Showing posts with label Montagnard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Montagnard. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2007

More than 60 Vietnamese Montagnards flee to Cambodia

13/09/2007
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

More than 60 Vietnamese ethnic minority Montagnards have crossed the border to Cambodia to seek asylum through the UN refugee agency.

The human rights group, Adhoc, says 40 Vietnamese Montagnards entered Cambodia earlier this week, and another group of 22 crossed the border three weeks ago.

Pen Bunna of the human rights group, Adhoc, says the refugees are hiding in dense forest in northeastern Ratanakiri province.

He says the UNHCR office in Phnom Penh has been informed of their whereabouts.


Around 2,000 Montagnards - a group whose members backed US forces during the Vietnam war - fled to Cambodia in 2001 and 2004 after security forces crushed protests against land confiscations and religious persecution.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Vietnam Expels Hundreds of Catholic Villagers; Burning Down Homes, Group Claims

Monday, 13 August 2007
By BosNewsLife News Center

HANOI, VIETNAM (BosNewsLife) -- Hundreds of Degar-Montagnard Catholics have been driven from "their ancestral villages" in Vietnam's Central Highlands by security forces who burned their houses to the ground, a group representing the believers said Monday, August 13.

News of the expulsion came amid fresh reports that a Degar-Montagnard man was tortured for two days by Vietnamese authorities after speaking with representatives of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) investigating the circumstances of people fleeing the Central Highlands.

The Montagnard Foundation Incorporated (MFI), which has close contacts with the predominantly Christian Degar-Montagnards, told BosNewsLife in a statement that "hundreds" of people have been expelled since July 23 from the Ha Mong commune area.

"On July 23 approximately 212 Vietnamese soldiers and security police armed with weapons and electrical stun guns conducted a large scale sweeping operation in the area of the Ha Mong commune searching for [Montagnard] Degar villagers," MFI said.

FAMILIES DETAINED

Two days later security forces returned and "detained by force most of the [Montagnard] Degar families remaining in the area and brought them to one place. Here they burned all of their huts, personal belongings and food stocks of wild potatoes and roots. The villagers had nothing left except their clothes," MFI said.

Government officials allegedly tried distributing rice to the villagers "but they refused fearing the rice had been poisoned," MFI claimed, citing sources in the area. Officials responded by "threatening harsh punishment on those who refuse" the rice and
soldiers and police "pointed their rifles and shook electrical stun guns at the villagers," MFI added.

On July 27 soldiers and security police "continued sweeping operations in the area" locating several Montagnard-Degar families, MFI investigators claimed. The Y-Phun family who was living in a small hut was allegedly surrounded by soldiers who forced the three family members outside before burning the hut to the ground with all its contents.

A family living in another hut belonging to a man identified as Y-Trut "fled in fear as security police knocked Y-Trut to the ground while he was shielding his two month old baby in his arms," MFI claimed.

HUTS BURNED

The families "stood in fear as their huts burned before their eyes and their children screamed," the group added. The villagers refused to leave the area "as they have been living for generations there and also because of their Catholic faith," MFI added. Catholics believe that the Virgin Mary revealed herself in a vision in the area in November last year. Evangelicals have questioned these kinds of occurrences, saying God reveals Himself directly through Christ to anyone seeking Him.

News of the violence came amid mounting concern surrounding the fate of Y Phuoc Buon Krong who several human rights investigators said was beaten and tortured for two days by Vietnamese authorities after speaking to UNHCR officials in June, despite government threats. MFI said it has "re-confirmed from various sources that Vietnamese security forces had gone into the village of Buon Cuor Knia prior to the UNHCR officials arriving there...[They] threatened the villagers beforehand that if they say anything negative to foreigners...they will be arrested, tortured and imprisoned."

The UNHCR on June 26, entered the village of Buon Cuor Knia in Dak Lak to conduct interviews of three mothers of Degar- Montagnard men who had previously fled to neighboring Cambodia. The entire village was reportedly frightened when UNHCR officials arrived in company of security forces, who later prevented UNHCR from meetings the villagers.

UN officials declined to comment on the alleged incident, but Human Rights Watch Refugee Policy Director Bill Frelick reportedly said his organization now took the torture as fact after its own separate investigation. He said his group was "extremely concerned about continuing reports of threats, harassment, and even detention and beatings of Montagnards visited by international delegations."

GOVERNMENT DENIAL

Vietnamese officials have denied allegations of torture and accused the MFI of spreading "propaganda."

The crackdown on Degar-Montagnards has been linked to concern within the Communist Party about the spread of Christianity and plans by Communist officials to nationalize land.

MFI said that in 2005 the Vietnamese government already summoned all villagers from Ha Mong commune to leave as authorities planned to build a power plant in the area.

However many refused. Before the latest operation there were "still approximately 725 villagers there who have been living in the open forest and who now have little food and surviving by gathering wild potatoes and tree roots. Their existence is very difficult as they have little food and security forces are continually hunting for them," MFI added. (With reporting from Vietnam and BosNewsLife Research).

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Tense Calm In Ho Chi Minh City After Police Crackdown; Dozens Injured, Massive Arrests

Vietnamese police have been involved in crackdown on pro democracy activists, including active Christians, rights groups claim. Via Amnesty International

Thursday, 19 July 2007
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent
BosNewsLife with reporting from Vietnam


HO CHI MINH CITY/HANOI (BosNewsLife)-- A tense calm returned to the streets of Ho Chi Minh City Thursday, July 19, after dozens of people were injured and hundreds detained when police broke up a massive protest of peasants demanding the return of their lands, dissidents said.

Over 1,500 male and female police officers equipped with electric prods, police vehicles and "animal control trucks" dispersed "the sit-in protest of over 1,700 peasants from 19 different provinces" who had gathered in front of the Vietnamese National, Assembly offices for almost a month, Sy Hoang, president of the International Movement for Democracy and Human Rights in Vietnam (IMDHR) told BosNewsLife.

"Four peasants were knocked down unconscious by police electric prods, 24 peasants were badly injured," including several protest leaders, the official said. "One young man from Lam Dong province received a serious head injury. Eight police ambulance vans full of injured protesters were seen leaving the protest site."

HUNDREDS DETAINED

In addition police reportedly detained over 200 protesters in Binh Thuan, Binh Phuoc and Soc Trang provinces who had been protesting against nationalization of lands at Mai Xuan Thuong Park in Hanoi. "Police have transported them away to unknown places in two trains," Sy Hoang added.

There was no immediate word from Vietnamese officials where and how long the demonstrators will be held. The Vietnamese government has accused advocacy groups and dissidents, including Christian leaders, for allegedly spreading "propaganda" and "undermining" stability in the country.

Among those detained Wednesday, July 18, are five key female activists including Lu Thi Thu Duyen, 34, Vu Thanh Phuong, in her 40s, Pham Thi Hien, in her 30s, and Cao Que Hoa and Le Thi Nguyet, who are both in their 50s, IMDHR said.

Police officials reportedly announced that at least three of them are also held for their involvement in Bloc 8406, a group promoting political and religious rights. The group was founded last year by Nguyen Thanh Phong and Nguyen Binh Thanh under the "spiritual guidance" of priest Thaddeus Nguyen Van Ly. All these men have been imprisoned.

The report came amid growing concern Thursday, July 19, over a reported police crackdown on Christian Degar Montagnards in the Central Highlands, many of whom also claim they lost land under the Communist government.

