[Background / related]
...
CPP, CNRP Diverge Over Leniency for Immigrants
Cambodia Daily | 22 August 2016
Announcing that more than 160,000 immigrants are living in Cambodia
without proper documentation, the Interior Ministry on Friday said it
would give the majority of the group an opportunity to stay in the
country, while the opposition pushed for a blanket deportation.
The
positions put forward by the ruling CPP, long criticized for weak
enforcement of immigration laws, and the opposition CNRP, often accused
of race-baiting for blaming social ills on Vietnamese people living in
the country, come about a week before registration is set to begin for
next year’s commune elections.
Launching a report on illegal
immigrants, Sok Phal, head of the Interior Ministry’s general
immigration department, told reporters that 160,000 foreign
residents—mostly Vietnamese—were missing at least some of the
documentation necessary to live in the country. But he said that most
would be given a path to legal residency, if not full citizenship.
“We have divided them into types of foreign immigrants,” he said of those identified during a government census that was about 85 percent complete, adding that there were three categories of immigrants whose paperwork was incomplete.
The first group are those who have
documents showing that they had lived in the country since at least the
1970s, the second are people who have documents from local officials
allowing them to live in the country and the third are people with no
documentation whatsoever.
“What is going to happen with those whom
we have announced will be rejected in the near future?” General Phal
said, referring to those who did not have full documentation.
“First,
if they have no documents, they can voluntarily go to their original
country. Second, if they have lived here for a long time—for example, if
they have lived here for 30 years—they can submit applications as
immigrants to stay for seven years for adults and three years for
children. And if they volunteer to apply for citizenship, we will review
those according to procedure,” he said.
Gen. Phal said a
hard-line response would only be taken against those who never obtained
any documents upon entering the country.
“The third group, who
have entered our country without documents, we have to detain them and
send them back to their original country,” he said. “For those with
improper documents, we have to deny [their existing documents] and give
them time.”
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann, however, said foreigners
found to be living in the country without full documentation, including a
royal decree confirming their citizenship, should be sent to their home
country right away, in line with the law.
“If they do not have
the proper documents, it means they are living here illegally; they
should go back to their country,” Mr. Sovann said, adding that Cambodia
could not afford a more tolerant process—such as that in force in the
U.S.—that would allow for some illegal immigrants to apply to stay in
the country.
“They are a rich country,” he said. “We are a very
poor country. We have to go outside our country to find work, so it is a
very different situation.”
The opposition also announced after a
workshop at its Phnom Penh headquarters on Thursday that it would be
deploying observers to voter registration centers in the coming weeks to
ensure that only those with proper documentation were being signed up
to vote.
“The party will prepare observers at the voter
registration office to monitor the process of registration and will file
complaints about irregularities, including any foreigners that use the
Khmer identity to illegally register,” the CNRP said in a statement.
Mr.
Sovann said the party’s position toward immigrants and plans for
monitoring voter registration were not meant to specifically target
Vietnamese immigrants.
“We are talking about the law. We don’t discriminate against anybody,” he said.
“In
every country you can see a lot of problems about the border,” he said,
noting that the government also sent a stern letter to Vietnam last
week over various border incursions. “We have to be careful about
defending our country.”
In that diplomatic complaint from
Cambodia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs to its counterpart in Vietnam,
the government recounts numerous cases of Vietnam violating border
agreements between the countries.
The letter lists incursions
including Vietnam digging irrigation ponds and constructing a road in
Ratanakkiri province, building government or military offices in
Mondolkiri and Kandal provinces, and building a road in Svay Rieng
province and a border gate in Takeo province. The letter refers to
various diplomatic notes dating to 2010.
“Through the spirit and
meaning of notes and letters mentioned above, the Royal Government of
Cambodia has requested that the Socialist Republic of Vietnam please
reaffirm that it has halted building activity immediately,” says the
letter, which comes before a meeting of the countries’ Joint Border
Committee next week.
“Take measures to prohibit people from
Vietnam to come to farm or do any activity at the border area that has
not been” fully demarcated, it continues, adding that the countries are
preparing a joint request for France to help resolve outstanding border
disputes.
CNRP lawmaker Mao Monyvann said he believed resolving the border disputes through diplomatic notes had already proven futile.
“We
have seen the Cambodian government has sent lots of diplomatic notes on
violations along the border, but has yet to get any positive results,”
he said.
“It is time to find an arbitrator such as the U.N. and
International Court of Justice or a third country because Cambodia is a
small country, and is weak economically and militarily.”
No comments:
Post a Comment