The Phnom Penh Post

Calls for protection of refugees

- Khorn Savi

ASI A Pacific Refugee Rights Network (APRRN) chairman Arash Bordbar wrote an open letter to Minister of Interior Sar Kheng, urging the government to “safeg uard t he rights of a ll ref ugees inside its borders”.

In the letter that was posted on Monday on APRRN’s website, Bordbar particular­ly called for the protection of the “long-persecuted” Montagnard ethnic group, which comprises Christian minorities hailing from Vietnam’s Central Highlands.

Bordbar said most of the Montagnard­s “face severe persecutio­n in their home country of Vietnam”.

He said that returning Montagnard asylum seekers in Cambodia back to Vietnam would “place them in serious violations of their fundamenta­l human rights by the Vietnamese government”.

By repatriati­ng Montagnard asylum seekers to Vietnam, Bordbar continued, “Cambodia undermined its commitment to national and internatio­nal laws to protect the basic right of refugees”.

He was referring to the likes of SubDecree No 224/2009 on Procedure for Recognitio­n as a Refugee or Providing Asylum Rights to Foreigners in the Kingdom of Cambodia.

The sub-decree stipulates that a refugee “shall not be expelled or returned in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territorie­s where his or her life, freedom or rights would be threatened on account of his or her race, religion, nationalit­y, membership of a social group or particular political opinion”.

Moreover, Bordbar also reiterated that “Cambodia is a party to both the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and the United Nations Convention Against Torture”.

Under these convention­s, the Kingdom has “clear legal obligation­s not to return

individual­s to countries where they may be at risk of persecutio­n or torture”.

“We encourage Cambodia to adhere to their obligation­s,” the letter reads.

Four Montagnard asylum seekers were reportedly repatriate­d to Vietnam in mid-June, said the network.

Bordbar wrote: “This action created significan­t anxiety and fear among others in the Montagnard community that they too could be forced to return.”

Human rights observers reportedly said that the Montagnard­s faced all types of persecutio­n, including “intimidati­on, beatings, arbitrary arrest, prolonged detention and restrictio­ns on practising their religion, while some refugees who were sent to Vietnam from Cambodia have disappeare­d without any traces”.

On why Cambodia repatriate­d the Montagnard asylum seekers to Vietnam, government spokespers­on Phay Siphan said “the Kingdom did not interfere with other countries’ internal affairs”.

He reiterated that the Montagnard­s used to live in the mountainou­s areas and “were used by the US to fight against Vietnam’s communist government”.

Siphan also suggested that they did not seek asylum in other countries due to economic and freedom restrictio­ns, but rather because they were used as “political pawns in the US foreign policy”.

“Cambodia’s laws prohibit interferen­ce with the internal affairs of other countries, and the refugees are the responsibi­lity for the UN,” he told The Post on Wednesday.

Last year, a group of Montagnard refugees were reportedly granted asylum status by the US. They travelled across Cambodia to reach Thailand.

About 12,000 Montagnard­s live in the southern state of North Carolina in the US, the report said.

In March last year, Prime Minister Hun Sen said the Montagnard­s did not exist in Cambodia.

“We respect all minorities such as Jarai, Steang, Phnong, but we have never had Montagnard­s,” the prime minister said before supporters in Australia.

The APRRN is a network of 400 civil society organisati­ons and individual­s from 29 countries committed to advancing the rights of refugees across the region.

 ?? POSTPIX ?? A group of Montagnard­s in Teuk Thla communce in the capital’s Sen Sok district in 2015.
POSTPIX A group of Montagnard­s in Teuk Thla communce in the capital’s Sen Sok district in 2015.

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