without citizenship, vietnamese remain adrift · 2018-08-05 · 1/18/2016 without citizenship,...

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1/18/2016 Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift - The Cambodia Daily https://www.cambodiadaily.com/archives/without-citizenship-vietnamese-remain-adrift-77344/ 1/5 by Chris Mueller and Khuon Narim | February 4, 2015 KANDAL VILLAGE, Kompong Chhnang Province – Though they live in floating houses moored to the banks of the Tonle Sap river, few of the nearly 2,500 ethnic Vietnamese villagers here can truly call Cambodia home. Like many of his neighbors in Kompong Chhnang City’s Kandal village, Nguyen Van Hung, 59, settled on the Tonle Sap in the early 1980s when he resettled in Cambodia after fleeing the Khmer Rouge a decade earlier. Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift

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Page 1: Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift · 2018-08-05 · 1/18/2016 Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift ... by Chris Mueller and Khuon Narim | February 4, 2015 KANDAL

1/18/2016 Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift - The Cambodia Daily

https://www.cambodiadaily.com/archives/without-citizenship-vietnamese-remain-adrift-77344/ 1/5

by Chris Mueller and Khuon Narim | February 4, 2015

KANDAL VILLAGE, Kompong Chhnang Province – Though they live in floating housesmoored to the banks of the Tonle Sap river, few of the nearly 2,500 ethnic Vietnamesevillagers here can truly call Cambodia home.

Like many of his neighbors in Kompong Chhnang City’s Kandal village, Nguyen Van Hung,59, settled on the Tonle Sap in the early 1980s when he resettled in Cambodia after fleeing theKhmer Rouge a decade earlier.

Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift

Page 2: Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift · 2018-08-05 · 1/18/2016 Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift ... by Chris Mueller and Khuon Narim | February 4, 2015 KANDAL

1/18/2016 Without Citizenship, Vietnamese Remain Adrift - The Cambodia Daily

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But when he returned, he found that his Cambodian citizenship was no longer recognized.

“I have asked for Cambodian citizenship since 1982,” Mr. Hung said in an interview last week.“The government won’t do it.”

Born in Cambodia to Vietnamese parents—both of whom were also born in Cambodia—Mr.Hung said he has the right to citizenship.

“We were born here, so we should have it,” he said. “We want to live here forever.”

In the early 1970s, fervent anti-Vietnamese sentiment began to spread throughout Cambodiaunder the government of Lon Nol, forcing hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese to flee toVietnam. As the Khmer Rouge began its ascent to power, almost all Vietnamese either leftthe country, were forcibly removed or executed.

After Vietnamese forces toppled the Khmer Rouge in 1979, the ethnic Vietnamese refugeesslowly began to return to the country, but many had lost their citizenship.

Thousands built floating homes on the Tonle Sap, a cheaper and more attainable alternativeto settling on solid ground; without citizenship, the returnees were legally barred from buyingland. And unable to find work elsewhere, most families settled into lives on the river asfishermen.

The CIA World Factbook in 2012 estimated that Vietnamese people made up roughly 5percent of Cambodia population—about 750,000 people. The Factbook does notdifferentiate between ethnic Vietnamese, Vietnamese nationals and Vietnamese immigrants.

Sok Phal, head of the Interior Ministry’s immigration department, which began a nationwidecensus of foreigners in August, said last week that he did not now how many ethnicVietnamese were living in the country.

Resident Outsiders

In interviews last week, nearly a dozen ethnic Vietnamese living on the Tonle Sap river saidthey neither held Cambodian citizenship, nor knew how to acquire it.

Lounging on a hammock strung over the deck of his floating house, Nguyen Van Giao, 73, saidhe was born to Vietnamese parents in Cambodia in 1943.

The aging fisherman said he and his family fled the Khmer Rouge in 1975 and he did notreturn until 1995. Since settling on the Tonle Sap, he said a lack of Cambodian citizenship hadaffected almost every aspect of his life.

“We don’t have citizenship, so we don’t have rights like Cambodians,” he said. “People think

Nguyen Thi Nguyen, an ethnic Vietnamese woman living in Kompong Chhnang City’s Kandalvillage, prepares to dock her boat on the shore of the Tonle Sap river last week. (Chris Mueller/The Cambodia Daily)

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we are illegal immigrants and they look down on us.”

