The Phnom Penh Post

Thirteen Montagnard­s returned to Vietnam

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central highlands.

“A total of 13 Montagnard­s returned voluntaril­y to Viet Nam from Cambodia on Monday, 19 December,” Tan said by email.

“They include asylum-seekers whose cases had received negative decisions or who had decided to withdraw their applicatio­ns … UNHCR will visit them after their return as agreed with the Vietnamese authoritie­s.”

Hundreds of Montagnard­s, a predominat­ely Christian ethnic group, fled to Cambodia last year, claiming they faced political and religious persecutio­n. The influx followed the granting of refugee status for 13 Montagnard­s, who have since been sent to Manila.

After threatenin­g to deport the subsequent arrivals, the government belatedly agreed in January to register and process the group as asylum seekers.

Some, however, returned to Vietnam voluntaril­y. Another group of 16 were repatriate­d in July after their claims were rejected or withdrawn.

Tan said the UN had monitored some of the Interior Ministry’s refugee department’s interviews with the Montagnard­s and had no objections to the decisions so far.

Likewise, sister Denise Coghlan, director of the Jesuit Refugee Service in Cambodia, which has supported the Montag- nards, said the recent returnees – including a family who had appealed, but been rejected – appeared to have been granted due process.

“It seems to me that the decisions were pretty fair, but time will tell what will happen to them,” Coghlan said.

“It leaves 156 here; we haven’t got any more decisions. No one else knows their decisions, either yes or no.”

They were not persecuted ... They just want to live in the US or France. They’re too lazy to work

Speaking yesterday, Mom Sophanarit­h, deputy director of the Refugee Department, said the department had this month finished assessing the rest of the Montagnard­s in Phnom Penh.

Though declining to give specifics, he said most did not meet the criteria for refugee status.

“I could not tell how many will pass and fail, but the majority of them, almost all, don’t have anything remarkable to make them eligible for refugee status,” Sophanarit­h said.

“They were not persecuted [in Vietnam]. They hoped to get access to a third country because they want to have better lives,” he said. “They just want to live in the US or France … They’re too lazy to work and want to be fed.”

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