home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!news.service.uci.edu!ucivax!gateway
- From: mdo@socrates.umd.edu ("Mike T. Do")
- Subject: [NEWS] Flow of Vietnamese to Hong Kong Seems Over, to Hong Kong's Relief
- Message-ID: <Pine.3.05.9211170020.A12111-e101000@socrates.umd.edu>
- Content-Type: MULTIPART/MIXED; BOUNDARY="308100-96667764-721978179:#12111"
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.vietnamese
- Lines: 160
- Date: 17 Nov 92 05:28:58 GMT
-
- --308100-96667764-721978179:#12111
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- --308100-96667764-721978179:#12111
- Content-Type: APPLICATION/octet-stream; name=news2
- Content-ID: <Pine.3.05.9211170039.A12111@socrates.umd.edu>
- Content-Description:
-
- Flow of Vietnamese to Hong Kong Seems Over, to Hong Kong's Relief
- From New York Times (11/16/92)
- By Nicholas D. Kristof
- Special to the New York Times
-
- Hong Kong, Nov 11-After 17 years in which more than 1.5 million Vietnamese fled
- their homeland, the exodus appears to have ended, and the refugee experts say
- they belive that the long catastrophe of the "boat people" is finally winding
- to a close.
- The exodus was one of the tragedies of the latter part of this century.
- Tens of thousands of Vietnamese were drowned at sea or killed by pirates
- while trying to escape, and nearby countries sometimes tried to deter the
- boat people from landing by firing on them as they approached the shore or by
- towing their rickety boats back out to sea.
- Even for those who landed safely in places like Hong Kong, there has been
- no quick deliverance. About 48,000 Vietnamese are still in bleak camps in
- this British territory, with some having waited for a decade to be resettled
- in the West.
- Recent statistics suggest that the huge migration may finally have ended.
- Only nine Vietnamese arrived in Hong Kong in the first nine months of this
- year, and now only three since then, compared to more than 20,000 in the
- similar period last year.
- New arrivals have also slowed to a trickle elsewhere in Southeast Asia.
- In the first eight months of this year, only 18 Vietnamese landed in
- Indonesia, 9 in Thailand, 1 in Malaysia and none in Singapore, Macao or
- Philippines.
- "Everything points to the fact that this is a problem that is passing
- into the pages of history," said Brian J. Bresnihan, refugeee coodinator for
- the Hong Kong government. "The decline in the exodus is one of the most
- important elements of this, and the other is the increased willingness of
- people in the camps to return to Vietnam."
- No one entirely rules out the possiblity of a resumption in the exodus; a
- lull in the early 1980's was followed by another surged of migrants chasing
- rumors of relaxed resettlement policies. But most experts believe that a
- resumption is quite unlikely, in part because the returning Vietnamese are
- now carrying with them the message that flight is a dead end.
- Just a year or two ago, the problem of the boat people was regularly
- modified by the adjective "insoluble." Last year, 21,900 Vietnamese arrivals
- were reported by Southeast Asia countries, on top of 32,100 in 1990 and
- 70,000 in 1989.
- Until recently, the number of Vietnamese born in the camps in Hong Kong
- exceeded the number of returning to Vietnam. Some young children have no
- memories of anything but life behind the barbed-wire fences, locked in a
- world that is virtually a prison - except that it is run by gangs more than
- by guards.
- "There is a repressive regime of unimaginable ghastliness inside these
- concentration camps here," said Michael T. Darwyne, a Hong Kong lawyer and
- advocate for the Vietnamese. "Hong Kong has persecuted the asylum seekers -
- to a degree less than they are persecuted in Vietnam, but it has persecuted
- them nonetheless.
- "We are imposing on them a psychological tortue and physical deprivation
- of unparalleled proportions. Under the stress of that, they are moving back
- away from the cuntries where they have sought asylum, and particularly from
- Hong Kong. In that sense, what Hong Kong perceives as its problem is being
- solved."
- Hong Kong officials acknowledge that the camps are grim but note that
- there are Vietnamese-language schools and other facilities, and they say
- conditions are not as bad as critics like Mr. Darwyne suggest. One reason
- why conditions are difficult to gauge is that journalists are allowed in the
- camps only occasionally, on supervised tours arranged by the authorities.
- Only a tiny proportion of the boat people are deemed to be political
- refugees eligble for resettlement in the West. The rest are locked up in the
- camps and told that their only way out is to return to Vietnam. In the past,
- most stuck it out, hoping against hope that the United States would change
- its policies and take them in.
- Since autumn 1991, however, the number agreeing to return to Vietnam has
- picked up sharly, to an average of about 1,000 a month. A record 1,400 are
- expected to return this month. While Hong Kong has as many Vietnamese as all
- other countries in the region combined, the numbers are also going down in
- Indonesia, Malaysia and other countries.
