Update report and casualty list
MONTAGNARD FOUNDATION, INC.
Update of 18 April 2004. A week
after the first demonstration staged in Vietnam's Central Highlands on 10 April
2004 that triggered a bloody reaction of Vietnamese authorities, the region
remains sealed off. Hanoi denies any type of verification and assessment of the
situation and has not responded to the appeal issued by American and European
diplomats.
Human Rights Watch in its 14 April 2004 report on the crisis
stated: "The
human rights situation for Montagnards in the Central Highlands has plummeted
to a new low," said Brad Adams, executive director of the Asia Division of
Human Rights Watch. "Vietnam's policy of repression of Montagnard
Christians is only fueling the unrest."
Independent
reports estimate that the number of victims needs to be put in the hundreds and
that mass graves are being dug in secret places. At the same time, the ethnic
cleansing campaign is now targeting women and children, who are denied food and
forced to live in a region that is not only under martial law but that is also
being poisoned in some areas to force migration.
The
following report has been compiled on April 14, 2004, by the U.S.-based
Montagnard Foundation Inc. and is based on information received directly via
phone in conversations with people in the Central Highlands. On the basis of
the figures gathered by MFI, there is an immediate need for action to document
with photographic evidence taken from satellites the instances presented below,
as the dimensions of the repression are becoming of extraordinary proportions
and international concern according to the Geneva conventions on genocide.
DAKLAK
PROVINCE
On April
10, 2004 according to the eyewitnesses, Y-Nging Nie, who went into the city of
Buonmathuot with the group of demonstration and saw a large group of Vietnamese
soldiers mixed with police, Vietnamese civilians, students and criminal
prisoners (released by the police) who attacked the crowd with rifles,
machetes, knives, rocks, stones whatever they can have at that time. First, the
soldiers and police fired tear gas and electric guns into the crowd to weaken
them. He saw 6 people from his village
that were murdered in front of his eyes on the street of Pham Chu Trinh. Their
names are:
1. Y-Rit Nie, age 31, from the village of Buon Poc, district of
Cu Mgar, province of Daklak.
2. Y-Nguoi Adrong, age 22, from village of Buon Poc, district
of Cu Mgar, Province of Daklak.
3. Y-Hrah
Kbuor, age 20, from the village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, province of
Daklak.
4. Y-Rung Kbuor, age 25, from the village of Buon Poc,
distrtict Cu Mgar, province of Dak lak.
5. Y-Phuom Eban, age 16, from the village of Buon poc, district
of Cu Mgar, province of Dak lak.
6. Y-To Ayun, (age unknown) from village Buon Poc, district of
Cu Mgar, province of Dak lak.
The following are some of the names
of people who have been reported as missing:
1. Y-Piet Nie, age 29, from the village of Buon Jung, district
of Krong Pac, province of Daklak.
2. Y-Gum Nie, (age unknown), from village of Buon Jung,
district of Krong Pac, province of Daklak.
3. Y-Nut Nie, age 40, from the village of Buon Ecam, district
of Krong Ana, province of Daklak.
4. Y-Mut Nie, age 31, from the village of Buon Ea Sang,
district of Cu Mgar, province of Daklak.
5. Y-Jen Hwing, age 32, from the village of Buon Nie, district
of Cu Mgar, province of Daklak.
6. Y-Lo Nie, age 22, from the village of Buon Poc, district of
Cu Mgar, province of Daklak.
7. Y-Thien, (age unknown), from the village ofBuon Emap,
district of Cu Mgar, province of Daklak.
8. Y-Yoh Hwing, age 22, from the village of Buon Poc, district
of Cu Mgar, province of Daklak.
9. Y-Dung Hwing, age 19, from the village of Buon Poc, district
of Cu Mgar, province of Daklak.
10. Y-Ku
Nie, age 20, from the village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, province of
Daklak.
11. Y-Khat
nie, age 23, from the village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, province of
Daklak.
12. Y-Bo
Nie, age 18, from the village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, province of
Daklak.
13. Y-Dhin
Buon Ya, age 16, from village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, province of
DakLak.
14. Y-Then
Hwing, age 22, from the village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, province of
DakLak.
15. Y-Bhieo
Hwing, age 32, from the village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, province of
Daklak.
16. Y-Luen
Nie, age 37, from the village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, province of
DakLak.
17. H'minh
Ksor, age21, from the village of Buon Mgru, district of Cu Mgar, province of
Dak Lak.
18. H'Ruc
ksor, age 16, from the village of Buon Mgru, district of Cu Mgar, province of
DakLak.
19. H'Bhil
Nie, age 32, from the village of Buon Poc, district of Cu Mgar, provinve of
Daklak.
20. Y-Nai
Kbuor, age 28, from the village Buon Cuor knia, district of Buon Don, province
Dak lak.
21. Y-Liem
Hmok, (age u/k), from village Buon Cuor Knia, district Buon Don, province
Daklak.
Another eyewitness, a Degar student from a boarding school
walking home on April 11, 2004,
reported that the Vietnamese soldiers cleared up the dead bodies on the
street by using bulldozers and pilled them up on the side of the street. There were many bodies and some had no
cloths on; they were men, women and children. It was also reported to us by
other villagers that many trucks were carrying dead bodies out of the city to
be eventually picked up by helicopters.
Nobody knows where the government was taking the dead bodies and where
they will be buried or dumped. Local authorities as well as Vietnamese
civilians have threatened to exterminate all the Montagnards before they leave
the Central Highlands. The situation is
a humanitarian crisis and unless international action is taken many more
Montagnards will suffer and die. Some of the current human rights abuses
include the following:
q
The government locked
up in the hospital all the Degars who have been seriously injured with broken
legs, arms and heads, doctors refuse to treat them. Their life is in danger.
q
In Daklak province,
especially, some of the Vietnamese who have been in the Central Highlands since
1957, said that they saw 4 government big trucks driving into Degar villages
close by and arresting many Degar villagers taking them away. Their life is in
danger.
q
Since the
demonstrations happened, Vietnamese settlers in the Central Highlands have
forced their way into Degar villages murdering indigenous people, while they
were asleep, throwing their bodies in the rivers nearby. These events took place in the district of
Cu Jut and district of Dak Mil in the province of Daklak.
q
Government
representatives and Vietnamese civilians refused to sell food to our people
worsening the situation for thousands of people who might die of starvation.
q
There are reports of
Vietnamese government and civilians poisoning the food that is available and
the water sources in the region.
Furthermore, It has been reported that some people have died because of
the poisoning.
This
report will be updated as the information is received.