YOUNG CHILDREN

In the latest incidents two young children in Dak Nong province were still without their Christian parents Thursday, July 19, after their young mother H’Thui Ya, 29, from Buon U village, was sentenced to three years and seven months imprisonment for fleeing to neighboring Cambodia, rights activists said.

The June 1 sentencing came after her husband Y-Thot Butrang, 45, was sentenced in 2002 to 11 years in imprisonment for fleeing to Cambodia, added the Montagnard Foundation Incorporated (MFI) in a statement to BosNewsLife.

Another Christian Degar Montagnard woman was also sentenced the same day for fleeing to Cambodia, MFI said. 32-year-old Nai H’Ngat from Kli Kia village in Gia Lai received six years imprisonment after a brief trial in which "numerous security police testified against" her, the group said.

Human rights groups have linked the crackdown on Degar Montagnards to concerns within the Communist party over the spread of Christianity in the Central Highlands. In addition officials are upset for Degar Montagnards' past support for American forces during the Vietnam War. Hundreds of Degar Montagnards are held in prisons across Vietnam. The government has denied human rights abuses saying reports to the contrary are false.

Vietnam Police Break Up Peasant Protests; Christians Attacked In Highlands

The protesters are demanding the return of their land. Via BBC News

Wednesday, 18 July 2007
By Stefan J. Bos,
Chief International Correspondent with reporting from Vietnam

HO CHI MIN CITY/HANOI (BosNewsLife)-- Hundreds of people were detained as Vietnamese special police forces broke up a massive peasant demonstration for land rights in Ho Chi Min City late Wednesday, July 18, while in the Central Highlands a security crackdown on Degar Montagnard Christians continued, several leading dissidents and investigators told BosNewsLife.

"At around 10 PM [local time] police began to violently suppress Vietnamese peasants as they protest for their land rights," Tran Nam, a representative of the underground People's Democratic Party, told BosNewsLife.

"Thousands of police have surrounded the protesters, firing tear gas and spraying water into the crowd. Hundreds of organizers and protesters are being arrested and taken to unknown locations," he added.

Since June 22, "thousands of peasants from Southern provinces" traveled to Ho Chi Min City, formerly known as Saigon, many of them camping outside the Vietnamese National Assembly offices to protest the apparent seizure of their land by the Communist government.

"Due to corruption, unlawful and arbitrary land policy, thousands of Vietnamese peasants have lost their land, homes and other properties. Many are living homeless, poor and hungry while corrupt government officials continue to pocket peasants' compensation to fund their lavish life style," said Sy Hoang, president of the International Movement for Democracy and Human Rights (IMDHR) for Vietnam, a group made up of exiles and dissidents.

MEMBERS JAILED

Pham Linh, a spokesperson of the United Workers-Farmers Organization of Vietnam (UWFOV), told BosNewsLife the rights group supports the demonstrators as its own members have suffered under alleged oppression.

"Members of UWFOV have been jailed, placed on warrant lists and suffered extreme intimidation, including Tran Quoc Hien, Nguyen Tan Hoanh, Tran Thi Le Hang, Doan Van Dien and Doan Huy Chuong. However, the UWFOV will...continue to struggle for the right to form independent labor unions and work for justice for farmers who suffer of government corruption," the spokesperson added.

Vietnamese officials have denied human rights abuses. The reported riots in Ho Chi Minh City came amid fresh allegations that police forces also target predominantly Christian Degar Montagnards in the country's tense Central Highlands, many of whom fight lost lands.

In the latest incident, two small children in Dak Nong province were without their Christian parents Wednesday, July 18, after their young mother H’Thui Ya, 29, from Buon U village, was sentenced to three years and seven months imprisonment for fleeing to neighboring Cambodia, rights activists said.

HUSBAND DETAINED

The June sentencing , details of which emerged only Wednesday, July 18, came after her husband Y-Thot Butrang, 45, was sentenced to 11 years in imprisonment for fleeing to Cambodia in 2002, said the Montagnard Foundation Incorporated (MFI) in a statement to BosNewsLife.

Y-Thot Butrang and H’Thui Ya are Degar Montagnard Christians had fled repression in Vietnam’s Central Highlands in 2001, claimed MFI, a major advocacy group with close contacts in the Central Highlands.

"They crossed the Cambodian border and soon became refugees residing in the United Nations refugee camp in Mondolkiri province, Cambodia. In 2001 and 2002 Vietnamese officials came into the camp and announced that Vietnam would not harm any refugees who returned back to Vietnam," MFI said.

In 2002 the couple apparently decided to go back to Vietnam where they were soon "tortured" and jailed, the group claimed, adding that their "their children were abandoned by police," while their parents were harassed.

CHILDREN ABANDONED

Their daughter H’Phiwana, 5, and son Y-Tuwani, 4, first faced abandonment in December, 2006, when authorities arrested their mother, leaving the two children at home alone, MFI said.

"The authorities did not tell anyone where she was held and her two children cried often suffering from distress at having both parents taken away." On Christmas day two women from the family's villages discovered the children and began searching for their mother.

Only in may they discovered that she was held in a prison, MFI said, citing sources in the region. "H’Thui Ya could barely walk as she had been permanently chained to stocks with her legs chained between two logs. She had also been beaten and tortured in prison. Her face was pale as she had been deprived of food, her legs bruised and swollen. When she met with her children, all of them burst into tears and they cried as they were happy to see each other."

Police allegedly allowed her to see her children only 30 minutes and then "dragged her away"back to prison cell number 5, MFI said. She was reportedly sentenced on June 1. Another Christian Degar Montagnard woman was also sentenced the same day for fleeing to Cambodia, the group added. 32-year-old Nai H’Ngat from Kli Kia village in Gia Lai received six years imprisonment after a brief trial in which "numerous security police testified against" her, MFI added.

LEAVING CAMBODIA

"Nai H’Ngat came from Cambodia back to Vietnam because she had failed her interview for refugee status. Subsequently one year later on June 15, 2006 Vietnamese security police arrested her because she was a House Church Christian and had previously harbored refugees who had fled arrest."

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) allegedly forced her to return, but the organization has previously played down similar accusations.

The UNHCR has said it reached a deal with Vietnamese authorities not to prosecute returning Degar Montagnards. Vietnam has accused the MFI and other groups of spreading "false propaganda", but rights watchers counter that the facts on the ground confirm that the government is not meeting its international obligations.

At least 350 mainly Christian Degar Montagnards are believed to be held in prisons across Vietnam along with other believers and political activists. (With BosNewsLife Research).

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Saturday, June 30, 2007

UNHCR saves 15 Montagnard out of the forest

29 June 2007
By Ratha Visal
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy

A UN Official indicated that a group of people was saved from the forest located in the east of Cambodia. The group claimed that they fled from Vietnam to look for refuge in a third country.

Chuong Ravuth, a UNHCR official, said that the 15 Montagnard people from Vietnam were saved on Thursday after they hid in the forest of O’Yadaw district, Ratanakiri province in the past one month while waiting for help to get out.

Chuong ravuth said: “Based on the information, we had to cooperate with the authority and several departments to get help. When we arrived at their (hiding) location, they all came about according to the number we were told: 15 of them.”

The group of Montagnard people is believed to be part of a group of 27 people whom the UNHCR learnt that they fled from their villages in Vietnam last May.

The 15 Montagnard people will be sent to the UNHCR headquarters in Phnom Penh next week.

Friday, June 29, 2007

UNHCR: Montagnards fled to Cambodia because they were deceived, have low education level ... and not from VN's oppression and persecution

29/06/2007
UNHCR makes fact-finding tour in Dak Lak

A representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has said that ethnic minority people in Central Highlands who illegally crossed the border to Cambodia were easily to be deceived due to their low educational level, according to the Army Newspaper.

