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New
Documents Reveal Escalating Repression
(New York, April 21, 2003) - Vietnam's campaign of persecution against
ethnic minorities known as Montagnards is increasing, Human Rights
Watch said today, making public new documents smuggled out of the
country's Central Highland region.
A nineteen-page briefing paper published by Human Rights Watch details
recent events in the Central Highlands through March 2003 and provides
English translations of previously unavailable documents, including
several hand-written Montagnard testimonies on the crackdown, and two
internal Vietnamese government directives.
"Despite Hanoi's statements of concern for its ethnic minorities,
Vietnam is clearly escalating its repression of the Montagnards," said
Brad Adams, executive director of the Asia Division of Human Rights
Watch. "The United Nations and Vietnam's international donors must take
a more active role in protesting and preventing such serious human
rights violations."
Nine letters written by Montagnard church leaders in Dak Lak province
detail ongoing human rights violations up to the end of February 2003.
They describe beatings of church leaders by police and other officials,
destruction of churches, official prohibitions on nighttime gatherings
and travel outside of villages, and widespread confiscation of
villagers' farm land by authorities.
Human Rights Watch has obtained original copies of official Vietnamese
government documents issued in February 2003, describing ceremonies in
which Montagnard villagers are forced to "Swear Brotherhood" (le ket
nghia) with local party cadres in front of pictures of Ho Chi Minh.
Local officials are instructed to coordinate with party officials to
"step by step, eradicate out-dated and backward ways, and eradicate all
illegal religious organizations."
To enforce the new directives, in February 2003 the Vietnamese
government launched a fresh round of arrests of Montagnard Christians
as well as those suspected by the government of seeking to flee to
Cambodia or of supporting the Montagnard movement for greater land
rights. Widespread peaceful demonstrations took place in the Central
Highlands in February 2001.
Other documents obtained by Human Rights Watch show how government
officials are forcing Montagnards to sign "voluntary" papers pledging
to withdraw petitions opposing government confiscation of their land.
In March, Human Rights Watch received a handwritten list containing the
names and thumbprints of 439 ethnic Montagnard Christian families
(1,206 people) from Dak Lak province, Vietnam, who are requesting
international protection in Cambodia. "Please have pity for us and
rescue the Christian believers and help us receive back our ancestral
lands," one of the petitions states. "Only those who have been
persecuted have agreed to give their fingerprints below."
Hundreds of Montagnards have gone into hiding in Vietnam, unable to
obtain asylum in Cambodia. On March 26, Vietnamese security police and
soldiers shot at a group of Montagnards who had gone into hiding in the
forest in Gia Lai province. Five people escaped, but two men were
wounded and taken to the commune center, where one of the men later
died. When his body was returned to his family, his skull had been
severely crushed, apparently from additional beatings by security
officers at the commune center. The whereabouts of the other man taken
into custody are unknown. A third Montagnard was arrested and beaten on
March 27, but then allowed to return to his village.
Since the beginning of 2003, more than 100 Montagnards who have tried
to flee to Cambodia have been forcibly returned to Vietnam, where some
have been arrested and beaten. More than seventy Montagnards are
currently serving lengthy prison sentences in Vietnam for participating
in protests or trying to flee to Cambodia since February 2001.
The Cambodian government, which last year sealed its borders to new
refugee arrivals, announced this month that it plans to close the
refugee transit center operated by the U.N. High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) in Phnom Penh as soon as the final forty-two refugees
are resettled.
"UNHCR's ability to protect and screen new refugees will be severely
compromised if it is forced to close its refugee camps in Cambodia,"
said Adams.
Human Rights Watch called on Vietnam's international donors to insist
that Vietnam cease its persecution against the Montagnards. Human
Rights Watch also called on the Cambodian government to authorize UNHCR
to immediately establish a field presence in Cambodia's border
provinces, to re-open provincial refugee camps that were closed last
year, and to provide protection and assistance to refugees from
Vietnam.

To view the briefing paper, "Vietnam: New Documents Reveal Escalating
Repression," please see
http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/asia/vietnam/montagnards/
For more information, please contact:
In New York, Brad Adams: +1-212-216-1228
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