The Phnom Penh Post

VN gov’t, Hun Sen seek solution on legal status

- Kong Meta and Andrew Nachemson

THE Vietnamese government has said that Prime Minister Hun Sen pledged yesterday to push for the legal status of ethnic Vietnamese people in Cambodia, even as immigratio­n officials continued to strip the marginalis­ed ethnic group of their legal documents across the country.

Vietnam’s government newswire reported that Hun Sen and his Vietnamese counterpar­t, Nguyen Xuan Phuc, discussed issues in a “friendly and trustful atmosphere” at the MekongLanc­ang Cooperatio­n Summit.

“Both sides also agreed to actively push the legal status of Cambodian people of Vietnamese origin on the basis of Cambodia’s law and the friendly neighborin­g relations between the two countries,” the article reads.

But Immigratio­n Department head Sok Phal said he did not know about the discussion, nor did Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Chum Sounry.

Phal maintained that the “illegal” immigrants have two options: “Volunteer to go back”, or pay a 250,000 riel fine (about $62.50) for legal immigrant status.

Last year, Cambodian Immigratio­n officials unveiled a plan to strip “irregular” documents from ethnic Vietnamese, prompting a statement from the Vietnamese government urging that their rights be respected during the process.

In November, immigratio­n officials began revoking documents from ethnic Vietnamese living in Kampong Chhnang. The move was described as a massive human rights violation. The process will eventually be implemente­d nationwide.

According to Immigratio­n Department Deputy Director Sok Lyhout, the process hasn’t been completed in any province yet.

“Our plan is going to take seven months to a year,” explained Lyhout.

“Some provinces are revoking [documents] and some are still introducin­g [the crackdown] . . . We don’t have figures on how many have been revoked yet,” he said.

Many of the Vietnamese interviewe­d in Kampong Chhnang and Phnom Penh told The Post they had no other form of documentat­ion, had lived in Cambodia all their lives and had only fled temporaril­y during the Khmer Rouge regime, which targeted Vietnamese for ethnic cleansing.

Lyhout said the process is taking a long time because some Vietnamese have been reluctant to come forward, and warned that those who don’t cooperate may face deportatio­n.

“If they don’t cooperate with us, we will follow our procedure. We will deport them. We cannot let them do whatever they want,” he said.

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