UNHCR spokesman Kitty McKinsey, who is leading a delegation on a fact-finding visit to Central Highlands province of Dak Lak from June 26-28, made the remark during a meeting with provincial People’s Committee Chairman Lu Ngoc Cu on June 27.

McKinsey was quoted as saying that almost all of the returnees were not refugees, and therefore, they were unfit to settle in a third country.

The delegation arrived in districts of Buon Don and Cu M’gar, visited boarding and vocational training schools for ethnic minority children and met directly with families of those ethnic minority people who had illegally left for Cambodia in 2006.

The UN representative said that she would reflect objectively and honestly what she had seen during the visit, thus helping the international community understand more about the Vietnamese Government’s policies on the ethnic minority people in Central Highlands, the paper said.

McKinsey said she was also impressed with the development of Vietnam since her first visit to the country in 1991.

Source: VNA

Monday, June 25, 2007

VN and Cambodia works together to prevent fleeing Montagnard from crossing into Cambodia?

June 25, 2007
Vietnamese, Cambodian provinces work for border security

Nhan Dan (Hanoi)

Border guards from Vietnam 's southern Binh Phuoc province and the police department of Cambodia 's Kratie province have met to discuss coordination in safeguarding border security.

The Vietnam News Agency reported from Binh Phuoc province that high on the agenda will be the exchange of information relating to security, social order and cross-border crimes as well as deployment of joint patrols.

Both sides reviewed their work since the beginning of this year and signed an action plan for future cooperation.

The two forces held regular meetings in the past six months to work out solutions to the problems relating to border security and cross-border crimes.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

FORUM: Vietnam and communism's victims

Vietnam pulls the strings of
the marionette Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen


Khmer Krom demonstration in Washington DC (Photo: kounsrey, Khmer Krom Network)

Members of the Hmong community call for the release of former Laotion General Vang Pao, who is being held on charges of trying to overthrow the government of Laos, during a demonstration outside the Robert T. Matsui Federal Courthouse in in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, June 11, 2007. A magistrate judge ordered Pao, 77, who led a Hmong fighting force that helped the CIA and American forces during the Vietnam War, detained until his trial. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

Thai Vang bows his head with other members of the Hmong community outside the Federal Courthouse in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, June 11, 2007, as they pray for the release of former guerilla leader Vang Pao for allegedly planning to overturn the current Laotian government. A federal magistrate ordered Van Pao who led a Hmong fighting force that helped the CIA and American forces during the Vietnam War, detained until his trial. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

June 17, 2007
By Mike Benge
The Washington Times (USA)


Last Tuesday, June 12, President Bush spoke at the dedication of the Victims of Communism Memorial that honors the memories of those killed in communist regimes. He said their deaths should remind the American public "evil is real and must be confronted." Ironically, this Friday, June 22, President Bush will honor the president of a tyrannical communist regime that murdered over a million Vietnamese and ethnic minorities with a White House visit during which he has the opportunity to confront that evil.

Recently, dozens of democracy activists, journalists, cyber-dissidents and Christian and other religious leaders were arrested and imprisoned by the Vietnamese communists. Congressional leaders and human-rights groups have charged Hanoi with "unbridled human-rights abuses," the "worst wave of oppression in 20 years." Those recently arrested are but a few of the hundreds of political and religious prisoners in Vietnam; some have been tried, while those less visible simply "disappeared." This mounting crackdown is a deliberate diplomatic slap in the face of the United States.

Hanoi brazenly aired on TV the kangaroo court trial of Thaddeus Nguyen Van Father Ly, who was muzzled during the proceedings. In Vietnamese, the colloquial phrase for censorship is "bit mieng" -- to cover the mouth. The picture of Father Ly's muzzling seems a literal enactment of an old cliche. Denied representation, Father Ly was sentenced to eight years imprisonment.

Mr. Bush's endorsement for Hanoi's admission into the World Trade Organization at last year's Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Hanoi, the removal of Vietnam from listed as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC), and the granting of Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) were all predicated on the Communist Party substantially improving its human-rights record.

It should come as no surprise that after the granting of these privileges, the Vietnamese communists continued and intensified their repression.

Though Vietnam professes great strides in religious freedom, one must look under the veneer to seek the truth. For example, in 2006, the Vietnamese government claimed that "25 denominations" had received certificates to carry on religious activities, when in fact they were only individual house churches.

The price of these certificates is the surrender of religious freedom. The church must submit to the central Bureau of Religious Affairs (CBA) a list of the names and addresses of members, and only those approved by the CBA can attend services. All sermons must be approved by the CBA, and all sermons, including those of minorities, must be given in Vietnamese. Pastors and priests can neither deviate from the approved sermon nor proselytize, and the CBA police monitor all services.

Montagnards, Hmong and other Christians, Khmer Krom Monks, members of the Cao Dai faith, and Hoa Hao are still relentlessly persecuted. This is what Hanoi calls religious freedom, and the U.S. administration was naive enough to believe them and removed them from the Countries of Particular Concern (CPC) list of countries that suppress religious freedom.

Recently, the Vietnamese communist regime demanded of the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues the cancellation of scheduled films to be screened at the May 22 forum. One film, "Hunted Like Animals," sponsored by the Hmong-Lao Human Rights Council depicted the genocide against the Hmong, and the other film depicted human-rights abuses against the Khmer Krom by the Vietnamese communists. It should come as no surprise that the United Nations acquiesced to the demands of the repressive Hanoi regime.

Reminiscent of the days of slavery in the "Old South," Montagnards who flee from repression in the Central Highlands are hunted down like wild animals. Vietnam pays bounties to Cambodian police for every Montagnard they catch and turn over to them. Vietnam considers refugees seeking asylum in another country to have violation its national security, punishable by imprisonment for up to 15 years.

Recently, three Montagnards were arrested by Cambodian police and charged with "human trafficking" for the so-called crime of aiding other Montagnards to flee the repression in Vietnam via the Montagnards' "underground railroad." Although Cambodia does little to stop the trafficking of children for prostitution, the communist regime is prosecuting these Montagnards on Vietnam's request in hopes it will convince the U.S. it is serious about trafficking. Vietnam pulls the strings of the marionette Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Reports continue from behind the curtain of silence drawn around the Central Highlands of the torture and deaths of Montagnard Christians. During a February trip to Hanoi, Ellen Sauerbrey, assistant secretary of state for population, refugees and migration, told a press conference that the Vietnamese officials assured her that Montagnards can freely travel to the Embassy in Hanoi or the Consulate in Ho Chi Minh City to voice any grievances.

She said Montagnards should stay in Vietnam and not seek asylum in Cambodia. Given the Vietnamese communists history of repression and broken promises, how can Mrs. Sauerbrey be naive enough to believe Montagnards suffering persecution would ever to be allowed through the phalanx of Vietnamese police surrounding the U.S. Embassy and Consulate?

As predicted, Hanoi has announced the release of a few token high-profile political prisoners in an attempt to smooth the way for the arrival of Vietnam's President Triet, and in hopes of placating President Bush, the State Department and Congress. Can this administration be gullible enough to fall for yet another charade by the Vietnamese communists?

President Bush, keeping faith in the spirit of the Victims of Communism Memorial that "evil is real and must be confronted," should demand of Vietnam's president the release of all of the hundreds of political prisoners including those recently arrested and the more than 350 Christian Montagnards that seem to have been forgotten by this administration.

