Showing posts with label Vietnamese spies in Cambodia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vietnamese spies in Cambodia. Show all posts
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Friday, June 10, 2011
2 foreigners [1 Cambodian and 1 Vietnamese], Thai nabbed for spying
10/06/2011
Ssrmpong Thongsamrit & Wassana Nanuam
Bangkok Post
Ssrmpong Thongsamrit & Wassana Nanuam
Bangkok Post
Thai security authorities arrested a Cambodian, a Vietnamese and a Thai man for espionage in a village adjacent to Cambodia in Si Sa Ket province.
Police and paramilitary soldiers in Kantharalak district arrested the three men - Suchart Muhammad, 32, Ung Kimtai, 43 from Cambodia, and Wiang Tengyang, 37 from Vietnam - in Ban Phum Srol village at 5pm on Tuesday.
According to Sompoj Khomprang, chief of Kantharalak police, Mr Suchart, was driving a Bangkok-registered pickup with the other two men on board.
Police said the three were driving around paramilitary bases and bunkers that the government had built for villagers and pinpointing the locations.
They had with them different maps used by Thailand and Cambodia to demarcate the common border.
Friday, October 05, 2007
More refugees calling Cambodia home [... Yet Khmer Krom in Cambodia are called VN by Hun Sen and Tep Vong]
By Cat Barton
Phnom Penh Post, Issue 16 / 20, October 5 - 18, 2007
The impetus to move started in 2001 in Mogadishu, Somalia, when local warlord militia dragged his father from their home and shot him. Dia, then 12, tried to stop them, but someone wacked him across the face with the butt of a gun, badly breaking his nose. Six years later, Islamic rebels shot his brother and burned the family's recording studio to the ground.
"I ran away when I saw them kill my brother," he said quietly, his dark eyes alert above his still-crooked nose. "That was when my mother decided I had to go out of the country."
Dia's mother gave the family savings to a businessman to get her son to Europe. The two travelled to Kenya and Sudan, on to Bangkok, and arrived in Cambodia, where the trip ended last January 2.
"I had never even heard of Cambodia," Dia said. "The man stole my bags and left me with nothing - the clothes I was wearing and $9."
Dia has joined the 295 refugees and asylum seekers on record at the end of 2006, with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office in Phnom Penh.
In recent years as the Kingdom's neighbours, such as Thailand and Malaysia, have tightened their entry requirements and imposed harsh penalties on illegal immigrants, Cambodia has become the region's haven for refugees. Comparatively lax visa requirements and humane treatment of refugees means that the nation is now playing host to some of the world's most vulnerable.
"The purpose of the convention on refugees is not to resettle but to provide safety," said Thamrongsak Meechubot, UNHCR country representative. "People can't stay in their own country, so they leave and seek asylum elsewhere."
For refugees like Dia, there are three recognized solutions, said Meechubot. First, they can go back to their own country when it is safe for them to do so. Second, they can integrate locally. Third, if neither of the first two options are viable, they can be resettled in a third country.
"It is not safe to go back to Somalia now," said Dia, who wants to go to Canada. "They have accepted me but now I am waiting."
In the middle of the interview with the Post on October 2, Dia received a call telling him Canada had approved his asylum application, Overjoyed, he said he will never forget UNHCR for helping him.
"It will be better in Canada than in Cambodia, there I can study and work. I promised my father I would study. I have to find my mother and my younger brothers and sisters - I think they are on the Somali/Kenyan border," he pauses, rubbing his scarred nose self-consciously. "I will fix it later if I can but I want to help my mother first, when I was leaving she was crying - I must help her."
But for other UNHCR-supported refugees in Cambodia, being resettled in a third country is a distant dream.
"If you're considered high risk - an unaccompanied minor, a family with young children - [UNHCR] will resettle you," said a representative from the Jesuit Relief Services (JRS), an organisation that works with UNHCR providing services to refugees. "If not, you have to settle in here."
Settling in has proved impossible for Mr Luong and Pastor Au, two Vietnamese refugees who have lived in Cambodia for 15 and three years, respectively. UNHCR has granted both refugee status but both said they live in constant fear of their lives. "I don't feel safe here. Even during the day, I lock my doors," said Pastor Au, formerly a lecturer at a university in southern Vietnam until his decision to convert to Christianity brought him into conflict with the Vietnamese authorities. In 2004 he was arrested in Vietnam, but escaped prison and fled to Cambodia where, after five months on the streets, he was granted refugee status in January 2005.
"The Vietnamese and Chinese refugees are never safe here," he said. "They know they could be kidnapped and taken back at any time. I think UNHCR should try and get more refugees to third countries."