Mr. Giao also said that without a government-issued ID card—which he, his children andgrandchildren do not possess—job prospects were meager.

“If we had Cambodian IDs, it would be much easier to find jobs and run a business,” he said.

Mr. Giao said he had never attempted to apply for Cambodian citizenship because he hadnever been told how to do so. And he fears that broaching the subject with authorities wouldonly cause problems for his family.

“I worry they will deport my family and me,” he said, adding that he does have Vietnamesecitizenship.

But while he is concerned about the future of his family, Mr. Giao also said he considershimself fortunate.

“I’m happy because my granddaughter gets to attend the primary school,” he said. “And theschool pays 2,000 riel per day to her.”

The school Mr. Giao’s granddaughter attends is the newly opened Samakki Primary School, apublic institution built and operated with the support of the Minority Rights Organization(MIRO), a local NGO that provides assistance to ethnic Vietnamese and Khmer Kromcommunities.

Sourn Butmao, the acting director of MIRO, said most Vietnamese children in Cambodia arenot allowed to attend public schools because they do not have birth certificates. But in Kandalvillage, Mr. Butmao said, local officials provide letters that provisionally recognize thesechildren as residents, thus allowing them to attend public schools in the village.

While most Vietnamese children attend informal classes taught by unqualified Vietnameseteachers, he said, all 47 available spots at Samakki Primary School were filled when its first-ever semester began in September.

“Before the school was running, the Vietnamese parents didn’t trust our project,” Mr. Butmaosaid. “But so far, they are very happy.”

Laying the Foundation

Cambodia’s 1996 Law on Nationality states that in order to qualify for Cambodiancitizenship, applicants must be able to read and write Khmer, demonstrate an understandingof Cambodian history and prove they have lived continuously in the country for at least sevenyears.

Mr. Butmao said his school would offer its Vietnamese students the tools to meet the firsttwo qualifications.

“Now, they can go to school, learn about Cambodian culture and learn the Khmer language,”he said.

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Lyma Nguyen, an Australian civil party lawyer who represents ethnic Vietnamese at theKhmer Rouge tribunal, noted that school records could also be used to prove that Vietnamesestudents are residents of Cambodia.

“If they had access to school, it can give them a leg up to get documentation such as birthcertificates,” she said.

Ms. Nguyen explained that birth certificates gives ethnic Vietnamese similar rights toCambodians—rights to run businesses and hold jobs, vote and purchase land.

“It just sets them up for life and establishes who they are and that they were born inCambodia,” she said.

But Ms. Nguyen said that while obtaining a birth certificate—the first step toward obtainingfull citizenship—was within reach of most ethnic Vietnamese in Cambodia, the rest of theprocess was more difficult.

The requirements for citizenship are vague and not well understood, even by authorities, shesaid.

“Even to this day, I’m uncovering subdecrees [related to immigration and nationality] thathaven’t been published publicly,” she said.

“The law itself is inaccessible,” she added. “It’s all very randomly implemented and is almost atthe whim of who is sitting behind the desk.”

Mao Chandara, director-general of the Interior Ministry’s identification department, which istasked with issuing ID cards and birth certificates, said that applying for them is a simpleprocess.

“For foreigners who are legally living on Cambodian land, they can ask for citizenship,” hesaid. “They have to fill out an application form.”

Thai Srung, a representative of the Vietnamese community in Kandal village, however, saidthe cost of simply applying for citizenship is far beyond the means of most members of hiscommunity.

Mr. Srung said local officials had told him application fees came to about 750,000 riel, orabout $185, per person.

“For us poor families, we can’t afford it,” he said.

“We should have the same rights, but the rights are biased toward Cambodians,” he added.

“For me, I don’t care about citizenship, but I worry for future generations.”

[email protected], [email protected]

© 2015, The Cambodia Daily. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced in print,electronically, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without written permission.

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Copyright © 2015 | The Cambodia Daily | All the News Without Fear or Favor | The Daily Newspaper of Record Since 1993