Mike Benge is an advocate for human rights and religious freedom in South East Asia.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Christians martyred under communist [Vietnamese] rule

Dieu Suoi

Sui H'Krong

2 more deaths in crackdown on house church movement

Posted: June 9, 2007
WorldNetDaily

Two more members of a mostly-Christian population in the Central Highlands of Vietnam have died at the hands of authorities, according to a U.S.-based foundation whose leaders recently issued a plea to President Bush to ask Vietnamese President Nguyen Minh Triet about such tragedies when the two meet later this month.

The death toll from the communist government's persecution of Christians there actually is rising by three, but one of the deaths happened some time ago, only to be reported recently. The two other deaths have happened just in recent weeks, according to officials with the the Montagnard Foundation.

As WND reported, that group just days ago sent an open letter to Bush asking him to pressure the president of Vietnam to stop the "persecution, torture, killings and imprisonment" of the Degar Montagnards, a group of people who sided with the U.S. during the Vietnam war and have been persecuted since.

The foundation said an estimated 350 Degar Montagnards are imprisoned for standing up for human rights, spreading Christianity, or fleeing to Cambodia. "These prisoners are subjected to torture, including electric shock treatment, and withheld food and medical care," the foundation said.

Its new report documented the death on May 29, 2007, of Dieu Suoi, a Christian who was tortured by police and prison officials. He was arrested in 2005 "because he was a house church Christian who refused to join the official church," the foundation said. He was beaten with batons and shocked, then imprisoned.

His health deteriorated in prison, and on May 27, police returned him to his family, who insisted he be hospitalized because he had been beaten so badly they hardly recognized him. Suoi, 30, died in two days, the report said.

Another death happened just a few weeks earlier, when Sui H'Krong, 55, a Christian woman, died at her home after she was released from a hospital after surgery.

She had gone to a doctor in March because of stomach pains, but was referred immediately to a hospital where she was taken directly in to surgery.

"After the surgical operation was done, Dr. La Van Thang told her he could not find anything wrong," the report said. She was sent home, where her health quickly failed and she died.

"Her family fears that she was experimented on and did not receive proper medical care," the foundation report said.

The third report that just came in involved Y-Kuot Enuol, 41, who was arrested in 2001 and subjected to torture for several years in prison. After his death in late 2004, "security police threatened his family not to tell anyone about what had happened … or they too will also be tortured and killed by the police," the foundation report said.

The open letter to Bush had been written by Kok Ksor, the president of the foundation, and describes how the attacks began as soon as the communists took over South Vietnam after the U.S. military pullout.

"One of those victims was my uncle, a civilian congressman for the Montagnards who was publicly executed in 1975," Ksor wrote. "Ever since the Vietnamese government has continued land exploitation, Christian persecution, torture, killings and imprisonment of our people. Religious persecution continues today as authorities torture house church Christians who resist joining the 'official' church."

"Mr. President, We ask that you: Strongly urge Vietnam to release all of the estimated 350 Montagnard Degar Prisoners from Vietnamese prisons…," the letter said, citing a Human Rights Watch report documenting those cases.

The letter also is asking the U.S. to consider restoring Vietnam to the list of nations cited as "Countries of Particular Concern," for its persecution of religious and minority groups. And it also would like the State Department to include the Montagnard Foundation as relations between the U.S. and Vietnam develop.

"We are not asking the United States to abandon relations with Vietnam and we do not want progress between the United States and Vietnam to be stifled. We know the world of politics is complex but we cry out in desperation to you," the letter said. "Inside the Central Highlands our people desperately await to hear some news that an American president has remembered them."

"As you may know the Montagnard Degar people were allies to the United States during the Vietnam War and U.S. veterans came to know our people like brothers," Ksor said. "In fact, during the Vietnam War our people were considered one of America's most loyal allies and it is estimated that at any one time over 40,000 Montagnards served alongside their American comrades. Throughout the … war it is estimated 100,000 Montagnards served with the U.S. military and by the end of the war, over a quarter of our population, over 200,000 people, had died including half of all adult males," he wrote. The communists, on taking over, he said, "enacted revenge," and it continues.

Leaving the situation as it is would mean "surveillance, arrests, beatings, electric shock torture, imprisonment and murdering," he said.

The foundation also announced plans for a peaceful demonstration on June 16 outside the White House, "calling for an end to persecution of their people by the Vietnamese communist government," which will be followed by a prayer vigil at the Vietnam Wall Memorial.

In a recent report from Michael Ireland, of ASSIST News, he documented the ongoing harassment.

Citing Human Rights Watch documentation, he said Vietnam is targeting "those perceived as following 'Dega Christianity,' an unsanctioned form of evangelical Christianity."

HRW said the government has ordered a ban, calling it a political movement, not a religion. The organization said police in recent weeks have conducted midnight raids on villages, ransacking homes and have beaten women and children.

The abuse also has been documented by Freedom House's Center for Religious Freedom.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

'New’ Vietnam: Montagnards up against the wall

May 9, 2007

By Lorraine Ahearn, Staff Writer
News-Record (Greenboro, North Carolina, USA

Well, it's now been six months since the U.S. removed its new trade partner, Vietnam, from a human rights blacklist. And guess what?

Human rights under one of the world's most oppressive regimes have taken a turn for the worse, according to relief workers, members of Congress and leaders of the Montagnard exile community in Greensboro.

"The Vietnamese government lied to the world in order to join the World Trade Organization," said Y-Siu Hlong, executive director of the 8,000-member Montagnard-Dega Association based here. "In reality, they still put people in jail for their beliefs; they still arrest students for using the Internet."

The ethnic highlanders have long been a thorn in the Vietnamese government's side. They are a largely Christian racial minority in an officially Buddhist country and fought for the U.S. in the Vietnam War.

But foreign correspondents and other outside observers say the situation for many others deemed "subversive" by the Vietnamese government has likewise deteriorated since President Bush's visit to Hanoi last fall.

The visit marked the communist government's acceptance into the world trade community and a cementing of defense and intelligence cooperation between the U.S. and its one-time enemy. Since then, Vietnam has been assured a seat on the U.N. Security Council in 2008-09.

Behind the veneer of world respectability, however, critics say the government has engaged in a campaign of suppression and intimidation of perceived enemies of the state.

Last week, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom released a scathing report on what it termed a "wide-ranging crackdown on individuals associated with human rights, democracy, legal reform, labor and free speech organizations."

Since January, the report said, numerous Catholic and Mennonite leaders have been arrested and beaten — most notably, Father Nguyen Van Ly, founder of a democracy movement and editor of the magazine Freedom of Speech. Ly, who previously served 13 years in prison, had his parish house raided this year and was sentenced April 2 to another eight years for the crime of "propagandizing against the state."

Meanwhile, one of the country's only human rights lawyers, Nguyen Van Dai, was arrested in March and is awaiting trial on charges of collecting evidence of religious persecution, according to Vietnam's Ministry of Public Security, to send to "enemy powers and overseas reactionaries."

Presumably, these include the U.S. House of Representatives, which on the same day as the May 2 report was published, voted 404-0 to condemn Vietnam's civil rights abuses and call for the release of political prisoners.

The resolution sponsor, Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), said in a floor speech that after a period of improvement in human rights that rewarded Vietnam last fall with acceptance into the world community, the government had quickly undone the progress.

"Vietnam has reverted back to its repressive practices," said Smith, who met with Father Ly, "and has arrested and imposed lengthy prison sentences on numerous individuals whose only crime has been to seek democratic reform and respect for human rights in their country."

