Cambodian
opposition lawmakers and activists confront Vietnamese soldiers and villagers
at the border in Ratanakiri province, June 8, 2015.
Cambodia has deported 700 illegal immigrants in the past six months, the
ministry of interior said on Thursday, as the detention of Vietnamese border
guards who disguised themselves as local police to spy on a meeting underscored
Phnom Penh’s difficulty in controlling its borders.
Ouk Hai
Seila, head of the ministry’s immigration investigation bureau, told RFA’s
Khmer Service authorities had deported 500 Vietnamese and 200 Chinese illegal
immigrants since late 2014. Most had come seeking work in construction, he
said.
“Illegal
Vietnamese are coming to Cambodia because there are ethnic Vietnamese who are
living in Cambodia. Some contractors in construction businesses and carpentry
hired staff from Vietnam. They are illegal entering the country,” he said.
Ouk Hai
Seila spoke to RFA after a raid on Wednesday by police netted more than 50
illegal Vietnamese immigrants, who were working in Karaoke parlors and as
carpenters.
Cambodian
social analyst Kem Lei told RFA some aspects of the raids were questionable
because they were conducted in secrecy and took place without addressing
problems of lawlessness and corruption that allowed easy entry into the
country.
“Immigration
law has not been fully enforced, so this raises concerns,” he said.
Porous border
Cambodia’s
difficulty in policing its frontiers was driven home by another incident this
week involving its larger neighbor Vietnam in an area where the two countries
have a nagging border dispute.
On
Wednesday activists from the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP)
detained two Vietnamese border police officers who dressed in Cambodian police
uniforms and eavesdropped on a meeting the party held in Ratanakiri province to
call attention to what they say is illegal irrigation dam construction in by
Vietnamese people on the Cambodian side of a disputed border.
Local
villager Romas Svat told RFA that the villagers detained a spy who sneaked into
the group to listen the rally.
“We
detained a Vietnamese, but we didn’t use any violence against him,” he said.
CNRP lawmaker
Mao Monivann, who had led a rally in the area on Monday, stepped in to prevent
a crowd of Cambodians who had threatened to beat up the Vietnamese officers,
which they accused of spying on the activists.
“They
[Vietnamese soldiers] entered Cambodia illegally, they abused Cambodian laws.
We detained them for the police,” he told RFA’s Khmer Service. One
escaped during the scuffle.
Police
later released the Vietnamese officer, drawing criticism from Cambodian
activists, who said the captured man should have been tried.
“The
police officers abused the law by releasing the Vietnamese soldier who entered
Cambodia illegally,” Chhay Thy, a coordinator for the NGO, told RFA.
On Monday,
around 200 activists from Ratanakiri province led by opposition lawmakers
confronted dozens of soldiers and villagers from Vietnam in a standoff over the
digging of irrigation ponds in a non-demarcated area along the border shared by
the two nations.
The
activists were met by around 50 Vietnamese soldiers armed with guns and patrol
dogs, and Vietnamese villagers, at the edge of the so-called “white zone” of
unmarked border territory in Oyadaw district, Mao Monivann said on
Monday.
After a
three-hour standoff, the group from Cambodia pushed forward into the white zone
and determined that Vietnam had broken an agreement between the two nations
prohibiting development of the area until the border is officially demarcated.
Conflicts
along the 1,228-kilometer (763-mile) Cambodia-Vietnam border have occurred in
several other provinces, including Svay Rieng, Kampot, Tbong Khmum and Kampong
Cham.
Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated
by Samean Yun. Written in English by Paul Eckert.
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