TNAG-1425-FCO40-1908-Vietnamese-refugees-in-Hong-Kong-general-1985 — Page 235

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CONFIDENTIAL

VIETNAMESE REFUGEES IN HONG KONG

POLICY PAPER

I

INTRODUCTION

(22)

MKK 243/5.

RECEIVED IN REGISTRY

14 MAY 1985

DESK ON Fires

INDEX

PA

الله

Tion. Taken

1.

This paper surveys the problem of Vietnamese refugees in Hong

Kong, attempts to predict how it will develop if policy remains as

it is now, and sets out possible options for improving the

position.

II BACKGROUND

2.

cd

a

About 1.5 million people have left Indo-China since 1975,

1975, over

million of them Vietnamese. Over half a million boat refugees from

Vietnam have arrived in first asylum countries including Hong Kong

and many more have certainly perished en route. Since 1979 over

72,000 Vietname se have left Vietnam under the Orderly Departure

Programme (ODP) administered by the UNHCR with Vietnamese Government

cooperation. Currently over 160,000 Indo-Chinese (some 36,000

Vietnamese) await resettlement in camps in the area.

104,000 Vietnamese have reached Hong Kong since 1975; none have been

turned away.

elsewhere.

A11 have been placed in

Hong Kong have themselves

camps pending resettlement

accepted 14,500 displaced

Indo-Chinese, mostly from Vietnam, for permanent settlement. Hong

Kong's refugee population has now remained steady at 12-13,000 for

about two years.

This is more than the numbers of Vietname se

refugees in any of the South East Asian countries awaiting

resettlement, eg Malaysia (9,000), Indonesia (7,000), Philippines

(2,000).

1979 GENEVA CONFERENCE

UK RESPONSE TO VIETNAMESE REFUGEE PROBLEM

3.

I t

was

In January 1979, HMG agreed to admit 1,500 refugees from

Indo-China, in addition to the 300 or SO already here.

decided that, because of Our responsibilities. for the territory

1,000 of these should come from Hong Kong. In July 1979, at UK

initiative, a conference was held in Geneva to deal with the

worsening refugee crisis. At that conference, the UK agreed to take

a further quota of 10,000 Vietnamese refugees from Hong Kong.

At the same conference a general consensus emerged, though it is not

recorded formally in any document, to confer group refugee status on

CONFIDENTIAL

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