Aggravating the situation for Montagnards, who in the past tried to escape to Cambodia and Thailand, is a policy adopted May 1 by the U.S. State Department. No longer are fleeing Montagnards granted refugee status, but must go home and try to seek asylum at the U.S. Consulate. A relief worker who has traveled extensively in the highlands, which are under martial law, calls the rule "insane."

"These were our allies," said Kay Reibold of the Montagnard Human Rights Organization in Raleigh. "But as part of the 'bigger picture,' they're kind of expendable now."

Contact Lorraine Ahearn at 373-7334 or lahearn@news-record.com

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Cambodia: Helping Montagnards escape communist VN oppression is human trafficking; Promoting prostitution is considered National police chief

UN Pushes for Speedy Proceedings in Arrest of 3 Minorities

Mean Veasna, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
02/05/2007

A UN human rights representative pressed Wednesday for Ratanakkiri provincial court to speed up proceedings against three Jarai minorities being held for human trafficking.

The three Jarai men, arrested April 20 for moving Vietnamese Montagnards across the border, should either be charged or released, the representative said.

Investigating Judge An Samnang said the process could not be sped up, because the court had only just received the charging documents.

Monday, April 30, 2007

SRP’s reaction to the pursue of its activist in Ratanakiri

28 April 2007
By Kem Sotheavin Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy

The Sam Rainsy Party issued a statement on 27 April, to defend one of its political activists in Ratanakiri province who is now in hiding from the arrest threat by the authority.

Song Yim, a SRP activist who has just been election as the Pate commune chief, Ratanakiri province, is accused by the court of involvement with the traffic of Montagnard refugees.

The SRP statement refuted the provincial court accusation on its activist. The SRP statement indicated that Song Yim used to work as a Degar (Montagnard) language translator for the UNHCR in 2001 and 2002. The statement noted that the authority had made the same accusation against Song Yim once in 2003.

The statement called on the provincial court to review this accusation and to put to an immediate stop this arrest. There is no reaction yet from the authority on this statement by the SRP.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

SRP Commune chief in Ratanakiri is scared

26 April 2007
By Ratha Visal
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Socheata

An official from the Sam Rainsy Party claimed on 26 April, that one of the party activists in Pate commune, O’Yadaw district, Ratanakiri province, who was recently elected as the commune chief, is facing political scare-tactics perpetrated against him

SRP MP Sok Pheng said that Song Yin, the SRP activist who was recently elected as commune chief of Pate commune, is in hiding because he is afraid that the police will arrest him. He is also appealing to the government authority to stop all its threatening and intimidation activities against political party activists.

Sok Pheng said: “This is a purely political case, threats and pressures were exerted on SRP activist.”

From his hiding, Song Yin gave an interview in which he stated that the provincial court has issued 2 summons for him. The court accuses him of being involved in the traffic of Montagnard refugees [who fled from Vietnam into Ratanakiri province].

Song Yin said: “I am very concerned because several summons have been issued against me.”

Song Yin’s scare started when the police arrested three ethnic minority villagers from Andoung Meas district last Saturday, the three are accused of being involved in providing help and showing road directions to Montagnard refugees fleeing Vietnam. The Montagnard refugees were rescued by the UNHCR which visited the area. The three Cambodian ethnic minority villagers were ordered detained in the provincial jail.

Chea Bunthoeun, the provincial deputy police chief, denied that the police has received any summon regarding the arrest of a SRP activist yet.

Pen Bonnar, an investigator for the Adhoc NGO in the Ratanakiri province, confirmed that SRP activist Song Yin, also known as Rochang Yin, and two other villagers have been accused by the tribunal of cheating and inciting. The court issued a second summon on 03 April, but Song Yin refused to show himself up at the court. The case has dragged on until now because of the changes of investigation judges in this case.

Pen Bonnar said: “A number of local villagers were traveling when they crossed path with [Montagnard] refugees. The refugees pleaded the villagers to help them, that is why the villagers are being accused.”

In the Ratanakiri, the SRP won only one commune chief among a total number of 49 communes in the province. Following the ending of the commune election, SRP reported that a number of its party activists suffered threats in Kompong Thom: a party activist in the Pong’ro commune was threatened with death, and another party activist in Mean Rith commune was murdered.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

VN's confession to illegal Vietnamese immigration into Cambodia or is it a pretext to arrest Montagnard people?

April 14, 2007
Illegal immigration con-artist jailed

VNA (Hanoi)

A 38 year old fraudster who organised illegal immigration into Cambodia from Vietnam was sentenced to two years in prison, by the Kon Tum provincial court, on April 13.

A Kak and nine other Central Highlands residents were arrested by Cambodian police in O Ya Dao district, on December 30, 2006 and extradited to Vietnam later.

On January 5, 2007, A Kak was prosecuted by Kon Tum province’s police for “masterminding illegal immigrations.”

He pleaded guilty to immigration fraud and admitted that he had organised cross-border migration for people through jungle tracks. Kak also admitted that he had duped his unsuspecting victims by promising well-paid jobs for them once they arrived in Cambodia and charged a brokerage fee of between 2 and VND 3 million for each victim.

The court also ordered Kak to pay VND 6 million in restitution to his victims.

Vietnamese Authorities Continue to Arrest and Torture House Church Degar Christians

14 APril 2007,
By Aloys Evina,
Journal Chrétien (Christian Journal)

SPARTANBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA — Five men and one woman have been beaten and imprisoned for refusing to join the officially-sanctioned Vietnamese government church.

The Spartanburg, South Carolina-based Montagnard Foundation (MFI), which is dedicated to the preservation of the Indigenous People of the Central Vietnam, says the Vietnamese government is continuing to use its religious reform laws as a means of control. The five men and a mother were taken to a police station where they have been severely abused.

MFI is calling on the US State Department to reconsider placing Vietnam back on the ‘Country of Particular Concern’ (CPC) watch list of nations which are the most egregious violators of religious freedom.

MFI is also calling on concerned Embassies, the Red Cross and other international humanitarian agencies "to try to urgently ensure medical attention is given to the victims who are still in prison and seek to get medical help to hundreds of the other Montagnard prisoners inside Vietnam’s prisons who suffer abuse and maltreatment."

The organization is asking concerned Embassies and the international community "to urgently demand Vietnam to release the prisoners still in custody and to release all 350 Degar Prisoners as identified in the Human Rights Watch report of 14 June 2006." (See : www.hrw.org/english/docs/2006/06/14/vietna13542.htm)

Furthermore, the group is requesting that concerned Embassies and the international community "pursue a permanent humanitarian presence in the Central Highlands by US, UN and international NGOs in order to address the underlying causes of the persecution of the indigenous Montagnard Degar peoples."

BEATEN UNCONSCIOUS AND IMPRISONED : UNABLE TO EAT

MFI reports that on 5 April, a Degar Christian named Siu Eng (age 38) from the village of Plei Hluh was arrested in his home at approximately 6:30 am by two Vietnamese security police named Vu and Chung.

In a media release, MFI says : "The reason for his arrest was that he’s a layman of a house church at his village who refused to join the official government recognized church."

According to MFI, the security police took him to the police station at Ia Grai district and beat him mercilessly using karate techniques, punching and kicking him over his body until he became unconscious.

"Siu Eng’s relatives visited him on 7 April and they saw his swollen face and battered body covered with blood. They burst into tears and used a handkerchief to wipe the dried blood from his face. He told them he was beaten repeatedly and had bled from his nose and ears. His family brought him food but he was unable to open his mouth from pain and was only able to feed him liquid soybean milk. Siu Eng is still imprisoned at the prison facility in the district of Ia Grai and the condition of his health is unknown," MFI said.

