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Khmer Krom

The Khmer Krom (Khmer: ជនជាតិខ្មែរក្រោម, Chónchéatĕ Khmêr Kraôm, [cɔnciət kʰmae kraom]; lit.'Lower Khmer people' or 'Southern Khmer people'; Vietnamese: người Khmer Nam Bộ, người Khmer Việt Nam, người Việt gốc Miên (used before 1975)) are ethnically Khmer people living in or from the Mekong Delta (Tây Nam Bộ), the south western part of Vietnam known in Khmer as Kampuchea Krom (Khmer: កម្ពុជាក្រោម, Kâmpŭchéa Kraôm [kampuciə kraom] lit.'Lower Cambodia'). The Khmer Krom people are considered as the Indigenous people of Southern Vietnam and having the oldest extant recorded history of inhabiting in the region.[4] In Vietnam, they are recognized as one of Vietnam's fifty-three ethnic minorities.

Khmer Krom
ជនជាតិខ្មែរក្រោម (Khmer)
người Khmer Nam Bộ (Vietnamese)
Khmer Krom dancer in Trà Vinh province
Total population
c. 2.5 million[citation needed]
Regions with significant populations
Southern Vietnam (Mekong Delta and SE Vietnam)1.32 million (2019)[1]
Cambodia1.2 million (1999)[2]
United States30,000 (1999)[2]
France3,000 (1999)[2]
Australia1,000 (1999)[2]
Other countries6,000 (1999)[2]
Languages
Khmer, Vietnamese
Religion
Theravada Buddhism 95%,[3] Roman Catholic 5%
Related ethnic groups
Khmers, Northern Khmers

In Accordance to Resolution 117-CT/TƯ issued September 29, 1981 of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Vietnam and Resolution 122-CT issued on May 12, 1982 from the Vietnamese Ministry Committee, Khmer was sanctioned by the government as the only state-recognized ethnonym of the Khmer Krom people, stated that all other colloquial exonyms previously used by Vietnamese to refer to Khmer people "are incorrect and have negative racial connotations." Both Resolutions declared that any acts of misuse to misspelling that intended to incite and direct hate speech and discrimination toward the Khmer people are prohibited by the law.[5]

In Khmer, Krom (ក្រោម kraôm) means 'low' or 'below'. It is added to differentiate from the Khmers in Cambodia. Most Khmer Krom live in Tây Nam Bộ, the southern lowland region of historical Cambodia covering an area of 89,000 square kilometres (34,363 sq mi) around modern day Ho Chi Minh City and the Mekong Delta, which used to be the southeasternmost territory of the Khmer Empire until its incorporation into Vietnam under the Nguyễn lords in the early 18th century. This marks the final stage of the Vietnamese "March to the South" (Nam tiến).[6][7]

Khmer Krom people have been members of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization since 15 July 2001.[8]

According to the US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) "the Khmer Krom people face serious restrictions of freedom of expression, assembly, association, information, and movement".[9]

Demographics edit

 
Khmer Krom dancers in Sóc Trăng province

The majority of Khmer Krom live in Southern Vietnam. According to Vietnamese government figures (2019 census), there are 1,319,652 Khmer Krom in Vietnam. Their distribution is as follows: Sóc Trăng (362,029 people, constituting 30.18% of the province's population and 27.43% of all Khmer in Vietnam), Trà Vinh (318,231 people, constituting 31.53% of the province's population and 24.11% of all Khmer in Vietnam), Kiên Giang (211,282 people, constituting 12.26% of the province's population and 16.01% of all Khmer in Vietnam), An Giang (75,878 people), Bạc Liêu (73,968 people), Bình Dương (65,233 people), Hồ Chí Minh City (50,422 people), Cà Mau (26,110 people), Đồng Nai (23,560 people), Vĩnh Long (22,630 people) each constituting less than 10% of all Khmer in Vietnam.[1]

Other estimates vary considerably, with the Khmer Kampuchea-Krom Federation claiming that there are about 7 million Khmer Krom.[3] A significant number of Khmer Krom also fled to Cambodia, estimated at 1.20 million by one source.[10]

In other parts of the world, there are approximately 40,000 Khmer Krom emigrants notably in the United States (30,000), France (3,000), Australia (1,000), Canada (500).[10] Khmer Krom emigrant communities in the US are located near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and in Washington state.[11]

Origins edit

 
Prow of the tuk ngo, Khmer Krom styled boat used in celebratory races

The Khmer Krom identify ethnically with the Khmer people, who founded the Khmer Empire under the rule of King Jayavarman II in 802 C.E.[12] They retain deep linguistic, religious, customary and cultural links to Cambodia.[13] The Mekong Delta region constituted for more than 800 years an integral part of the empire and the subsequent kingdom.[14] The region's economic center was the city of Prey Nokor, now Ho Chi Minh City.