- The xodus of the boat people began with a specific event - the collapse
- of South Vietnam in 1975 - and so perhaps it was inevitable that it would
- eventually end. In addition, a complex web of factors help explain why the
- Vietnamese are no longer fleeing their homeland and those abroad are
- beginning to go back.
- While the phrase "boat people" is often used as shorthand for the
- Vietnamese, some arrive by other means. In recent years, many were "bus
- people" who traveled by land through China before taking a boat for the final
- hop to Hong Kong.
- The Vietnamese Government initially encouraged the flight, seeing it as
- an opportunity to confiscate the wealth of the emigrants and to rid the
- country of its ethnic Chinese minority. Now Hanoi, eager to improve ties
- with the West, seems eager to curb the outflow and take back those who fled.
- Foreign lands are much less alluring than they used to be: Vietnamese
- have learned, through the tragedy of lost and wasted lives of their friends
- and relatives, that other countries will not offer them a better life.
- "The message is getting through about what the realities are," said Robert
- Van Leeuwen, chief of the Hong Kong mission of the United Nations High
- Commissioner for Refugees.
- Another factor is the improvement in living standards in Vietnam as the
- economy opens up. Special videos have been shown in the camps in Hong Kong,
- emphasizing the new opportunities if the Vietnamese return home.
- It also helps that the European Community has paid for projects that
- offer returning boat people vocational training or small loans to start
- businesses. The United States said in September that it would contribute up
- to $2 million for similar programs.
- While the horrors of privacy and drowning are now fading, new tragedies
- are unfolding in the lives of people lilke 26-year-old Cam Jia Ninh, who has
- been living in a camp in Hong Kong for more than five years. Mr. Cam married
- another Vietnamese, Pham Thi Thuy; they have a six-month son.
- Now the family is about to be split up, perhaps forever. Hong Kong will
- send Pham Thi Thuy and her son back to China. Vietnam expelled Mr. Cam, an
- ethnic Chinese, to China in 1978 and will not take him back; China refuses to
- take Ms. Pham; Hong Kong refuses to allow them stay.
- Mr. Bresnihan, the refugee coordinator, said that while this kind of
- separation is a terible thing, allowing such couples to settle in Hong Kong
- would lead to a flood of similar marriages.
- The Hong Kong government interviewes all the Vietnamese arrivals to
- screen out those whom it regards as genuine political refugees, and they are
- resettled in the West. But human rights groups such as Asia Watch have
- criticized the screening procedures.
- "The real question is wheter screening is adequate, whether Hong Kong is
- identifying those at risk," said Dinah PoKempner, a researcher at Asia Watch.
- There has been no proven case of a boat people being persecuted after
- returning to Vietnam, but it is not clear that the West would find out if it
- had happened only occasionally.
- Almost all of the returning Vietnamese are described as volunteers, but
- the spur in many cases is the forced repatriation program that Hong Kong
- instituted in May. Some of the 38 Vietnames on the first flight had to be
- dragged onto the plane, and Hong Kong was widely criticized for the action.
- But the threat of being forcibly repatriated has encouraged people to
- "volunteer".
- Sympathy in Hong Kong for the boat people seems to be extremely limited,
- in part because illegal immigrants from China are forced back all the time -
- about 60 a day. Many Hong Kong Chinese see no reason why the Vietnamese
- should be treat differently.
- People in Hong Kong say the territory, a peck of land already crowded
- with 5.8 million people, alread has done more than its due. Many officials
- and ordinary citizens are indignant that Americans should complain about the
- repatriations when the United States forces migrants back to Mexico daily and
- has been shipping refugees back to Haiti, where they appeared face greater
- risk than those returned to Vietnam.
- Even though the exodus from Vietnam appears to have ended, it will take
- several years for the camps to be emptied. More than 18,000 are still
- waiting to be screened to determine if they are political refugees or simply
- economic migrants, who will be sent back. The screening will not be
- completed until 1994.
- Other countries in the regfion have not begun the kind of repatriation
- program that Hong Kong has initiated, and perhaps as a result it could take
- them longer to clear their camps. Outside Hong Kong, Indonesia has the most
- Vietnamese, with 15,000 followed by Malaysia with nearly 11,000.
- In the meantime, conditions in the camps remain grim. Just a few weeks
- ago, in a dispute about money, several Vietnamese chased another man into Red
- Cross clinic and stabbed him to death in front of horrified nurses.
- Ms. PoKemper said that she had just returned from a trip to refugee camps
- in Bosnia and that conditions there were much better than camps in Hong Kong:
- "Morale was better and food was better, and there wasn't the despair and
- complete social breakdown you have at the camp in Hong Kong."
-
-
- --308100-96667764-721978179:#12111--
-
-