To the kind attention of:
Hon. Governor General Dame Silvia Cartwright
Government House, Private Bag,
Wellington, New Zealand
Hon. Prime Minister Helen Clark
PO Box 18888
Parliament Buildings
Wellington, New Zealand
November 29, 2005
Open Letter to Hon. Prime Minister And Hon. Governor General of New Zealand in Regards to Over 300 Montagnard Prisoners
of Conscience And Vietnam's Attempts to Gain Membership in the WTO
Dear Hon. Governor General Dame Silvia Cartwright and Hon. Prime Minister Helen Clark
Recently the New Zealand Herald published an articles dealing with New Zealand's negotiations with Vietnam being granted
entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO) and this is the reason I am writing to you today. This letter is an actual
plea of utmost importance for the well-being of hundreds of our peaceful indigenous people who have been unjustly
imprisoned by the Government of Vietnam. I also note that our people the Montagnard Degar people of Vietnam Central
Highlands also have a ancestral heritage with your country's Indigenous people namely that we also are of
Malayo-Polynesian origins as are the Maori Peoples.
Our people recognize that Vietnam is trying to gain entry into the WTO, and while we do not harbor ill-feelings toward
progress in Vietnam, we however, cry out on behalf of our constituents in Vietnam. Our people want freedom from being
repressed and thus we respectfully ask that the fate of over 300 of our people who are prisoners and the ongoing
persecution against our people be raised with Vietnam and would like our prisoners of conscience to be released before
Vietnam be granted such status with the WTO.
As you may know, the Montagnard people who have inhabited Vietnam's Central Highlands for centuries, have been suffering
intense discrimination and persecution by the Vietnamese Government especially since the end of the Vietnam War. During
that war, the Montagnards largely sided with the US military actively supporting the effort to stop the victory of
communist forces that, they knew, would have oppressed our civil liberties, starting with the right to religious
freedom, their indigenous rights, and the right to our ancestral lands. This religious, social and political oppression
has deteriorated after the fall of South Vietnam in 1975, especially since our people decided to stand up for their
rights and organize peaceful mass demonstrations in the central highlands to demand the Vietnamese Government and the
international community the respect of their basic rights. Both in 2001 and on Easter 2004 the largely peaceful
demonstrations, carried out by the Montagnard people, in coordination with the Montagnard Foundation have been followed
by a crackdown of the Vietnamese authorities and deployment security forces in the Central highlands, who have killed
many of our people and conducted a widespread campaign of arrests, tortures and intimidation that is far from over.
Despite some cosmetic gestures by the Vietnamese authorities almost all the Montagnards imprisoned since 2001 for
peacefully demonstrating for their rights, for fleeing to Cambodia or for practicing Christian beliefs remain in
Vietnamese prisons.
This widespread repression has been documented by numerous sources, including the US State Department which had led to
Vietnam being designated as a Country of Particular Concern in 2005 for violating religious freedom.
Hon. Prime Minister and Hon. Governor General
With this letter I wish to respectfully request if you can use your influence to secure the release of all our
Montagnard prisoners who are in prison following the 2001 and 2004 demonstrations. I am attaching to this letter a
detailed report by us which confirms and expands on the information on Montagnards prisoners already published by Human
Rights Watch and Amnesty International.
We know the world of politics and world trade is difficult and complex but we cry out in desperation to you in order
that you may use some of your influence to help our people who suffer in prison. Attached is our report list of over 300
prisoners with over a hundred photos.
Sincerely and God Bless you,
Kok Ksor
President of the Montagnard Foundation
ENDS