History edit

 
Ancient Vĩnh Hưng tower, a religious structure built in 9th century CE by Khmer people, in Vĩnh Lợi district, Bạc Liêu province

Absorption of the Mekong Delta by Vietnam edit

In the 17th century a weakened Khmer state left the Mekong Delta poorly administered after repeated warfare with Siam. Concurrently Vietnamese refugees fleeing the Trịnh–Nguyễn War in Vietnam migrated into the area. In 1623 Cambodian king Chey Chettha II (1618–1628) officially sanctioned the Vietnamese immigrants to operate a custom house at Prey Nokor, then a small fishing village. The settlement steadily grew soon becoming a major regional port, attracting even more settlers.

In 1698 the Nguyễn Lords of Huế commissioned Nguyễn Hữu Cảnh, a Vietnamese noble to organize the territory along Vietnamese administrative lines, thus by de facto detaching it from the Kingdom of Cambodia and incorporating it into Vietnam.[15]

With the loss of the port of Prey Nokor, then renamed Saigon, Cambodia's control of the area grew increasingly tenuous while increasing waves of Vietnamese settlers to the Delta isolated the Khmer of the Mekong Delta from the Cambodian kingdom. By 1757 the Vietnamese had absorbed the provinces of Psar Dèk (renamed Sa Đéc in Vietnamese) on the Mekong itself, and Moat Chrouk (Vietnamized to Châu Đốc) on the Bassac River.[6]

After establishment of the Nguyễn dynasty, emperor Minh Mạng enacted compulsory assimilation policies upon the Khmer such as forcing them to adopt Sino-Vietnamese surnames, culture, and clothing. Minh Mang sinicized ethnic minorities including the Cambodians, in line with Confucianism as he diffused Vietnamese culture with China's Han civilization using the term Han people 漢人 for the Vietnamese.[16] Minh Mang declared that "We must hope that their barbarian habits will be subconsciously dissipated, and that they will daily become more infected by Han [Sino-Vietnamese] customs."[17][18] These policies were directed at the Khmer and hill tribes.[19]

Separatist movements edit

 
Khmer pagoda in Trà Vinh

Khmer nationalist Son Ngoc Thanh (1908–77) was a Khmer krom, born in Trà Vinh, Vietnam. Thanh was active in the independence movement for Cambodia. With Japanese support he became the prime minister of Cambodia in March 1945 but was then quickly ousted with the return of the French later that year. Widely supported by the Khmer Krom during the First Indochina War, Thanh's role faded in Vietnam after 1954 as he became more embroiled with politics in Cambodia proper, forming an opposition movement against Prince Sihanouk.

During the Vietnam War and direct American involvement between 1964 and 1974, the Khmer Krom were recruited by the United States Armed Forces to serve in MIKE Force.[20] The force fought on the side of South Vietnam against the Viet Cong but in time the militia regrouped as the "Front for the Struggle of Kampuchea Krom" (French: Front de Lutte du Kampuchea Krom). Headed by a Khmer Krom Buddhist monk, Samouk Sen, the group was nicknamed the "White Scarves" (Khmer: Kangsaing Sar; Vietnamese: Can Sen So) and allied itself with FULRO against South Vietnam.[21] FULRO was an alliance of Khmer Krom, Montagnard, and Cham groups.

