UN Special Rapporteur Rhona Smith (right) speaks at a press conference in Phnom Penh today. Ananth Baliga |
Breaking: Cambodia uncooperative in relocating Montagnard asylum seekers, says UN envoy
Phnom Penh Post | 18 August 2017
The United Nations is trying to relocate 36 Montagnard refugees
with serious asylum claims to a third country, but the Cambodian
government has so far failed to cooperate, a UN rights envoy to Cambodia
revealed today.
The disclosure comes a day after it came to light that a Montagnard –
a member of a mostly Christian ethnic minority from Vietnam’s central
highlands – was set to be forcibly deported after his asylum claim was rejected by the Cambodian government.
“I am concerned about the situation of 36 Montagnards whom UNHCR [the
UN refugee body] has offered to find a solution outside of Cambodia
based on the seriousness of their asylum claims,” UN Special Rapporteur
Rhona Smith said on Friday in a press statement at the end of her
two-week mission in Cambodia.
“The Government of Cambodia has to date not agreed to facilitate their transit to a safe third country.”
“I ask the Government of Cambodia to liaise with UNHCR to ensure that
the 36 Montagnards in need of international protection as refugees will
not be returned to Vietnam.”
The asylum seeker issue was just one of several human rights concerns raised in her end-of-visit statement.
In an interview today, Smith said both the government and UNHCR had
determined those 36 were “in need of protection”, and she had taken the
matter up with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
“If Cambodia cannot be a safe place of refuge then the government
should work with UNHCR to ensure that they can be transited to a third
safe country and settle there. The Minister took note of what I was
saying,” she said.
Spokesmen at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and at the government’s
refugee department could not be immediately reached for comment.
Since 2014, a wave of more than 200 Montagnards have fled to Cambodia
claiming persecution by Vietnamese authorities. Of those, the vast
majority have been “voluntarily” returned to Vietnam with the assistance
of the UNCHR – although some Montagnards and refugee advocates have
called into question how voluntary the process is. The insistence that
such repatriations are voluntary was further undermined by yesterday’s
news that one asylum seeker was set to be forcibly deported after
refusing to return upon his claim being rejected.
Earlier this week, it was revealed Vietnamese authorities had visited
the families of Montagnard asylum seekers in Vietnam, allegedly forcing
them to write letters beckoning their loved ones back home.
“If the Montagnards who have been returned or have voluntarily
returned to Vietnam are being persecuted, then obviously that is a
problem,” Smith said on Friday, urging any who had a persecution case
that fulfilled the requirements of the UN refugee convention to seek
asylum in another country.
Thirteen Montagnards were recognised as refugees and sent to the
Philippines last year. Fifty more, however, fearing an upcoming
rejection of their claims, fled to Thailand earlier this year.
Only three others have been granted refugee status, and an estimated 38 remain in Cambodia to date.
The UNHCR did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but
yesterday spokesperson Vivian Tan said the organisation is “working with
the authorities to ensure that those who need international protection
receive it”.
“UNHCR firmly believes that no refugee or asylum-seeker should be
pressured to return against their will. As such we have raised our
concerns with the Cambodian authorities over the reported home visits in
Viet Nam,” she said in an email yesterday.
With all of the fake development and fake economic rise from the properties development, the Cambodian poor still lack real paying jobs. When the LDC (least developed country) status is gone, the Cambodian poor will suffer even more since their products cannot sell well without the tax exempt.
ReplyDeleteWhat Cambodia really needs are real development such as the smartphone plants from South Korea. These jobs pay very well, 5 times as much as the garment jobs. Cambodia must cut back the properties development which no Cambodians can really buy. Only the rich foreigners can buy these properties.
The statement, "... his asylum claim was rejected by the Cambodian government. " Actually, current Cambodian government under Hun Sen's CPP regime is not real because CPP's Cambodian Government is of many of top secret Yuon/Vietcong agents in CPP controlling its government. So, Cambodian Government is owned by the secret top officials from evil Yuon Hanoi and Hun Sen has no authority or power, but he was told by his Vietcong master that Hun Sen rejected Montagnard – a member of a mostly Christian ethnic minority from Vietnam’s central highlands and deported them to Vietnam. Hun Sen is so far a scapegoat because Vietnamese secret top officials in Cambodian Government rejected them.
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