Also on 5 April, a Degar Christian named Rahlan Piom (age 31) from the village of Plei Com, was also arrested (as Siu Eng above) at approximately 6:30 am but by different security police (names unknown).

"The reason for the arrest was that he was a layman for his house church at his village who refused to join the official government recognized church," MFI said.

"The security police took him to the police station at Ia Grai district and tortured him in the same way they did to Siu Eng. The security police mercilessly beat him using karate techniques, boxing, and kicking him until he became unconscious. He was bruised and battered and covered in blood from the beatings. His family visited him on April 7 and cried out loud when they saw his battered face.

"They brought him food but he was barely able to open his mouth still suffering from the beatings. Rahlan Piom is still imprisoned at the prison facility in the district of Ia Grai and the condition of his health is unknown," MFI reported.

BEATEN UNCONSCIOUS : ATTEMPTS TO BREAK HIS EARDRUMS

A Degar Christian named Rahlan Pyap (age 32) from the village of Plei Hluh, on March 11 received an order from the Vietnamese security police of Ia Grang commune to attend their office.

MFI said : "When Rahlan Pyap arrived at the police station around 10 am that day the police grabbed him and pushed him into a car and drove him to the police station in the district of Ia Grai. Here, the security police told Rahlan Pyap that he must follow the government recognized religion of Siu Kim and Rcom Boi or they will severely punish him.

"He refused and the police began striking him with their fists and slapping his ears trying to break his eardrums. They also beat his face, abdominal region and kicked him all over his body until he became unconscious. The police repeatedly tortured him in this manner numerous times until he was released on 23 March."

On the same day another Degar Christian named Rcom Mrin (age 47) from the village of Plei Khop, was ordered by the Vietnamese security police of the Commune of Ia Grang to attend their office.

"When Rcom Mrin arrived at the police station around 10 am that day the police grabbed him and pushed him into a car and drove him to the police station in Ia Grai district. Here, the security police told him that he must follow the religion of Siu Kim or Rcom Boi or he will be severely punished," the MFI statement said.

Rcom Mrin refused and the police began beating him with their fists and also slapping his ears trying to break his eardrums, MFI said. He was beaten on his face, his abdominal parts and kicked all over until he was unconscious. MFI says that Rcom Mrin is still imprisoned at the prison facility in the district of Ia Grai and the condition of his health is unknown.

Rmah Hlip (age 37), also a Degar believer, who is also from the village of Plei Hluh was summoned by the security police to attend their office at Ia Grang commune, MFI says.

MFI reports that when he arrived at the police station around 10 am, the police grabbed him and pushed him into a car then took him to the police station in Ia Grai district. Here, the security police told him that he must follow the religion of Siu Kim or Rcom Boi or he will be severely punished. "Rmah Hlip refused and the police began beating him with their fists and also slapping his ears trying to break his eardrums. He was beaten on his face, his abdominal parts and kicked all over until he was unconscious. He is still imprisoned at the prison facility in the district of Ia Grai and the condition of his health is unknown, the MFI report explained.

HOUSE CHURCH MOTHER AND 6 YEAR OLD DAUGHTER IMPRISONED

A 28-year-old Degar woman named Rahlan H’Per from Plei Com village, was summoned by the communal security police to meet with a provincial police officer at the communal police station.

MFUI says that at around 10:00 am, Rahlan H’Per arrived at the communal police station and she was grabbed by a Vietnamese police officer named Minh who took her to the police station in Ia Grai district.

The MFI report says : "The Vietnamese police questioned Rahlan H’Per as to whom she was communicating with in America and she replied back by saying that she only kept in contact with her husband. The Security Police warned her that if she doesn’t follow the official Church she will be placed in jail. She remained silent and was right away taken to prison in the district of Ia Grai.

"The next morning her mother and 6- year-old daughter came to the prison to see her. The security police then took her 6-year-old daughter and also put her in the prison cell with her mother and kept them both there for six days until they were released on 16 March."

BACKGROUND TO DEGAR CHRISTIAN PERSECUTION

The indigenous Degar Peoples (known under the French colonial term “Montagnard”) have suffered decades of persecution by the Vietnamese communist government, namely ; confiscation of their ancestral lands, Christian religious repression, torture, killings and imprisonment.

To date over 350 Degar prisoners remain in Vietnamese prisons for standing up for their human rights, for spreading Christianity or for fleeing to Cambodia and many have been subjected to electric shock treatment and torture as well as being withheld food and medical care.

The authorities continue to persecute members of the Christian House Church movement and in many cases have killed prisoners by deliberately beating them causing internal organ damage. Throughout the Central Highlands, the Degar population suffers abuses committed by soldiers and police.

A Vietnamese Government Document form the Central Bureau of Religious Affairs, dated Hanoi, 2006 says : "Those who are hostile and extremely resistant treat them severely and publicly denounce them to the citizen explaining their activities of destroying the country, dividing the ethnic groups, and their other illegal actions."

MONTAGNARD FOUNDATION, INC.
P.O. BOX 171114 - SPARTANBURG, SC 29301-0038 USA
Fax : (864) 595-1940 - Phone : (864) 576-0698
E-mail : kksor@degar.org
Web site : www.montagnard-foundation.org

Friday, April 13, 2007

Khmer Krom, Montagnard and Hmong to hold demonstration in front of VN embassy in Washington DC on 20 April

2007-04-13
Vietnam: Protest Planned in US

UNPO

Date: April 20, 2007
Time: 10:00 AM
Where: In front of the Vietnamese embassy in Washington DC

Below is a press release issued by The Montagnard Foundation:

On Friday the 20th of April 2007 the Montagnard Foundation in conjunction with the Khmer Krom and Hmong peoples will conduct a peaceful demonstration in Washington DC at capital hill and outside the Vietnamese Embassy calling for an end to persecution of their people by the Vietnamese communist government. The Degar Montagnards, the Khmer Krom and the Hmong peoples have long suffered religious persecution and human rights violations perpetrated by the Vietnamese communist government.

The indigenous Degar Peoples (known under the French colonial term “Montagnard”) have suffered decades of persecution by the Vietnamese communist government, namely; confiscation of their ancestral lands, Christian religious repression, torture, killings and imprisonment. To date over 350 Degar prisoners remain in Vietnamese prisons for standing up for their human rights, for spreading Christianity or for fleeing to Cambodia and many have been subjected to electric shock treatment and torture as well as being withheld food and medical care. The authorities today continue to persecute members of the Christian House Church movement and in many cases have killed prisoners by deliberately beating them causing internal organ damage. Throughout the Central Highlands, the Degar population continues to suffer abuses committed by soldiers and police.

The Montagnard Foundation welcomes all persons who value freedom, democracy and the triumph of the human spirit to attend and join us on Friday 20 April 2007 in showing that repressive and authoritarian governments like Vietnam cannot crush our desire for a better world.

The demonstration will commence at: 10 AM in front of Vietnamese Embassy and then at the Capitol Hill.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Montagnards: Appeal Community’s Persecution

2007-04-04
UNPO

Below is an article published by Montagnard Foundation, Inc.:

BACKGROUND:

The indigenous Degar Peoples (known under the French colonial term “Montagnard”) have suffered decades of persecution by the Vietnamese communist government, namely; confiscation of their ancestral lands, Christian religious repression, torture, killings and imprisonment. To date over 350 Degar prisoners remain in Vietnamese prisons for standing up for their human rights, for spreading Christianity or for fleeing to Cambodia and many have been subjected to electric shock treatment and torture as well as being withheld food and medical care. The authorities continue to persecute members of the Christian House Church movement and in many cases have killed prisoners by deliberately beating them causing internal organ damage. Throughout the Central Highlands, the Degar population suffers abuses committed by soldiers and police. The information below was just received from the tightly controlled central highlands.

