Thach Ngoc Thach, left and newly re-ordained monk Tim Sakhorn, middle, drops by VOA Khmer while on a visit in the US, file photo. (Photo: VOA Khmer) |
Friday, 20 April 2012
Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer | Washington, DC
“The government of Vietnam has always accused us of being a terrorist group, a group to break up the country.”
Members of the Khmer minority in Vietnam recently met
with State Department officials and are now looking for ways to unite
with other minorities like the Hmong and Montagnards to protect
themselves from persecution, a leading advocate says.
Thach Ngoc Thach, president of the US-based Khmer Kampuchea Krom
Federation, told VOA Khmer the main goals of these minorities are the
same.
Khmer groups in Vietnam face persecution for their religion and
separate culture, activists say, including land seizures and arbitrary
arrest.
“Khmer Krom, Montagnards, and Hmong face similar social and economic issues,”
a US State Department official said. “We continue to encourage Vietnam
to implement policy that will encourage greater economic and social
opportunities for all ethnic minorities.”
The State Deparment “continues to press Vietnam to improve its human
rights practices, including in minority regions,” the official said.
“The government of Vietnam has always accused us of being a terrorist
group, a group to break up the country,” Thach Ngoc Thach said.
Kok Ksor, president of the Montagnard Foundation, in South Carolina,
told VOA Khmer his group too had met with State officials to outline
continued rights concerns in Vietnam.
“In our church, they placed a statue of Ho Chi Minh, to worship him
before we worship God,” he said. “We have to put the [communist] party
above all. But that is not right according to our beliefs in Jesus
Christ.”
Large congregational worship is also banned, he said. “If we do, they
will arrest us and send us to prison to torture our people.”
Vietnamese officials have in the past denied accusations of human rights abuses and persecution.
Kok Ksor said that as a member of the United Nations, Vietnam should better respect people’s rights.
Joshua Cooper, a senior adviser to the Khmer Kampuchea Krom
Federation, said indigenous groups must now come together to push for
more rights, especially because Asean is creating its own rights
doctrine.
“So that is bringing people together in the Lower Mekong Initiative,
to make sure human rights is at the forefront of it,” he said.
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