The anti-Communist prime minister of the Khmer Republic (1970 - 1975) Lon Nol planned to recapture the Mekong Delta from South Vietnam.[22]

After the Fall of Saigon in 1975 and the Communist take-over of all of Vietnam, the Kampuchea Krom militia found itself embattled with People's Army of Vietnam. Many of the fighters fled to Khmer Rouge-controlled Democratic Kampuchea hoping to find a safe haven to launch their operations inside Vietnam. The "White Scarves" arrived in Kiri Vong District in 1976, making overture to the Khmer Rouge and appealing to the leader Khieu Samphan directly for assistance. The force was disarmed and welcomed initially. Subsequent orders from the Khmer Rouge leadership however had Samouk Sen arrested, taken to Phnom Penh, tortured, and killed. His force of 67 Khmer Krom fighters were all massacred. During the following months, some 2,000 "White Scarves" fighters crossing into Kampuchea were systematically killed by the Khmer Rouge.[23]

In the late 1970s, the Kampuchean Revolutionary Army attacked Vietnam in an attempt to reconquer the areas which were formerly part of the Khmer Empire, but this military adventure was a total disaster and precipitated the invasion of Democratic Kampuchea by the People's Army of Vietnam and subsequent downfall of the Khmer Rouge, with Vietnam occupying Kampuchea and set up the People's Republic of Kampuchea.

Human rights edit

 
Flag of Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation (KKF)

Many independent NGOs report that the human rights of the Khmer Krom are being violated by the Vietnamese government. Khmer Krom are reportedly forced to adopt Vietnamese family names and speak the Vietnamese language.[24][25] As well, the Vietnamese government has cracked down on non-violent demonstrations by the Khmer Krom.[26]

Unlike some other minority people groups in Vietnam[who?], the Khmer Krom are largely unknown by the Western world, despite efforts by associations of exiled Khmer Krom such as the Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation to publicize their plight with the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation. No Western government has yet raised the matter of the Khmer Krom's human rights with the Vietnamese government.[24]

The "Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review Working Group" was visited by the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation.[27]

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b General Statistics Office of Vietnam (2019). "Completed Results of the 2019 Viet Nam Population and Housing Census" (PDF). Statistical Publishing House (Vietnam). ISBN 978-604-75-1532-5.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Khmer Krom Background". Retrieved 2019-05-04.
  3. ^ a b "The Culture of the Khmer-Krom". KKF | Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation. December 29, 2012.
  4. ^ "Dân tộc Khơme (Khmer people)" (in Vietnamese). Nhân Dân. October 24, 2022. Retrieved October 24, 2023.
  5. ^ Chỉ thị của Chủ tịch Hội đồng Bộ trưởng số 122-CT ngày 12/5/1982 về công tác đối với đồng bào Khmer, Văn phòng Quốc hội, cơ sở dữ liệu luật Việt Nam[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ a b "Reconceptualizing Southern Vietnamese History from the 15th to 18th Centuries Competition along the Coasts from Guangdong to Cambodia by Brian A. Zottoli". University of Michigan. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  7. ^ "Mak Phœun: Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au début du XVIIIe siècle - According to Cambodian oral tradition, the marriage was because a weak Cambodian king fell in love..." (PDF). Michael Vickery’s Publications. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  8. ^ "Khmer Krom". Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation. Jan 30, 2018. Retrieved April 26, 2019.
  9. ^ "Khmer Krom in Cambodia Mark Loss of Their Homeland". Radio Free Asia. June 4, 2013. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  10. ^ a b "Khmer Krom People Statistics". KKF | Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation. Khmers Kampuchea-Krom Federation (KKF). Jan 3, 2006. Retrieved 26 April 2019.
  11. ^ Chan, Sucheng (2003). Not just victims: conversations with Cambodian community leaders in the United States. Kim, Audrey U. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 265. ISBN 025202799X. OCLC 49942929.
  12. ^ Stuart-Fox, William, The Murderous Revolution: Life & Death in Pol Pot's Kampuchea, Alternative Publishing Co-Operative Limited, 1985, pp. 6.
  13. ^ "Reconstituting the "Un-Pereson": The Khmer Krom & The Khmer Rouge Tribunal". Singapore Year Book of International Law and Contributorsb. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  14. ^ (PDF). caraweb. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 9, 2016. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  15. ^ Church, Peter (2012-02-03). MA Short History of South-East Asia edited by Peter Church. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118350447. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  16. ^ Norman G. Owen (2005). The Emergence Of Modern Southeast Asia: A New History. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 115–. ISBN 978-0-8248-2890-5.
  17. ^ A. Dirk Moses (1 January 2008). Empire, Colony, Genocide: Conquest, Occupation, and Subaltern Resistance in World History. Berghahn Books. p. 209. ISBN 978-1-84545-452-4.
  18. ^ Ta, Van Tai. "The Vietnamese Tradition of Human Rights" (PDF). Indochina Research Monograph. Institute of East Asian Studies ^§V) University of California, Berkeley: 134.
  19. ^ Randall Peerenboom; Carole J. Petersen; Albert H.Y. Chen (27 September 2006). Human Rights in Asia: A Comparative Legal Study of Twelve Asian Jurisdictions, France and the USA. Routledge. pp. 474–. ISBN 978-1-134-23881-1.
  20. ^ Vietnam Studies, U.S. Army Special Forces 1961-1971, CMH Publication 90-23, Department of the Army, Washington, D.C. 1989 (First Printed, 1973)
  21. ^ Radu, M. The New Insurgencies, Transaction Publishers, 1990, p.202
  22. ^ Kiernan, B. (2004). How Pol Pot came to Power. Yale University Press. p. 348. ISBN 9780300102628.
  23. ^ Ben Kiernan, The Pol Pot Regime: Race, Power, and Genocide in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, 1975–79. New Haven: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-14434-5, 1996
  24. ^ a b Human Rights Watch: "On the Margins: Rights and Abuses of Ethnic Khmer in Vietnam's Mekong Delta" 2013-04-23 at the Wayback Machine 2009
  25. ^ . 6 August 2009. Archived from the original on 6 August 2009. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  26. ^ "On the Margins". Human Rights Watch. 21 January 2009. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  27. ^ "Khmer Krom Attend UPR Session on Vietnam". Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation.

