Nowhere to call home
Sok* doesn’t know if he’s Cambodian or yuon. The 30-year-old,
who has been an undocumented immigrant his entire adult life, speaks the
Khmer Krom dialect, which sounds similar to Vietnamese and contains
loanwords. It has brought him abuse on both sides of the border.
“I’m not clear for myself – am I Khmer or youn? Because of rhetorical attacks like that, I’m not clear about my identity.”
Despite being an ethnic Khmer living in Cambodia, Sok carries no
identity papers and is fearful of being deported if caught. He said that
if he returned to his home in Vietnam’s Soc Trang province (or Khleang,
as Khmers call it), he would likely be arrested due to his father’s
political activism, while life in Thailand, where he has spent the past
decade working illegally at night, has become unbearable due to the
frequent risk of arrest. His best option now, he said, is to blend into
the background in Cambodia.
“I think there is not much expectation or hope in my life, if the
Cambodian government does not change, does not respect or protect our
rights,” he said.
Sok is a member of the Khmer Krom (literally “lower Khmer”)
community, whose descendents first settled the Mekong Delta region
(which is known by Cambodians as Kampuchea Krom, or “lower Cambodia”)
while it was still Cambodian territory in the years of the Khmer Empire.
Although the Vietnamese became the dominant ethnic group in the region
centuries ago, the Khmer population retained its culture and numbers.
The Vietnamese government’s official data puts the number of Khmer Krom
at 1,260,640, but the Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation, an international
Khmer Krom advocacy network, estimates the population to be around
seven million.
Culturally, the Khmer Krom are very similar to their northern
relations. Although they are taught the Vietnamese language at school,
they speak Khmer within their communities and observe all the major
Cambodian holidays. Since Theravada Buddhism, the religion of almost all
Khmers worldwide including the Khmer Krom, is not traditional among
ethnic Vietnamese, religion is a central cultural signifier for the
group.
While the Vietnamese government maintains that it respects the rights
of its Khmer minority to retain its culture, Khmer Krom migrants in
Cambodia complain that the transmission of their traditions, history and
religious practices are under attack by a state that seeks to impose
ethnic hegemony upon minorities. In Cambodia, where local activists
guess that more than a million Khmer Krom live, Khmer migrants from
Vietnam often struggle to get identity cards. The Cambodian government
is also accused of extraditing Khmer Krom activists to Vietnam to face
prosecution under the country’s harsh restrictions on political
activism.
Sreang Sovanna, a Khmer Krom monk from Soc Trang province, said that
the Vietnamese government targets the local Khmer community by cracking
down on education.
“Vietnam doesn’t want Khmer Krom to study their culture, their
traditions, or anything else that Khmer Krom want to do,” said Sovanna,
who is the head monk at Wat Samaki Rangsei, which is home to 57 Khmer
Krom monks, in Phnom Penh’s Stung Meanchey district.
Sovanna said that with all public education provided in Vietnamese,
Khmer Krom students must attend private lessons in pagodas to learn
about their own language and culture. While Khmer language instruction
is allowed in the pagodas, Sovanna said that the government has sent
teachers to prison for teaching history and politics lessons. Part of
his work is to help provide lesson materials to illegal Khmer Krom
teachers in Vietnam.
Activists say that Cambodia’s treatment of Khmer Krom is also dismal,
with authorities sometimes denying migrants identity cards on the
grounds they are Vietnamese, and sending those who have been involved in
activism back to Vietnam to stand trial.
“They always said that they welcome and consider the Khmer Krom as
Khmer, but in practice they never comply with their word,” said Ang
Chanrith of the Minority Rights Organisation, a local NGO that promotes
the human rights of Khmer Krom and ethnic Vietnamese living in Cambodia.
Phay Siphan, a spokesman for the Council of Ministers, said that
Cambodia does not allow anyone to use its territory to interfere in the
internal affairs of other nations.
“We will not allow Cambodians to attack any [country], so if they do it, it will be in the courts,” he said.
“Not just Vietnam, anyone against any nation.”
The origins of the Khmer Krom in Vietnam may also serve as a
hindrance to their acceptance in Cambodia. Son Chum Chuon, program
officer at the Khmer Kampuchea Krom for Human Rights and Development
Association (KKKHRDA), said that many provincial authorities lump the
Khmer Krom immigrants, who have the right to live in Cambodia under the
Kingdom’s nationality laws, with ethnic Vietnamese migrants.
“Most [Khmer Krom] can have [identity cards], but for some who live
in the provinces, it is difficult to get the ID card or family book
because some of the local authority consider them Vietnamese people –
illegal immigrants in Cambodia,” said Choun.
One of the most famous cases of a Khmer Krom being expelled is
Venerable Tim Sakhorn, a Khmer Krom activist who was arrested and
defrocked in Cambodia in June 2007 before being deported and jailed for a
year in Vietnam on charges of undermining its national unity. The case
still scares Sok, who cited the activist’s fate as a reason to keep a
low profile.
“I don’t know anyone or trust anyone here in Cambodia, especially because of Tim Sakhorn,” he said.
