Vietnam: Open Central Highlands to International Observers
Reported Killings of Montagnard Protesters
Must be Investigated Immediately

HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH PRESS RELEASE
(New York,
April 22, 2004) – Vietnamese security forces appear to have coordinated with
armed men in civilian clothing to savagely attack Montagnard protesters at more
than a dozen mass demonstrations during Easter weekend, Human Rights Watch said
today.
The international
community must act now and insist that Vietnam allow independent observers into
the highlands to conduct a thorough and impartial investigation,” said Dinah
PoKempner, General Counsel for Human Rights Watch. “We’ve received alarming
reports that scores of protesters were wounded during the demonstrations, and
that some protesters were beaten to death".
Large-scale
unrest involving between 10,000 and 30,000 indigenous minority Montagnards occurred
in the Central Highland provinces of Dak Lak, Gia Lai, and Dak Nong on April
10 and 11, according to Vietnam’s state media and independent accounts. Montagnard
activists in Vietnam and abroad say that their movement seeks to peacefully
press for religious freedom and return of ancestral lands in the Central Highlands.
The Vietnamese government has charged that “anti-government” and “counter- revolutionary”
elements are inciting the Montagnards to seek a separatist state.
Human Rights
Watch has received firsthand reports that security forces and men in civilian
clothing, armed with metal bars, shovels, clubs with nails attached to them,
machetes, and chains, confronted Montagnard protesters at more than a dozen
locations leading into Buon Ma Thuot, the capital of Dak Lak province, on the
morning of April 10. According to witnesses, the demonstrators were not armed,
although some defended themselves when attacked by throwing stones at the police.
In 12 eyewitness
accounts obtained by Human Rights Watch, sources from seven different locations
in Dak Lak, Gia Lai and Dak Nong provinces described seeing Vietnamese police,
and civilians working with the police, beating protesters. Vietnam’s state-controlled
media reported that two protesters were killed – one from rocks thrown by other
protesters and another who was run over by a tractor driven by Montagnards.
While it is impossible to confirm the numbers of casualties because the government
is barring outside observers from the region, to date Human Rights Watch has
received credible eyewitness accounts that at least 10 Montagnards were killed
-- one from a gunshot wound to the head and the others from beatings -- and
hundreds were wounded.
Clashes
broke out at more than a dozen locations when security forces and ethnic Vietnamese
in civilian clothes blocked demonstrators on roadways leading into Buon Ma Thuot,
including Phan Chu Trinh Road northwest of the city; at Ea Knir Bridge on the
road from Ea Kao commune, which lies east of the city; and at three locations
along the road leading to Krong Pak district town, which lies northeast of the
city, including the Ea Pak and Krong Ana bridges. Particularly hard hit at Phan
Chu Trinh Road were 3,000 protesters from several villages in Cu Mgar district,
northwest of Buon Ma Thuot.
The security
forces were well prepared for the protesters,” said PoKempner. “They had set
up ambushes at key places such as bridges and the main roads into the city,
and assembled people dressed as civilians holding crude weapons to block the
roads and attack the protestors.
Security
officials confiscated and burned hundreds of the farm tractors and makeshift
trailers that many Montagnards were traveling on, which had been packed with
food and supplies in preparation for several days of protests.
In Gia
Lai province, Vietnamese state media reported that demonstrators from Ayun Pa,
Cu Se, Dak Doa, Duc Co and Chu Prong districts gathered at the provincial administrative
offices in Pleiku provincial town on April 10. On April 11, Montagnards gathered
to demonstrate in numerous communes in Ayun Pa, Cu Se, and Dak Doa districts
of Gia Lai. Human Rights Watch has received reports of clashes in at least 17
locations in Gia Lai, with the fiercest incidents occurring in Ha Bau, A’Dok
and Glar communes of Dak Doa district and Ia Tiem commune of Cu Se district.
State media
reported that the provincial hospital in Pleiku received 52 injured people.
The provincial hospital in Dak Lak reported 40 injured people on the night of
April 10. Prior to a government-imposed news blackout on hospital personnel,
staff at Pleiku hospital told reporters that they had received scores of wounded
people on Sunday night, many with deep gashes and head injuries, and that at
least two demonstrators died that night. Many other wounded demonstrators, fearing
arrest, have not gone to the hospitals despite being in need of medical attention,
Human Rights Watch said.
Witnesses
said authorities quickly collected wounded people and dead bodies from the Phan
Chu Trinh area, and that within days, the blood on the roadway had been washed
away.
Human Rights
Watch stressed the urgency of an independent investigation.
“We fear
that a huge cover-up operation has likely already taken place,” said PoKempner.
“The Vietnamese government needs to account for the large numbers of people
who never returned to their villages after the demonstrations and are now feared
to be dead or detained at unknown locations.”
Hundreds
of Montagnards have fled their villages and gone into hiding, Human Rights Watch
said. In violation of Cambodia’s obligations under international law, Cambodian
security forces have been instructed to deport any Montagnards who try to cross
the border.
Testimony:
The Killings on Phan Chu Trinh Road
A 26 year
old Ede woman described a deadly incident she witnessed on Saturday morning,
April 10, when several thousand Montagnard protesters, some riding on their
farm tractors, arrived at Phan Chu Trinh road, an industrial area of machine
shops and welding supply stores on the outskirts of Buon Ma Thuot. Police had
lined up students and ethnic Vietnamese men in civilian clothing holding metal
bars, shovels, and machetes along the roadway, she said.
They suddenly
rushed at the unarmed crowd, beating the demonstrators until many were lying
in the streets,” she said. “They chased demonstrators who tried to flee, including
children and women.
She and
many other demonstrators fled to the coffee fields behind the shops lining the
roadway, chased by security forces. She described what happened:
A thousand
people tried to get away from the slaughter by the police and civilians. They
were beating us with metal bars and sticks. People were bleeding from their
throats, noses, mouths, and eyes. The villagers were crying as they tried to
get away from the slaughter by the police and civilians. We were running helter-skelter.
Those who tried to hide in the coffee plantation were caught, beaten and killed
on the spot. Police, students, and Vietnamese threw rocks at us. Many of us
were bleeding from being hit on our heads with rocks. Many people were injured
and bleeding. We didn’t have any first-aid for their wounds. They were bleeding
from their throats, noses, mouths, and eyes. A blind woman sitting on the farm
tractor was killed on the road by a dozen Vietnamese people, including police.
They asked her to get down from the tractor but she could not because she was
blind. They rushed at her and beat her until she fell from the tractor and died.
The police and Vietnamese civilians smashed and stepped on our food, clothing
and blankets we had prepared for a long-term peaceful demonstration asking for
freedom and the end to harassment of our religion and our Montagnard life.
More from Human Rights Watch
|