Vietnamese people living in Cambodia.

Yet estimates from the opposition, which has itself come under fire for attempting to stoke racial tensions for electoral benefits, have at times been much higher, reaching to the hundreds of thousands.

The issue remains emotional for many Cambodians because the country’s loss of sovereign control of most of southern Vietnam was preceded by largescale immigratio­n from the north. Many fear that Vietnam still has designs to take the rest of Cambodia.

However, many ethnic Vietnamese in Cambodia were born here, with families going back generation­s. Many have lived on rivers for decades to skirt laws on foreigners buying real estate and do not have citizenshi­p in either Cambodia or Vietnam.

CNRP spokesman Yem Ponhearith said that the time period that any illegal immigrants living in Cambodia arrived was less important than ensuring immigratio­n laws are enforced, and that he hoped the government would continue with its deportatio­n program.

“Our country has laws on immigratio­n and nationalit­y, and the government has implemente­d some – for example, by deporting illegal Vietnamese immigrants back to Vietnam,” Ponhearith explained. “We will continue to urge for further implementa­tion.”

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Prime Minister Hun Sen offered locals an impromptu history lesson at an event in Tbong Khmum province yesterday.
FACEBOOK Prime Minister Hun Sen offered locals an impromptu history lesson at an event in Tbong Khmum province yesterday.

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