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UNITED NATIONS
Economic and Social Council
Distr. General
E/CN.4/2005/NGO/177
10 March 2005
English only
COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
Sixty-first session
Item 15 of the provisional agenda
INDIGENOUS ISSUES
Written statement* submitted by the Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development
(FORUM-ASIA), a non-governmental organization in special consultative status
The Secretary-General has received the following written statement which is
circulated in
accordance with Economic and Social Council resolution 1996/31.
[10 February 2005]
* This written statement is issued, unedited, in the language(s) received from
the submitting
non-governmental organization(s).
SITUATION OF KHMER KROM PEOPLES IN VIETNAM
1. Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUMASIA), a non-governmental
organisation in special consultative status, in cooperation with the Unrepresented
Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO) and the Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation,
wish to draw the attention of the 61st Commission on Human Rights on the situation
of Khmer Krom Peoples in Vietnam.
2. While the human rights situation in Viet Nam has been raised at the
UN Commission on Human Rights, very little is known about the oppression of
the
indigenous Khmer Krom people in this country who lived in the former Cochin
China,
now in the southern part of present-day Viet Nam.
3. The UN Human Rights Committee (HRC) while considering Viet
Nam’s second Periodic Report, requested the country “to provide
information on
minorities in Viet Nam, including the Khmer Krom community.”
4. The assurances provided, in Viet Nam’s response to the HRC dated
23 April, 2002, contrast sharply with the actual reality of Khmer Krom situation.
Having endured immense human rights violations, subjected to ethnic, religious,
and
cultural discrimination and grievous oppression, they remain too terrorized
to speak
out about their sufferings to the world. Efforts to use domestic remedies have
resulted
in increased repression and retaliation, as indicated in the report, Vietnam:
The
Silencing of Dissent, by Human Rights Watch of 1 May 2000.
5. Gross and systematic human rights violations have been inflicted
upon the Khmer Krom people by Vietnamese authorities. This has been the strategy
of Viet Nam after it occupied Khmer Krom homeland. In this strategy countless
Khmer Krom leaders have faced summary executions. Others faced involuntary
disappearance or remain incarcerated for life. In terms of prison atrocities,
unknown
substances to impair a Khmer Krom individual’s brain functions were applied
with
detainees then being released mentally immobilised.
6. The Khmer Krom people are farmers and as such securing their
land rights becomes a crucial issue. Unfortunately, their lands have been confiscated
by the Vietnamese authorities to build roads and irrigation systems or handed
over to
Vietnamese farmers. No compensation has been provided to the Khmer Krom people.
On the contrary, if they wish to use the water from the irrigation facilities,
they must
pay for it.
7. Around 95 percent of the Khmers-Krom people practice Hinayanna
Buddhism, whereas most Vietnamese practice Mahayanna. On this issue, Viet Nam
continues to violate the rights of Hinayana Buddhists. The Special Rapporteur
on
Freedom of Religion or Belief, in his report to the fifty-fifth session of the
UNCHR
said: “The Special Rapporteur went to the place where a private meeting
was to take
place with representatives of the Khmers Krom, but the people he interviewed
were
unable to communicate any information whatsoever. After the visit, non-governmental
sources indicated that the Khmers Krom representatives' failure to make statements
had apparently been due to pressure from the security services.”
8. Similarly, HRC Concluding Observations of 26 July 2002 noted
that Viet Nam had provided insufficient information for the Committee “to
have a
clear view of the situation in Viet Nam with regard to religious freedom. In
the light
of information available to the Committee that certain religious practices are
repressed
or strongly discouraged in Viet Nam, the Committee is seriously concerned that
the
State party's practice in this respect does not meet the requirements of Article
18 of
the Covenant. The Committee is deeply concerned by allegations of harassment
and
detention of religious leaders and regrets that the delegation failed to provide
information relating to such allegations. In this context, the Committee is
concerned at
the restrictions placed on outside observers who wished to investigate the allegations.”
9. The Viet Nam’’s Ordinance of the Standing Committee of the
National Assembly regarding religious belief and religious organizations of
18 June,
2004 assures a degree of religious freedom. However, in practice temples have
been
used as prisons. Authorities dictate how Buddhism should be practiced with police
stationed at Buddhist to enforce the government’s policies. Land owned
by Buddhist
temples has been seized to provide housing for Vietnamese settlers. The imposition
of
restrictions on the importation of Pitakas (Buddhist religious texts) from Cambodia
for use by the Khmer Krom people remains a serious concern. Similarly forcing
Khmer Krom monks to join the Vietnamese army is creating a vacuum in the Khmer
Krom’s Buddhist clergy strength to serve the religious needs of the Khmer
Krom
people.
