FOCUS NEWS from COMPASS DIRECT
Global News from the Frontlines
Summary:
HO
CHI MINH CITY, May 21
(Compass) -- In spite of efforts by Vietnam to minimize and cover up their brutal
repression of demonstration attempts by the Montagnard ethnic minority this
past Easter, consistent information is emerging that confirms atrocities. During
Easter weekend, April 10 and 11, Montagnards in Vietnam’s Central Highlands
sought to call attention to harsh injustices they suffer at the hands of communist
authorities and ethnic Vietnamese settlers. However, Vietnamese security forces
attacked the demonstrators, causing many deaths, injuries, arrests, and the
flight of many more to unknown locations. One church leader reported to Compass,
“They [state officials] have promised to deliver to us great hardship
and pain. They specifically promise us fear and revenge. Day by day the animosity
between the races grows. It is virtually impossible to see how this can now
be resolved.”
**********
Vietnam’s
Atrocities Against Montagnards Confirmed
Facts surrounding Easter incident slowly emerge.
Special to Compass Direct
HO
CHI MINH CITY, May 21 (Compass) -- In spite of monumental efforts by
Vietnam to minimize and cover up their brutal repression of demonstration attempts
by the Montagnard ethnic minority this past Easter, consistent information is
emerging that confirms atrocities.
During Easter
weekend, April 10 and 11, Montagnards in Vietnam’s Central Highlands sought
to call attention to the harsh injustices they suffer at the hands of communist
authorities and ethnic Vietnamese settlers. However, Vietnamese security forces
attacked the demonstrators, causing many deaths, injuries, arrests, and the
flight of many more to unknown locations.
Montagnards,
who are largely Christian, have long been the victims of severe harassment and
persecution at the hands of the Kinh majority. This ill-treatment intensified
after previous demonstrations held in 2001. One church leader reported to Compass,
“They [state officials] have promised to deliver to us great hardship
and pain. They specifically promise us fear and revenge. Day by day the animosity
between the races grows. It is virtually impossible to see how this can now
be resolved.”
Reliable
sources from Vietnam have produced a list of names, along with birthdates and
village addresses, of 11 Ede people in seven Dak Lak provincial villages who
were arrested. Sixty-three others were listed as “killed, badly wounded
or known to be in hiding.” The list also covered articles that were confiscated,
including small farm tractors, fuel oil, water pumps, gold and cash.
Another
document, apparently prepared not long after the Easter events, reported the
deaths of 205 people in seven other Dak Lak villages. In four of those villages,
usually inhabited by a total of 2,200 people, only 12 people remained. The fate
and location of the missing is not known; some may have now returned.
The same
document reported that over 500 small farm tractors, used in transporting Montagnards
from 30 villages to the demonstrations, were completely destroyed.
On May 17,
the Montagnard Foundation Inc. (MFI), which Vietnam blames for the unrest, released
a 12-page report giving details of the repression. The MFI report named 37 people
killed during the Easter demonstration. Four of the dead were described as Jarai
from Gia Lai Province and the remainder as Ede from Dak Lak.
The MFI
claims it has information that another 239 people, as yet unidentified, were
also killed. Numbers in the report issued by MFI immediately after Easter weekend
appear to have been exaggerated. However, MFI spokesmen believe that information
still emerging will confirm their earlier claim that at least 400 people were
killed that weekend.
“The
verifying of deaths is a huge challenge,” a respected Vietnam watcher
explained, “but it is looking more and more certain that the number of
confirmed dead will exceed 100.
“Vietnam’s
admission of only two deaths is ridiculous. However, it will prove very hard
to provide forensic or testimonial evidence because Vietnam is engaged in a
rapid and thorough cleanup of evidence, and is now firmly rejecting calls for
independent investigations. Further, authorities are going to extraordinary
lengths to prevent news from getting out, and to prevent official visitors such
as diplomats and journalists from talking freely to people.”
Visits to
the region by U.S. diplomats, a Vatican delegation, and a team comprised of
the Canadian, Norwegian, Swiss and New Zealand ambassadors were completely controlled
by Vietnam officials. A handful of Montagnards were selected to speak with the
foreign visitors. However, local sources say they were threatened with severe
consequences if they so much as hinted at the truth of what happened.
After each
diplomatic visit, Vietnamese state journalists published manufactured quotes
saying the diplomats had complimented Vietnam for its enlightened minority policies.
In each case, the diplomats took strong public exception to the misrepresentation.
Vietnam’s
Kinh majority have a long history of racist attitudes towards the Montagnards
and other minorities. The minorities are subject to discrimination through the
illegal seizure of their lands, along with poor access to education, health
care, jobs, government relief and small loans. Those who do have access to public
schools are often driven out of the classroom by the ridicule and abuse of fellow
students.
There were
several accounts of cruelty to Montagnard children during the post-Easter crackdown.
One report stated that a number of third grade Montagnard schoolgirls were attacked
on the road in Buon Poc. One of the girls was stabbed to death, while another
was “humiliated” (a euphemism for rape) and then stoned to death.
A similar fate befell a schoolgirl in Buon Dha Prong.
Another
source reported that those attacking the Montagnards in a certain location killed
a number of children first, saying this was a pre-emptive action to stop future
demonstrators.
Some human
rights organizations are concerned that democratic governments seem unwilling
to address these atrocities, apparently because they lack forensic “proof.”
It appears that Vietnamese authorities have worked hard to prevent such proof
from surfacing.
A Montagnard
pastor told Compass, “If all foreign countries incline their ears toward
Vietnam and continue to believe its lies, then it is absolutely certain that,
bit by bit, the Montagnard people will be totally exterminated.” |