Cambodia: Refugee protection in crisis
News Release Issued by
the International Secretariat of Amnesty International
AI INDEX: ASA 23/003/2004 20 May 2004
Amnesty International is gravely concerned at the continuing forced return or
refoulement of Vietnamese asylum-seekers, known as Montagnards, who are fleeing
the Central Highlands region of Viet Nam in the face of well-documented
persecution.
Despite repeated calls from the international community including the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Cambodian authorities are
routinely forcibly returning Montagnard asylum-seekers. Most recently a group
of approximately 80 people are reported to have been returned to Viet Nam in
early May.
"It is particularly shocking to learn of allegations of rape of several
female asylum-seekers in this group and robbery of others allegedly perpetrated
by members of the Cambodian police prior to their forced return. The Cambodian
authorities should immediately conduct an investigation into these allegations
and bring any guilty persons to justice" Amnesty International said.
Amnesty International is worried at recent statements by the Cambodian Foreign
Ministry that Montagnards arriving from Viet Nam are not regarded as
asylum-seekers but illegal economic migrants.
"The Cambodian authorities are redefining, for their own purposes, the
definition of a refugee as set out in the 1951 Convention in blatant disregard
of international legal standards" continued Amnesty International.
Allegations by the Cambodian authorities that UNHCR has "violated
Cambodian sovereignty" reveal a misunderstanding of both the concept of
sovereignty and the mandate of the UN refugee agency. State sovereignty carries
both rights and obligations, not least of which are those taken on when an
international treaty is signed and ratified. UNHCR's mandate in Cambodia is
precisely to assist the authorities to deliver on their obligations under the
Refugee Convention.
Amnesty International is aware of the on-going discussions between the
Cambodian authorities and UNHCR regarding the modalities of refugee and
asylum-seeker protection in Cambodia. However, regardless of this and any
dispute between the Cambodian authorities and UNHCR, Cambodia's legal
obligations under the 1951 Refugee Convention to which Cambodia is a state
party continue to apply. Article 33.1 of the Refugee Convention states: no
Contracting State shall expel or return ("refouler" ) a refugee in
any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom
would be threatened on account of his race, religion, nationality, membership
of a particular social group or political opinion.
Amnesty International stresses that the international community also has a
responsibility to help Cambodia meet its obligations under the Refugee
Convention ensuring protection of both asylum-seekers and refugees. "More
pressure must be brought to bear on the Vietnamese authorities to address, in
an open and transparent manner, the underlying reasons for a crisis that is not
of Cambodia's making" said Amnesty International. "It is vital that
refugee protection is respected in Cambodia, one of the few countries in the
region that has signed the Refugee Convention".
Amnesty International calls upon the Cambodian authorities to provide
protection, and if necessary, safe passage to a third country for Montagnard
refugees from Viet Nam in the same way that the international community
provided protection to Cambodians fleeing abuses by the Khmer Rouge in the dark
days of Cambodia's recent past.
Background
In February 2001, thousands of people from indigenous minorities held protests
in the Vietnamese Central Highlands focussing on a number of grievances
including government confiscation of their ancestral homelands, an influx of
lowland Vietnamese settlers taking their agricultural land, lack of freedom of
worship for the many who are members of the unauthorized evangelical Protestant
churches and denial of basic rights including education in native languages.
Following a Vietnamese government crackdown after the 2001 protests, thousands
of Montagnards fled Viet Nam to seek asylum in neighbouring Cambodia. An
initial group of approximately 1,000 were resettled in the United States in
2002 and 2003. Further protests in April 2004 met with disproportionate and
brutal force by Vietnamese security officials. Amnesty International has
documented the deaths of at least eight people but fears the numbers could be
much higher. In addition, hundreds of protesters were reportedly wounded.
Montagnard asylum seekers continue to try and flee Viet Nam to Cambodia and
there have been numerous reports of the forcible repatriation or refoulement of
hundreds of people including women and children. Those returned to Viet Nam
face possible torture and long periods of imprisonment after trials held in
secret.
Visit Amnesty International's dedicated refugee pages at
http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maacgWfaa62flbergKub/
View all documents on Cambodia at http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maacgWfaa62fmbergKub/