"There are thousands of Vietnamese spies here," he said. "UNHCR thinks as there are one million Vietnamese here that it is easy to integrate, but the Vietnamese secret agents kidnap us."
In 1975, Luong was a captain in an ARVN unit that worked with US Special Forces. After the war ended in 1975 he was arrested and sentenced to life in prison. After 15 years in shackles that left big scars on his legs, he escaped and fled to Cambodia in 1992.
"UNHCR have helped me as I have had a series of operations; both legs have been operated on four times. I have been a refugee for 17 years and I am still scared they will come and get me. I don't know why UNHCR won't resettle me."
Au said the Vietnamese government hates having Vietnamese dissidents flee to Cambodia and sends agents to hunt them down. "If we stay out after 6pm we are at risk of being kidnapped," he said.
A representative from JRS confirmed that there is risk of "neighbouring countries swiping them [political or religious refugees] back."
The recent high profile case of the alleged abduction of monk Tim Sakhorn seems evidence that abductions do happen. But when UNHCR wrote to the government to demand an official explanation of what had happened to Sakhorn, the government denied any wrongdoing.
"They said he had chosen to return to Vietnam," said Meechubot. "This is the government version and if anyone has any evidence to disprove they should do so."
Soon after Sakhorn's alleged abduction, Au, the pastor, began receiving warnings from Vietnamese immigrants and refugees that he was an abduction target because he - like Sakhorn - helps new political and religious refugees from Vietnam to adapt to life in Cambodia.
"Now, I sleep in a different place every night," said Au. "At first, my faith helped me to deal with the fear, but now it doesn't help so much. I am always afraid, I live in fear."
For Yla Lhay, a Burmese refugee who has been in Cambodia for a year, the problem is not so much a fear of abduction, but frustration. The democracy activist fled Burma in 1996 after being threatened with arrest for participating in a student uprising. He lived in Thailand until last year when Thai authorities refused to give him a new visa. He crossed over to Cambodia, obtained UNHCR refugee status, and began studying.
"If I go back to Thailand I can reduce my loneliness and depression but it is difficult to get a chance to be educated," he said. "I would rather be in a Thai refugee camp with my people than on my own in Cambodia. But I don't have a passport - if I go back I have to cross the border illegally so there is a 50 to 70 percent chance I will be arrested."
He has applied for resettlement in a third country. He hopes to return eventually to Burma but in the meantime believes resettlement in the West would allow him to advocate for democracy in his homeland.
"I have the right to stay here, but I don't have the right to do anything - I can't speak, I can't have freedom of expression. UNHCR tell me not to speak as it will create problems for me and for UNHCR. I don't want to live forever in a secret, quiet way."
The names of the refugees whose experiences are included in this article have been changed to protect their personal safety.
Phnom Penh Post, Issue 16 / 20, October 5 - 18, 2007
"There are thousands of Vietnamese spies here" - Pastor Au, Vietnamese refugee in CambodiaIn a calm, matter-of-fact way, Dia describes his unexpected arrival in Cambodia the day after New Year's 2007.
The recent high profile case of the alleged abduction of monk Tim Sakhorn seems evidence that abductions [by Vietnamese spies] do happen...
The impetus to move started in 2001 in Mogadishu, Somalia, when local warlord militia dragged his father from their home and shot him. Dia, then 12, tried to stop them, but someone wacked him across the face with the butt of a gun, badly breaking his nose. Six years later, Islamic rebels shot his brother and burned the family's recording studio to the ground.
"I ran away when I saw them kill my brother," he said quietly, his dark eyes alert above his still-crooked nose. "That was when my mother decided I had to go out of the country."
Dia's mother gave the family savings to a businessman to get her son to Europe. The two travelled to Kenya and Sudan, on to Bangkok, and arrived in Cambodia, where the trip ended last January 2.
"I had never even heard of Cambodia," Dia said. "The man stole my bags and left me with nothing - the clothes I was wearing and $9."
Dia has joined the 295 refugees and asylum seekers on record at the end of 2006, with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office in Phnom Penh.
In recent years as the Kingdom's neighbours, such as Thailand and Malaysia, have tightened their entry requirements and imposed harsh penalties on illegal immigrants, Cambodia has become the region's haven for refugees. Comparatively lax visa requirements and humane treatment of refugees means that the nation is now playing host to some of the world's most vulnerable.
"The purpose of the convention on refugees is not to resettle but to provide safety," said Thamrongsak Meechubot, UNHCR country representative. "People can't stay in their own country, so they leave and seek asylum elsewhere."