External links edit


khmer, krom, khmer, ជនជ, រក, chónchéatĕ, khmêr, kraôm, cɔnciət, kʰmae, kraom, lower, khmer, people, southern, khmer, people, vietnamese, người, khmer, bộ, người, khmer, việt, người, việt, gốc, miên, used, before, 1975, ethnically, khmer, people, living, from, . The Khmer Krom Khmer ជនជ ត ខ ម រក រ ម Choncheatĕ Khmer Kraom cɔnciet kʰmae kraom lit Lower Khmer people or Southern Khmer people Vietnamese người Khmer Nam Bộ người Khmer Việt Nam người Việt gốc Mien used before 1975 are ethnically Khmer people living in or from the Mekong Delta Tay Nam Bộ the south western part of Vietnam known in Khmer as Kampuchea Krom Khmer កម ព ជ ក រ ម Kampŭchea Kraom kampucie kraom lit Lower Cambodia The Khmer Krom people are considered as the Indigenous people of Southern Vietnam and having the oldest extant recorded history of inhabiting in the region 4 In Vietnam they are recognized as one of Vietnam s fifty three ethnic minorities Khmer Kromជនជ ត ខ ម រក រ ម Khmer người Khmer Nam Bộ Vietnamese Khmer Krom dancer in Tra Vinh provinceTotal populationc 2 5 million citation needed Regions with significant populationsSouthern Vietnam Mekong Delta and SE Vietnam 1 32 million 2019 1 Cambodia1 2 million 1999 2 United States30 000 1999 2 France3 000 1999 2 Australia1 000 1999 2 Other countries6 000 1999 2 LanguagesKhmer VietnameseReligionTheravada Buddhism 95 3 Roman Catholic 5 Related ethnic groupsKhmers Northern Khmers In Accordance to Resolution 117 CT TƯ issued September 29 1981 of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Vietnam and Resolution 122 CT issued on May 12 1982 from the Vietnamese Ministry Committee Khmer was sanctioned by the government as the only state recognized ethnonym of the Khmer Krom people stated that all other colloquial exonyms previously used by Vietnamese to refer to Khmer people are incorrect and have negative racial connotations Both Resolutions declared that any acts of misuse to misspelling that intended to incite and direct hate speech and discrimination toward the Khmer people are prohibited by the law 5 In Khmer Krom ក រ ម kraom means low or below It is added to differentiate from the Khmers in Cambodia Most Khmer Krom live in Tay Nam Bộ the southern lowland region of historical Cambodia covering an area of 89 000 square kilometres 34 363 sq mi around modern day Ho Chi Minh City and the Mekong Delta which used to be the southeasternmost territory of the Khmer Empire until its incorporation into Vietnam under the Nguyễn lords in the early 18th century This marks the final stage of the Vietnamese March to the South Nam tiến 6 7 Khmer Krom people have been members of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization since 15 July 2001 8 According to the US based Human Rights Watch HRW the Khmer Krom people face serious restrictions of freedom of expression assembly association information and movement 9 Contents 1 Demographics 2 Origins 3 History 3 1 Absorption of the Mekong Delta by Vietnam 3 2 Separatist movements 4 Human rights 5 Notable people 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDemographics edit nbsp Khmer Krom dancers in Soc Trăng province The majority of Khmer Krom live in Southern Vietnam According to Vietnamese government figures 2019 census there are 1 319 652 Khmer Krom in Vietnam Their distribution is as follows Soc Trăng 362 029 people constituting 30 18 of the province s population and 27 43 of all Khmer in Vietnam Tra Vinh 318 231 people constituting 31 53 of the province s population and 24 11 of all Khmer in Vietnam Kien Giang 211 282 people constituting 12 26 of the province s population and 16 01 of all Khmer in Vietnam An Giang 75 878 people Bạc Lieu 73 968 people Binh Dương 65 233 people Hồ Chi Minh City 50 422 people Ca Mau 26 110 people Đồng Nai 23 560 people Vĩnh Long 22 630 people each constituting less than 10 of all Khmer