TNAG-1417-FCO40-1900-Hong-Kong-Parliamentary-Sub-Committee-on-Race-Relations-and--1985 — Page 54

FCO40 Hong Kong Department Records 聯邦事務部香港部檔案 All

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(e) Whether one of the problems is that resettlement

countries feel that the Vietnamese are not genuine

refugees.

I recall that this question was broached at your hearing with my colleague Mr Waddington and that both a member of the

Sub-Committee and Mr Waddington himself expressed the

view that a large number of those refugees coming out of

Vietnam at present are economic rather than political refugees.

We would agree with this assessment. Interviews with

recent arrivals in Hong Kong endorse the view that the

motivation for the majority of those leaving Vietnam is economic

improvement. This is not to say, though, that given the

continuing political repression in Vietnam, political motivation

does not continue to play a strong part. Furthermore, as Mr Waddington rightly suggested, we should not overlook the

fact that the Vietnamese Government is itself responsible through its deplorable economic policies, for creating economic circumstances which force people to take desperate measures. They are implementing policies which involve the extending of state control throughout the economy, particularly in the more dynamic south, where private businesses have continued to flourish. When you have economic policies as extreme as this

it is difficult to draw the line between political and

economic motivation. If Vietnam were to withdraw its troops

from Cambodia and invest in its own economy the resources and manpower which are devoted to the occupation of its neighbour, the Vietnamese economy might not be in such a parlous state.

We are not alone in our view that many of the Vietnamese refugees are essentially economic refugees. Indeed the major

resettlement countries cite this as a reason for not taking

more refugees from Hong Kong. The Thai Government have also expressed views on this question. Their representative at UNHCR's Executive Committee meeting last October favoured

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