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The move by the Vietnamese powers on Tuesday was censured by common society as terrorizing of the Montagnards, who rights bunches say have been casualties of abuse and constraint in Vietnam. Rights amasses likewise addressed how remote police were permitted to enter and work in Cambodia.

"Those Montagnards fled their nation because of racial, political and religious abuse, and dangers," Suon Bunsak general secretary of the Cambodian Human Rights Action Coalition (CHRAC) told RFA's Khmer Service.

"On the off chance that authorities from their nation of cause came to visit them, this is a risk to their own security," he included.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) likewise scrutinized the meeting.

"Nobody who looks for shelter ought to be compelled to meet the delegate of the administration they blamed for tormenting them," UNHCR official Vivian Tan told RFA.

Among the Vietnamese powers who investigated the gathering of around 150 Montagnards was the head of Gai Lai common police, the Montagnards told RFA.

While the Vietnamese police endeavored to convince the Montagnards to come back to Vietnam, the shelter seekers declined inspired by a paranoid fear of what may happen on the off chance that they returned, they told RFA. The Montagnards additionally communicated dread that Vietnamese would capture them or that the Cambodian government would send them back.

Tan Sokvichea, leader of the Immigration Department's Refugee Division, told RFA he was uninformed of the Vietnamese police visit.

"I didn't get any data since this is at the political level," he said. "The pioneers talked about it, however we as the executing authorities did not think about that. The U.N. was not included. They recently said that Cambodia needs to actualize lawful standards as per universal law."

While movement authorities may have been ignorant of the visit, the Montagnards told RFA that Cambodian police went with the Vietnamese.

Endeavors to achieve the service's representative Khiev Sopheak were unsuccessful, however Suon Bunsak told RFA that the visit was a bruised eye for the Cambodian government.









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