in Vietnam 1 Other estimates vary considerably with the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation claiming that there are about 7 million Khmer Krom 3 A significant number of Khmer Krom also fled to Cambodia estimated at 1 20 million by one source 10 In other parts of the world there are approximately 40 000 Khmer Krom emigrants notably in the United States 30 000 France 3 000 Australia 1 000 Canada 500 10 Khmer Krom emigrant communities in the US are located near Philadelphia Pennsylvania and in Washington state 11 Origins edit nbsp Prow of the tuk ngo Khmer Krom styled boat used in celebratory races The Khmer Krom identify ethnically with the Khmer people who founded the Khmer Empire under the rule of King Jayavarman II in 802 C E 12 They retain deep linguistic religious customary and cultural links to Cambodia 13 The Mekong Delta region constituted for more than 800 years an integral part of the empire and the subsequent kingdom 14 The region s economic center was the city of Prey Nokor now Ho Chi Minh City History editMain article History of Cambodia nbsp Ancient Vĩnh Hưng tower a religious structure built in 9th century CE by Khmer people in Vĩnh Lợi district Bạc Lieu province Absorption of the Mekong Delta by Vietnam edit In the 17th century a weakened Khmer state left the Mekong Delta poorly administered after repeated warfare with Siam Concurrently Vietnamese refugees fleeing the Trịnh Nguyễn War in Vietnam migrated into the area In 1623 Cambodian king Chey Chettha II 1618 1628 officially sanctioned the Vietnamese immigrants to operate a custom house at Prey Nokor then a small fishing village The settlement steadily grew soon becoming a major regional port attracting even more settlers In 1698 the Nguyễn Lords of Huế commissioned Nguyễn Hữu Cảnh a Vietnamese noble to organize the territory along Vietnamese administrative lines thus by de facto detaching it from the Kingdom of Cambodia and incorporating it into Vietnam 15 With the loss of the port of Prey Nokor then renamed Saigon Cambodia s control of the area grew increasingly tenuous while increasing waves of Vietnamese settlers to the Delta isolated the Khmer of the Mekong Delta from the Cambodian kingdom By 1757 the Vietnamese had absorbed the provinces of Psar Dek renamed Sa Đec in Vietnamese on the Mekong itself and Moat Chrouk Vietnamized to Chau Đốc on the Bassac River 6 After establishment of the Nguyễn dynasty emperor Minh Mạng enacted compulsory assimilation policies upon the Khmer such as forcing them to adopt Sino Vietnamese surnames culture and clothing Minh Mang sinicized ethnic minorities including the Cambodians in line with Confucianism as he diffused Vietnamese culture with China s Han civilization using the term Han people 漢人 for the Vietnamese 16 Minh Mang declared that We must hope that their barbarian habits will be subconsciously dissipated and that they will daily become more infected by Han Sino Vietnamese customs 17 18 These policies were directed at the Khmer and hill tribes 19 Separatist movements edit nbsp Khmer pagoda in Tra Vinh Khmer nationalist Son Ngoc Thanh 1908 77 was a Khmer krom born in Tra Vinh Vietnam Thanh was active in the independence movement for Cambodia With Japanese support he became the prime minister of Cambodia in March 1945 but was then quickly ousted with the return of the French later that year Widely supported by the Khmer Krom during the First Indochina War Thanh s role faded in Vietnam after 1954 as he became more embroiled with politics in Cambodia proper forming an opposition movement against Prince Sihanouk During the Vietnam War and direct American involvement between 1964 and 1974 the Khmer Krom were recruited by the United States Armed Forces to serve in MIKE Force 20 The force fought on the side of South Vietnam against the Viet Cong but in time the militia regrouped as the