The Phnom Penh Post

VN refugees flee from Cambodia

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“mountain people” as they were named by the French colonialis­ts – arrived in Cambodia in late 2014 and 2015 from Vietnam’s Central Highlands, where the group has long complained of religious and political persecutio­n by communist authoritie­s and in decades past.

Reached yesterday by phone, one of the Montagnard­s who fled, a 27-year-old, said about 50 Montagnard­s had made it to Thailand in several separate groups. He said he left by car with five other people and spent two nights near the border before paying a broker $50 to get across during the night.

“We were absolutely terrified, but it would be much worse than that if we were sent back to Vietnam. They will arrest, jail or kill us” he said, speaking his native language of Jarai through a translator.

He said his group had made contact with Montagnard­s in Thailand before fleeing and added he was now with 14 runaways staying in a rental house and trying to make contact with the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees to apply for asylum. The UNHCR could not be reached for comment yesterday.

“We dare not go anywhere so we are not arrested; we just stay inside the home,” he said.

Though an initial group of 13 from the 200 who fled in 2014 and 2015 was granted refugee status – and flown to the Philippine­s in May where they are seeking asylum in a third country – most spent months in limbo before being registered as asylum seekers in January last year. The Post has been told there are now 96 Montagnard­s left in United Nations-supported accommodat­ion in the capital’s Por Sen Chey district, where immigratio­n officers have increased their presence since the mass departure.

According to a source with knowledge of the situation, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivit­y surroundin­g the exodus, police have now restricted the group’s movement.

“Before they were allowed to go out and they could play football. After the other group fled they are not allowed to go out a lot; just to buy food or go to the market for 10 to 15 minutes,” said the source. “They are all concerned that they will be rejected and taken back to Vietnam.”

Yesterday, at least four Cambodian officials, who were not in uniform, but were obviously there for security, occupied a table in front of the building while a vehicle from the Department of Immigratio­n was parked nearby. One official, who appeared to be in charge, directed questions to the Interior Ministry and refused to identify himself, saying: “You have no right to ask my name.”

Yesterday, Sovichea, of the refugee department, said he had “no informatio­n” on the fate of those who fled, but said it was “not a problem” for the Cambodian government and denied there was any pressure from Vietnam to send them back.

He said only 20 or 30 of the group were yet to receive a decision and noted some of those rejected had appealed their rejections. He said only three were being considered for asylum.

“Only three of them will hopefully be recognised as refugees,” Sovichea said. “The department has evaluated them and made a letter to the superiors to sign to agree and they will get it back within the next two weeks.”

Sovichea said the rest would be voluntaril­y repatriate­d to Vietnam with assistance from the UNHCR, as has been the case with other individual­s rejected, including six who were sent back on March 14.

He added that authoritie­s had intended last month to send back 10 people, but four refused at the last minute to leave and were later among those who fled.

The Montagnard speaking from Thailand claimed one of the recent returnees to Vietnam had been harassed by police upon arriving and “slapped in the face” for not answering questions about fleeing to Cambodia, though The Post could not independen­tly verify this.The asylum seeker said he had crossed the border into Cambodia’s Ratanakkir­i province in 2015 after being detained for two days by Vietnamese authoritie­s who he said had also “tortured” his brother and jailed his brother-in-law, whom he said died in prison.

“[In Vietnam] we were persecuted, not allowed to gather, pray or celebrate Christmas. Particular­ly we were afraid of arrest by the authoritie­s, so we fled to Cambodia but they did not grant us refugee status so we came here because we are frightened of repatriati­on to Vietnam.”

 ?? POST STAFF ?? Police vehicles sit outside a house where Montagnard asylum seekers are housed in Phnom Penh.
POST STAFF Police vehicles sit outside a house where Montagnard asylum seekers are housed in Phnom Penh.
 ?? TURTON SHAUN ?? A Montagnard in Phnom Penh’s Por Sen Chey district holds up photos of a Montagnard’s funeral inside a Vietnamese prison last year.
TURTON SHAUN A Montagnard in Phnom Penh’s Por Sen Chey district holds up photos of a Montagnard’s funeral inside a Vietnamese prison last year.

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