VIETNAMESE AUTHORITIES SHOOT TWO MONTAGNARDS:

On November 26, 2006 four of our Christian brothers named Y-Pam Ya (age 39), Y-Khac Rocam (age 39), Y-Cin Buonya (age 26) and Y-Somit Knul (age 17) all from the village of Buon Drec, commune Ea Hoa, district Buon Don in Daklak province went to the forest near their village looking for lumber to repair their longhouse and spent the night in the forest camped by Ea Mdrec stream. At approximately 5:00 AM the following morning of November 27, 2006 six Vietnamese forest rangers found them asleep on the ground and opened fire at them wounding two of them. Y-Pam Ya was shot in his right thigh and Y-Cin Buonya was shot on his right arm. One of the six forest rangers is named “Hoa” but the others are unknown. The rangers then took them to the clinic at Buon Don district but threatened to kill them if they enter the forest again. The rangers made repeated death threats to them stating “it doesn’t matter who your report this to because we are not afraid of the international community, the United Nations, the United States, or Kok Ksor, because we are the children of Uncle Ho Chi Minh.” Four of our Degar Montagnard brothers here now remain confined (under house arrest) with the charge of destroying the forest.

YEARS OF DEFORESTATION BY THE VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT:

The ironic and unjust facts concerning this incident however, is that the Vietnamese military has for decades operated logging companies that committed mass deforestation throughout the central highlands. In January 2001 the former director of Vietnam’s Department of Forestry Development, Mr. Nguyen Ngoc Lung stated, “Due to unchecked timber exploitation, most of our forests have been depleted, with depletion rates reaching well over 60 percent.” (see: South China Morning Post, Race to Shield Dwindling Forests From Loggers, 2 January 2001). Over the past decades Vietnamese government policies have also resulted in Degar Montagnard villages being forcibly relocated to provide access to logging companies and government run coffee plantations. The indigenous Degar Montagnard people who lived in a natural balance with the environment for thousands of years now have no right to their ancestral lands and resources. It is a shameful situation given that much of the world today has rewarded Vietnam with economic assistance and turned a blind eye to Vietnam’s abysmal human rights record.

THE MONTAGNARD FOUNDATION CALLS ON:

- Concerned Embassies and the international community to urgently investigate the shootings and arrests of these Degar people and ensure the authorities do not further torture, maltreat or imprison them.

- Concerned Embassies and the international community to pursue a permanent humanitarian presence in the Central Highlands by US, UN and international NGOs and initiate a diplomatic solution to the indigenous Degar land rights issue.

- Concerned Embassies and the international community to urgently demand Vietnam release all 350 Degar Prisoners identified in the Human Rights Watch report of 14 June 2006.

[Human Rights Watch report]

- The International Community, namely Japan, the European Union, the United States and international banking organizations, carefully review their financial aid commitments to Vietnam especially the proposed Triangle development project destined to develop the border regions between Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.

Source: Montagnard Foundation, Inc

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

New groups of Montagnards have arrived in Ratanakkiri

19 March 2007
By Ratha Visal
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Socheata

The arrival of two new groups of Montagnard people has been reported on Sunday 18 march 2007. One of the group has already reached the UNHCR office in Phnom Penh, whereas the other group is still in hiding in the forest of Ratanakkiri province, and it is looking for intervention help from international refugee organizations.

Chung Ravuth, the local UNHCR official, indicated that a group of 4 Montagnard people has reached the UNHCR office in Phnom Penh today, however, detailed information about the refugees is not available yet. “We have not yet received information over the weekend, and we just return back to work on Monday,” Chung Ravuth said.

Anonymous villagers from O’Yadaw reported that 10 refugees were spotted by the villagers in the forest. The refugees are looking for help from the UNHCR. “They are in the forest and they lack food,” the villagers claimed.

The local police authority denied they know the presence of the Montagnard people who have arrived recently.

Pen Bonnar, Adhoc investigator in Ratanakkiri, said that the villagers have reported recently the presence of the refugees whom they spotted in the forest. The villagers said that the refugees lack food and are being pursued by the local authority. “The refugees are arriving one after another. This time, the villagers are reporting that the authority went to look for the refugees. We have reported the information to the UNHCR so it can help these refugees urgently,” Pen Bonnar said.

UNHCR’s Chung Ravuth said that his organization will request the government’s authorization to visit Ratanakkiri province next week to look for refugees who have arrived recently.

On 22 Feb 2007, the UNHCR had rescued 11 Montagnard people from the O’Yadaw andPublish Bor Keo district in Ratanakkiri province. According to a UNHCR report, currently, there are more than 200 refugees located at the UNHCR refugee camp in Phnom Penh, who are awaiting for their interview to obtain their refugee status.

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Vietnam Detains House Church Leader

Monday, 05 March 2007
By BosNewsLife News Center

HANOI, VIETNAM (BosNewsLife)-- There was mounting concern Monday, March 5, about the whereabouts of a key leader of an indigenous house church in Vietnam's Central Highlands after Vietnamese security forces reportedly raided a village and detained several Christians.

In a statement to BosNewsLife, the Montagnard Foundation Incorporated (MFI), which represents the predominantly Christian Degar-Montagnard community in the region, said about 100 Vietnamese government soldiers and police "entered and sealed off" the village of Buon Moak in Dak Lak province on February 17.

"The soldiers and police then arrested two of our Christian brothers Y-Ja Nie, 55 and Y-Tuc Buonya, 44, because they are Christians who refused to join the government recognized church," MFI said.

The group claimed that both "were taken to the prison facility in the district of Mdrak," in Dak Lak province. While Y-Tuc Buonya was released February 23, "Y-Ja Nie was sent to the prison facility in Buonmathuot because he is the preacher of [the] house church at his village of Buon Moak," MFI said.

TORTURE APPARENTLY USED

"Given the Vietnamese government’s track record of using torture against such prisoners it is thus feared this preacher will be maltreated and their families are extremely distressed," the group claimed.

Several Degar-Montagnard Christians have reportedly been tortured in seperate incidents, several human rights groups say. "These prisoners continue to suffer abuses and are subjected to torture, including electric shock treatment, beatings as well as being withheld food and medical care," MFI explained.

"The authorities continue to persecute members of the Christian House Church movement who refuse to join the government recognized church. In many cases authorities have beaten prisoners causing deliberate internal organ damage and a number of prisoners have already died in custody or soon after their release from prison."

HUNDREDS BEHIND BARS

At least hundreds of Christians, including about 350 predominantly Christian Degar-Montagnards, are believed to be behind bars across the Communist-run country. Vietnamese officials have denied wrongdoing saying Christians are free to worship in government backed churches.

However many Christians apparently refuse to worship there, saying the churches are not Christ-centered, but focused on the state's Communist doctrine. The United States removed Vietnam from its list of 'countries of particular concern' regarding religious rights violations, a move that was condemned by human rights groups.

The reported crackdown on Degar-Montagnards have been linked in part to anger among authorities about their Christian activities and support for American forces during the Vietnam War. Many are also said to have been persecuted for trying to flee to nearby Cambodia. (With reports from Vietnam).