Front for the Struggle of Kampuchea Krom French Front de Lutte du Kampuchea Krom Headed by a Khmer Krom Buddhist monk Samouk Sen the group was nicknamed the White Scarves Khmer Kangsaing Sar Vietnamese Can Sen So and allied itself with FULRO against South Vietnam 21 FULRO was an alliance of Khmer Krom Montagnard and Cham groups The anti Communist prime minister of the Khmer Republic 1970 1975 Lon Nol planned to recapture the Mekong Delta from South Vietnam 22 After the Fall of Saigon in 1975 and the Communist take over of all of Vietnam the Kampuchea Krom militia found itself embattled with People s Army of Vietnam Many of the fighters fled to Khmer Rouge controlled Democratic Kampuchea hoping to find a safe haven to launch their operations inside Vietnam The White Scarves arrived in Kiri Vong District in 1976 making overture to the Khmer Rouge and appealing to the leader Khieu Samphan directly for assistance The force was disarmed and welcomed initially Subsequent orders from the Khmer Rouge leadership however had Samouk Sen arrested taken to Phnom Penh tortured and killed His force of 67 Khmer Krom fighters were all massacred During the following months some 2 000 White Scarves fighters crossing into Kampuchea were systematically killed by the Khmer Rouge 23 In the late 1970s the Kampuchean Revolutionary Army attacked Vietnam in an attempt to reconquer the areas which were formerly part of the Khmer Empire but this military adventure was a total disaster and precipitated the invasion of Democratic Kampuchea by the People s Army of Vietnam and subsequent downfall of the Khmer Rouge with Vietnam occupying Kampuchea and set up the People s Republic of Kampuchea Human rights edit nbsp Flag of Khmers Kampuchea Krom Federation KKF Many independent NGOs report that the human rights of the Khmer Krom are being violated by the Vietnamese government Khmer Krom are reportedly forced to adopt Vietnamese family names and speak the Vietnamese language 24 25 As well the Vietnamese government has cracked down on non violent demonstrations by the Khmer Krom 26 Unlike some other minority people groups in Vietnam who the Khmer Krom are largely unknown by the Western world despite efforts by associations of exiled Khmer Krom such as the Khmers Kampuchea Krom Federation to publicize their plight with the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation No Western government has yet raised the matter of the Khmer Krom s human rights with the Vietnamese government 24 The Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review Working Group was visited by the Khmer Kampuchea Krom Federation 27 Notable people editSee also Category Khmer Krom people Chau Sen Cocsal Chhum Prime Minister of Cambodia 1962 Ieng Sary Khmer Rouge member and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Democratic Kampuchea Son Ngoc Minh co founder of the Communist Party of Kampuchea Son Ngoc Thanh Prime Minister of Cambodia 1945 and the Khmer Republic 1972 Son Sen Khmer Rouge member and Minister of National Defence of Democratic Kampuchea Tou Samouth co founder and General Secretary of the Communist Party of Kampuchea 1951 1962 See also editKampuchea Krom Khmer people History of Cambodia CochinchinaReferences edit a b General Statistics Office of Vietnam 2019 Completed Results of the 2019 Viet Nam Population and Housing Census PDF Statistical Publishing House Vietnam ISBN 978 604 75 1532 5 a b c d e Khmer Krom Background Retrieved 2019 05 04 a b The Culture of the Khmer Krom KKF Khmers Kampuchea Krom Federation December 29 2012 Dan tộc Khơme Khmer people in Vietnamese Nhan Dan October 24 2022 Retrieved October 24 2023 Chỉ thị của Chủ tịch Hội đồng Bộ trưởng số 122 CT ngay 12 5 1982 về cong tac đối với đồng bao Khmer Văn phong Quốc hội cơ sở dữ liệu luật Việt Nam permanent dead link a b Reconceptualizing Southern Vietnamese History from the 