Yorkshire Post

UK not as welcoming, says GP who came here in ’70s

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A VIETNAMESE migrant who fled her home country just after the Vietnam War before reaching the UK has said the public is “not as welcoming” to migrants today.

Yen Hoang Lam, 52, inset, a GP from Wallington, near Croydon, left Vietnam in the late 1970s aged five with her mother, father and younger twin brothers.

Ms Lam, who spent five years in Scotland before moving to England, said: “Five of us got on a rickety boat and I remember the fumes of petrol.

“One of my earliest memories is seeing my father cry, as he had to… sell everything to get money to get passage to Macau initially.”

Ms Lam’s father, Manh Hoang, is of Chinese heritage and part of Vietnam’s ethnic minority known as Hoa, a community which was exiled from Vietnam between 1978 and 1979.

She said her parents’ friends “all turned against them and people spied on them”, which prompted her family to flee via boat to Macau before settling in Hong Kong for a year.

At the time, the UK was among a list of countries accepting Vietnamese migrants, which Ms Lam’s father chose because “he felt the weather was the most temperate”.

The family were flown to Livingston, in Scotland, and Ms Lam said she was “very well received in the community”.

“The neighbours were kind and helpful and helped my parents out a lot. They helped them to learn to drive and supported them to settle into the community,” she said.

She recalls a time she was racially abused by some older pupils at her school, but said that was “the only occasion I ever had anything like this” after her headmaster punished the students.

She believes the UK public’s current perception of migrants is not the same as her experience more than 40 years ago.

“The public is not as accepting or welcoming now,” she said.

“The feeling towards migrants is very poor. In my time, people were very kind to us because it was new.

“I think there wasn’t as much bad feeling.”

A new exhibition curated by Voice ESEA, a non-profit organisati­on aiming to dispel discrimina­tion against the East and South East Asian (ESEA) community in the UK, will feature the history of the ESEA community in Britain, including another story about a Vietnamese family who fled their home country to the UK via boat.

Choon Young Tan, 35, head of events at Voice ESEA said the exhibition is designed to spotlight the “hidden” history of the British ESEA community.

He said: “It’s uncovering and showcasing British East and Southeast Asian history as far as the 1500s to now detailing our journeys coming from Southeast Asia and our struggles, for example, with racism and assimilati­on.

“But it also highlights our triumphs, showing how embedded we are into British history.”

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