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Vietnam's Politburo Continues to Oppress Indigenous Peoples, Ethnic Minorities [Including Khmer Krom]

February 25, 2007

By David M. Kinchen
Editor, Huntington News Network

"They abuse our people for so long, we are arrested for teaching our own language, or our history, and they always target our Buddhist monks, the heart and soul of our Khmer Krom people,” - T. Thach, president of NGO Khmer Krom Federation

Hardliners in Vietnam's politburo in Hanoi are obsessed with punishing, oppressing and even eliminating peoples -- such as the Khmer Krom, Montagnards and Hmong Lao, that aligned themselves more than 30 years ago with the United States during the Vietnam War.

That’s the view of international human rights groups,and many others in Southeast Asia concerned with the rights of indigenous and ethnic peoples.

Founded by Ho Chi Minh, the Communist Party of Indochina is well-known in the public for the killing fields of Cambodia, the boat people and the reeducation camps.

Less known is the current ongoing genocide on the Hmong Lao, which is currently making major headlines in the international media, after thousand of Hmong Lao fled Vietnamese and Laotian military aggressions inside of the Communist country Laos.

More than 10,000 of the ethnic minority Hmong Lao, descendants of former CIA soldiers, are hiding to this day in remote mountain areas in Laos. Well documented reports reveal that Vietnamese soldiers are taking part in attacking and killing thousands of half starved Hmong Lao who are constantly on the run from military attacks – including the use of chemical weapons, bombs and rockets.

Rebecca Sommer's video documentary "Hunted Like Animals" documented not only hundreds of testimonies of Hmong Lao refugees who recently fled from Laos, but includes shocking footage filmed by the Hmong Lao themselves -- people living-in-hiding in remote mountain areas of Laos -- showing gruesome atrocities which are considered genocide by international human rights groups. Passports of Vietnamese soldiers where confiscated by Hmong groups-in-hiding, after finding dead corpses of soldiers from troops who attacked them.

"We know that the Vietnamese are the higher rank military commanders inside of our country Laos, Hanoi is in charge of Laos - as in the case of Cambodia. Hanoi is giving the final orders - we saw them attacking us, we hear them speaking Vietnamese, it is no secret to us who is attacking us Hmong Lao" said Faitou Vue, a Hmong Lao refugee, and CIA veteran who fled Communist Laos’ widening military aggressions to refuge in Thailand.

In Vietnam, the indigenous peoples such as the Montagnards and Khmer Krom, who also sided with the U.S. during the Vietnam War, endure severe oppression and human rights violations, with many of them escaping to neighboring Cambodia.

"But if we stay in Cambodia, the Vietnamese will get us any minute. Cambodia listens to Hanoi, so many of our people got killed or forcefully brought back to Vietnam. The Cambodian authorities do nothing to protect us," stated one of many hundreds of Khmer Krom refugees, an indigenous peoples from the Mekong Delta, who fled further than Cambodia, hiding as an illegal migrant in Thailand.

Two weeks ago, inside of Vietnam -- five Khmer Krom Buddhist temples, together with their Khmer Krom communities held a peaceful demonstration to request to Hanoi to be allowed to maintain their Buddhist religion, which they say was not granted.

Instead, the temples were surrounded by Vietnamese authorities, and in the case of the Tra Set temple two hundred Vietnamese military officers surrounded and arrested numerous Buddhist monks, and disrobed them.

"They abuse our people for so long, we are arrested for teaching our own language, or our history, and they always target our Buddhist monks, the heart and soul of our Khmer Krom people,” said T. Thach, president of NGO Khmer Krom Federation. “Our temples are the center of our communities. We are imprisoned and tortured when we listen to the radio from the outside word, or when we check the internet related to our concerns. Writing e-mails to the outside world is prohibited.”

T. Thach continued: “If our Khmer Krom Buddhist monks teach the sacred Buddhist language Pali --- they are ordered by Hanoi to include Communist doctrines, if not, they get disrobed and are not allowed to be monks anymore, and are imprisoned as traitors and enemies of Communism . This is not right: our religion has nothing to do with Communism, or any form of politics, it is our religion, and sacred to us. It is the teaching of peace and rightful conduct in life. But we are not allowed to maintain our religion, we are not even allowed to maintain our Khmer Krom culture, way of life, actually, they want to Vietnamize us in a manner, that nothing would be left from us, as Khmer Krom peoples, or Montagnards peoples -- and we object to that.”

Award winning filmmaker Rebecca Sommer, a New York City-based representative from the Society for Threatened Peoples International documented in 2006 disturbing human rights violation claims made by hundreds of Khmer Krom from Vietnam in her video documentary " “Eliminated Without Bleeding".

"The title explains what is happening to the Khmer Krom -- they are not massacred like the Hmong Lao, which is well-documented in my feature film ‘Hunted Like Animals,’” Sommer told HNN. “The Khmer Krom and Montagnards have a different situation, They have no freedom of speech or religion, and are under tight control and intimidation -- targeted with their identity as a people. They are not massacred, but nevertheless eliminated as a people."

Sommer said that inside Vietnam, the Vietnamese Communist Party maintains a virtual iron curtain around the Central Highlands of Vietnam that used to be the traditional homeland for the 54 ethnic hill tribes loosely defined as Montagnards. No Montagnard can leave a village without a pass, their leaders are confined to house arrest, and many are in prison that refuse to denounce their protestant religion. The same rules apply to the Khmer Krom, who are Buddhists.

"One can always tell when a group of Montagnards escapes into Mondulkiri Province. Vietnamese army and police officials chase after them and cross the border as if they owned western Cambodia,” said journalist The Co Van, from Peace and Freedom. “The Cambodian provincial police are alerted, and the guesthouses in the capital of Sen Monorum quickly fill with Cambodian police and army officials from neighboring provinces,” The Co Van added. "What a tragedy that America has abandoned our former allies in the Vietnam War a second time. Now the U.S. has the leverage to force the Vietnamese government to treat the Montagnards better but it remains silent when Hanoi glosses over their draconian human rights record in their bid for entrance into the WTO."

The Montagnard Foundation reports that they hold evidence that bounty hunters capture the Montagnard refugees in Cambodia, and sell them back to the Vietnamese for $20 to $100. Twenty dollars is a month’s pay for a policeman in this part of the world.

"Why does the mainstream media ignore the plight of the Montagnards, the Khmer Krom, and their cousins, the Hmong in Laos for over 30 years, and still continue to do so?" asked Chue Chou Tchang, from the SGU Veterans, a U.S.- based Hmong organization.

Those Vietnam Veterans who fought the war along side with America -- and the holocaust that unraveled in Southeast Asia after the American military left -- had been simply too painful for the left in America to face, for if they honestly examined it, they might find themselves guilty by their tacit support for the perpetrators of the killing fields in Cambodia, the reeducation camps in Vietnam and Laos, and the genocide of the ethnic hill tribes that continues today, Tchang told HNN.

“One has to wonder why the Vietnamese Communist Party is so paranoid and ruthless in their treatment of a few Montagnards and Khmer Krom -- escaping their clutches in the middle of the night,” said Van. “Why Laos, under the advice of Hanoi pressures Thailand to force thousands of Hmong Lao refugees back to Laos. That’s because they know they can get away with it and that the mainstream media in the West really isn’t interested in the human rights abuses of Communist police states" said Van.

Sommer said that even though journalists and human rights advocates have entered and reported on the alarming human rights violations in in Laos and Vietnam, the ongoing silence by the U.S. administration that has lasted for over 30 years persists to this day. She opined that the U.S. continues to ignore the ongoing genocide in Southeast Asia of their former allies and swallows whole the communist doublespeak on the human rights violation there.