While Sok said he is not personally involved in Khmer Krom rights
campaigning, he fled from Vietnam with his family in 2001 after the
authorities tried to arrest his father for his activism, although Sok
said he cannot remember exactly what his father did.
His father was arrested in Banteay Meanchey in 2003 and given
conditional release in November after he signed a statement promising to
discontinue his political activities. The family took no chances,
however, and fled to Thailand where they sought refugee status from the
United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC).
Although Sok said his family was convinced that they would be unsafe
in both Vietnam and Cambodia, UNHRC rejected their petition on the
grounds that Cambodia’s nationality laws grant citizenship to Khmer
Krom.
“They told my father ‘you are Khmer, you have problems only in
Vietnam. So you can go back to live in Cambodia safely’,” adding that
UNHRC drastically misunderstands the plight of many in Cambodia’s Khmer
Krom population. Didian Tan, UNHRC press officer at the Bangkok office,
said that she could not comment on the Khmer Krom refugee claims other
than to say that the review team strives for fairness.
“We cannot comment on individual cases or groups, but in general we
do thorough assessments and do thorough interviews, and try to be as
fair as possible,” she said.
Thanch Khan, a 33-year-old Khmer Krom monk and activist who lives at
Wat Samaki Rangsei with Sovanna, also had his UNHRC petition declined in
2010 on similar grounds.
“I don’t feel safe in Cambodia. We have a lot of spies who monitor
our activities, so that’s the reason I wanted to go to Thailand,” said
Khan. Sovanna said that the Wat Samaki Rangsei monks, around half of
which live in the Kingdom illegally, are of particular concern to
Vietnam.
“They are afraid that many of the monks can be leaders or
representatives of the Khmer Krom, because the monks can promote their
history to the Khmer Krom and make them stand up to fight with the
Vietnamese authority,” said Sovanna. The Vietnamese have called me their
biggest enemy,” he added. Ly Chhoun, a Khmer Krom journalist with
Cambodian citizenship who runs the quarterly Khmer Krom newspaper Prey
Nokor from his house in Stung Meanchey, said that he agreed to make
regular reports to Vietnamese intelligence agents after he was
approached during a visit to Vietnam two years ago.
“The Vietnamese authorities thought that I was a person who knows
about every situation in Cambodia, so when I went back to Vietnam, they
asked me to make a report about my activities in Phnom Penh,” said
Chhoun, adding that he initially agreed to file reports after
intelligence agents promised to improve his relatives’ living conditions
back in Vietnam.
“The Vietnamese authorities forced me to do it, and if I did not say
yes they would not have allowed me to come back to Cambodia,” he said,
adding that he feared that noncompliance would probably result in
retribution against his family.
But Chhoun said that he has only filed reports containing unremarkable information.
He added that his poor performance in the eyes of the agents led him
to being detained for 48 hours, deported and banned when he returned to
Vietnam last year. His nephew was also fired from the Vietnamese
military police because of this.
Chhoun said that he still regularly receives requests for
intelligence reports from a Vietnamese deputy provincial military police
chief in Bac Lieu province. Most of the questions these days, said
Chhoun, relate to the activities of the opposition Cambodia National
Rescue Party (CNRP), which publically supports the Khmer Krom’s quest
for legitimacy and considers Cambodia’s warm relations with Hanoi a
major cause of concern.
The party has been accused of resorting to racist rhetoric over the
issue, with UN human rights envoy Surya Subedi telling reporters last
month that he was “alarmed” by anti-Vietnamese statements made at CNRP
rallies, although he added that opposition leaders had told him that it
was not their intention to provoke racism or inequality.
Upon calling the number of Chhoun’s contact in Vietnam, which had the
calling code of Vietnamese mobile operator Vinaphone, the answerer
immediately hung up after being asked if he was the person identified by
Chhoun.
Chhoun said that he does his best to undermine the Vietnamese
government by running a team of five journalists across the border which
secretly files stories via the internet to the Phnom Penh office. Prey
Nokor newspaper, which is named after the ancient Khmer town that would
eventually become Ho Chi Minh City, is illegally distributed in Vietnam
both in print and online, although Chhoun said he is at a disadvantage
given that around half of the Khmer Krom population cannot read Khmer.
Although he is an accredited journalist in Cambodia, the Cambodian
government has twice sent him warning letters: once for criticising King
Norodom Sihamoni when he did not raise the Khmer Krom issue on a state
visit to Vietnam, and once for reporting on allegations that Ho Chi Minh
kept several mistresses.
“[Cambodia’s government] didn’t want people in Cambodia to defame or
damage the dignity of leaders of neighbouring countries,” said Chhuon on
his reporting of the dead Vietnamese leader, adding that he suspected
Vietnamese interference.
With Vietnam disregarding Khmer Krom human rights while Cambodia
behaves complicity, Sok said that he would go to any other country that
would legally allow him to work. But Sok added he would prefer to go
back to his birthplace in southern Vietnam, which he considers his home.
“If Cambodia and Vietnam both respected and provided everything to
us, I would decide to live in my homeland in Vietnam. Kampuchea Krom is
our homeland, so I would decide to go back to live there.”
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