15th to 18th Centuries Competition along the Coasts from Guangdong to Cambodia by Brian A Zottoli University of Michigan Retrieved 26 June 2015 Mak Phœun Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au debut du XVIIIe siecle According to Cambodian oral tradition the marriage was because a weak Cambodian king fell in love PDF Michael Vickery s Publications Retrieved 30 June 2015 Khmer Krom Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation Jan 30 2018 Retrieved April 26 2019 Khmer Krom in Cambodia Mark Loss of Their Homeland Radio Free Asia June 4 2013 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b Khmer Krom People Statistics KKF Khmers Kampuchea Krom Federation Khmers Kampuchea Krom Federation KKF Jan 3 2006 Retrieved 26 April 2019 Chan Sucheng 2003 Not just victims conversations with Cambodian community leaders in the United States Kim Audrey U Urbana University of Illinois Press p 265 ISBN 025202799X OCLC 49942929 Stuart Fox William The Murderous Revolution Life amp Death in Pol Pot s Kampuchea Alternative Publishing Co Operative Limited 1985 pp 6 Reconstituting the Un Pereson The Khmer Krom amp The Khmer Rouge Tribunal Singapore Year Book of International Law and Contributorsb Retrieved September 16 2016 Memorandum By Cambodia on Her Territories in South Viet Nam PDF caraweb Archived from the original PDF on September 9 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 Church Peter 2012 02 03 MA Short History of South East Asia edited by Peter Church John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781118350447 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Norman G Owen 2005 The Emergence Of Modern Southeast Asia A New History University of Hawaii Press pp 115 ISBN 978 0 8248 2890 5 A Dirk Moses 1 January 2008 Empire Colony Genocide Conquest Occupation and Subaltern Resistance in World History Berghahn Books p 209 ISBN 978 1 84545 452 4 Ta Van Tai The Vietnamese Tradition of Human Rights PDF Indochina Research Monograph Institute of East Asian Studies V University of California Berkeley 134 Randall Peerenboom Carole J Petersen Albert H Y Chen 27 September 2006 Human Rights in Asia A Comparative Legal Study of Twelve Asian Jurisdictions France and the USA Routledge pp 474 ISBN 978 1 134 23881 1 Vietnam Studies U S Army Special Forces 1961 1971 CMH Publication 90 23 Department of the Army Washington D C 1989 First Printed 1973 Radu M The New Insurgencies Transaction Publishers 1990 p 202 Kiernan B 2004 How Pol Pot came to Power Yale University Press p 348 ISBN 9780300102628 Ben Kiernan The Pol Pot Regime Race Power and Genocide in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge 1975 79 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 14434 5 1996 a b Human Rights Watch On the Margins Rights and Abuses of Ethnic Khmer in Vietnam s Mekong Delta Archived 2013 04 23 at the Wayback Machine 2009 Rearhoo The Dark Age KKF 6 August 2009 Archived from the original on 6 August 2009 Retrieved 21 September 2016 On the Margins Human Rights Watch 21 January 2009 Retrieved 21 September 2016 Khmer Krom Attend UPR Session on Vietnam Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Khmer Krom nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Khmer Krom Khmers Kampuchea Krom Federation KKF Khmer Krom news and information network Khmer Krom news and information in Khmer language Khmer Krom A Royal Solution for a Nationalist Vietnam reported by Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation Video clips of Rebecca Sommer s film Eliminated without Bleeding documenting human rights violation claims of the Khmer Krom in Vietnam March 2007 Article on religious oppression by Vietnam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khmer Krom amp oldid 1220926169, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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