10. In terms of economic, social and cultural rights, there are no health
care facilities, no doctors or health workers, no prenatal care for expectant
mothers, no
vaccinations for children. As a result infant mortality rate is high. One of
the major
health crisis, faced by thousands of Khmer Krom people is blindness of undetermined
origin in one or both eyes, for which no treatment is available.
11. Clinics and hospitals in the urban areas generally refuse to treat
Khmer Krom people because they cannot pay medical bills. Since 2003, the epidemic
of blindness has spread throughout Kleang Provinces. Viet Nam, however, has
failed
to address the problem by making no serious effort to find the causes and remedies.
12. The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) in its
Summary Record of the 848th Meeting of 22 January 2003, acknowledged that children
in remote areas of Viet Nam had less access to social services than children
in urban
settings. This applies generally to Khmer Krom children. Deficiencies in education
for
the Khmers Krom children relate closely to religious-cultural discrimination
and
socio-economic marginalisation. Instead of promoting the tradition and culture
of
Khmer Krom people as an integral part of educating Khmer Krom children; Viet
Nam
has looked upon the Khmer Krom language, culture, and tradition with consistent
disdain. As such, there is no center for Khmer Krom studies or library in the
Khmer
language anywhere in Viet Nam. Teaching of the Khmer language in public school
is
inadequate. The Khmer Krom Buddhist clergy are forced to study new books and
materials that are devoid of their cultural values.
13. The Vietnamese population generally enjoy far better educational
opportunities and programs than the Khmer Krom people. In a Khmer Krom
population estimated by some international sources as 8 million (1.3 million,
according to the Government of Viet Nam), no one holds a Ph. D. and only 6
individuals hold Masters Degrees. Many Khmer Krom who hold undergraduate
degrees remain unemployed.
14. Khmers Krom people are forced to adopt Vietnamese culture,
forced to use only the Vietnamese language in official business, forced to subordinate
their traditions to the economic interests of the State (as in conducting the
traditionally-annual boat-racing festivals more than once a year, so as to provide
more
tourist-generated income for the government). Social and cultural activities
of the
Khmer Krom people are controlled and managed by Vietnamese authorities. The
Khmer Krom people are denied the right to wear traditional clothing and the
right to
build cultural museums.
15. Another serious problem faced by the Khmer Krom people is the
State-supported settlement of Vietnamese in the Khmer Krom homeland. This brought
about grave consequences upon our culture. The Concluding observations Viet
Nam of
the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD),, of 15
August, 2001, included the following expression of concern: “The Committee
is
further concerned about the alleged population transfer to territories inhabited
by
indigenous groups, disadvantaging them in the exercise of their social, economic
and
cultural rights.”
16. In conclusion, our organisations calls upon the Government of Viet
Nam
i. To invite the World Health Organization (WHO) and relevant thematic
mandates of the UN Commission on Human Rights, in particular the Special
Rapporteur on the Right to Health and the Special Rapporteur on human rights
of indigenous peoples, on official missions, including to the homeland of the
Khmer Krom people.
ii. To take effective measures in implementing the recommendations of the
following treaties bodies
a. Concluding observations of the Committee on Elimination of Racial
Discrimination: Vietnam 15/08/2001 especially
i. Paragraph 424: “The Committee recommends that State party
strengthen the education of the society in a spirit of respect for
human rights and in particular the rights of members of ethnic
minorities.”
b. Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee: Vietnam
26/07/2002 especially
i. Paragraph 19 “The State party should take immediate measures to
ensure the rights of members of indigenous people communities are
respected. Non-governmental organizations and other human rights
monitors should be granted access…”
c. Concluding observation of the Committee on Rights of the Child: Vietnam
18/03/2003 especially
i. Paragraph 14 “The Committee recommends that the State party pay
particular attention to the full implementation of article 4 of the
Convention by prioritizing budgetary allocations to ensure
implementation of the economic, social and cultural rights of
children, in particular those belonging to economically
disadvantaged groups and living in rural or mountainous areas,…”
18. We call on the Working Group on Indigenous Peoples of the Sub-Commission
to
take into consideration the plight of Khmer Krom people in their continuous
study
on lands rights and Indigenous peoples.
19. We call on the Permanent Forum of the Indigenous Peoples to pay attention
in
their discourse to this highly marginalized Khmer Krom Peoples in Vietnam.
Source: OHCHR |