For refugees like Dia, there are three recognized solutions, said Meechubot. First, they can go back to their own country when it is safe for them to do so. Second, they can integrate locally. Third, if neither of the first two options are viable, they can be resettled in a third country.
"It is not safe to go back to Somalia now," said Dia, who wants to go to Canada. "They have accepted me but now I am waiting."
In the middle of the interview with the Post on October 2, Dia received a call telling him Canada had approved his asylum application, Overjoyed, he said he will never forget UNHCR for helping him.
"It will be better in Canada than in Cambodia, there I can study and work. I promised my father I would study. I have to find my mother and my younger brothers and sisters - I think they are on the Somali/Kenyan border," he pauses, rubbing his scarred nose self-consciously. "I will fix it later if I can but I want to help my mother first, when I was leaving she was crying - I must help her."
But for other UNHCR-supported refugees in Cambodia, being resettled in a third country is a distant dream.
"If you're considered high risk - an unaccompanied minor, a family with young children - [UNHCR] will resettle you," said a representative from the Jesuit Relief Services (JRS), an organisation that works with UNHCR providing services to refugees. "If not, you have to settle in here."
Settling in has proved impossible for Mr Luong and Pastor Au, two Vietnamese refugees who have lived in Cambodia for 15 and three years, respectively. UNHCR has granted both refugee status but both said they live in constant fear of their lives. "I don't feel safe here. Even during the day, I lock my doors," said Pastor Au, formerly a lecturer at a university in southern Vietnam until his decision to convert to Christianity brought him into conflict with the Vietnamese authorities. In 2004 he was arrested in Vietnam, but escaped prison and fled to Cambodia where, after five months on the streets, he was granted refugee status in January 2005.
"The Vietnamese and Chinese refugees are never safe here," he said. "They know they could be kidnapped and taken back at any time. I think UNHCR should try and get more refugees to third countries."
"There are thousands of Vietnamese spies here," he said. "UNHCR thinks as there are one million Vietnamese here that it is easy to integrate, but the Vietnamese secret agents kidnap us."
In 1975, Luong was a captain in an ARVN unit that worked with US Special Forces. After the war ended in 1975 he was arrested and sentenced to life in prison. After 15 years in shackles that left big scars on his legs, he escaped and fled to Cambodia in 1992.
"UNHCR have helped me as I have had a series of operations; both legs have been operated on four times. I have been a refugee for 17 years and I am still scared they will come and get me. I don't know why UNHCR won't resettle me."
Au said the Vietnamese government hates having Vietnamese dissidents flee to Cambodia and sends agents to hunt them down. "If we stay out after 6pm we are at risk of being kidnapped," he said.
A representative from JRS confirmed that there is risk of "neighbouring countries swiping them [political or religious refugees] back."
The recent high profile case of the alleged abduction of monk Tim Sakhorn seems evidence that abductions do happen. But when UNHCR wrote to the government to demand an official explanation of what had happened to Sakhorn, the government denied any wrongdoing.
"They said he had chosen to return to Vietnam," said Meechubot. "This is the government version and if anyone has any evidence to disprove they should do so."
Soon after Sakhorn's alleged abduction, Au, the pastor, began receiving warnings from Vietnamese immigrants and refugees that he was an abduction target because he - like Sakhorn - helps new political and religious refugees from Vietnam to adapt to life in Cambodia.
"Now, I sleep in a different place every night," said Au. "At first, my faith helped me to deal with the fear, but now it doesn't help so much. I am always afraid, I live in fear."
For Yla Lhay, a Burmese refugee who has been in Cambodia for a year, the problem is not so much a fear of abduction, but frustration. The democracy activist fled Burma in 1996 after being threatened with arrest for participating in a student uprising. He lived in Thailand until last year when Thai authorities refused to give him a new visa. He crossed over to Cambodia, obtained UNHCR refugee status, and began studying.
"If I go back to Thailand I can reduce my loneliness and depression but it is difficult to get a chance to be educated," he said. "I would rather be in a Thai refugee camp with my people than on my own in Cambodia. But I don't have a passport - if I go back I have to cross the border illegally so there is a 50 to 70 percent chance I will be arrested."
He has applied for resettlement in a third country. He hopes to return eventually to Burma but in the meantime believes resettlement in the West would allow him to advocate for democracy in his homeland.
"I have the right to stay here, but I don't have the right to do anything - I can't speak, I can't have freedom of expression. UNHCR tell me not to speak as it will create problems for me and for UNHCR. I don't want to live forever in a secret, quiet way."
The names of the refugees whose experiences are included in this article have been changed to protect their personal safety.
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