TNAG-1425-FCO40-1908-Vietnamese-refugees-in-Hong-Kong-general-1985 — Page 247

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

CONFIDENTIAL

have however indicated that this idea remains Douglas' own, and that

it is not official US Government policy.

B.

Options designed to increase the rate of departures

25. (a) Voluntary repatriation to Vietnam

UNHCR consider voluntary repatriation to be the most desirable

solution to refugee problems. We agree. Not suprisingly, there

In

have been few volunteers for repatriation to Vietnam. Of the 20 who

have SO far applied from Hong Kong, 14 have returned

returned to Vietnam; the

other six applications are still pending.

response to an

approach from Mr Hartling

September 1984, the Vietnamese said

that there was no reason why Vietnam should take back Vietnamese who

did not wish to participate in the work of reconstruction and who

left Vietnam, although they were prepared to consider applications

n

in

on a case-by-case basis. This augurs badly for any large scale

repatriation to Vietnam; and there are not in any

case likely to be

many more volunteers.

(b) Local absorption

UNHCR also favour

Kong has absorbed

Vietnam, since 1975.

with enormous

Chinese legal

settlement in the

the country of first asylum. Hong

14,500 displaced Indo-Chinese, mostly from

Hong Kong's relative wealth might be cited as

a reason to take a greater number of Vietnamese. But the territory

is already densely populated; it has had to deal

immigration from China in the same period and

immigrants still number over 27, 000 a year. The people of Hong Kong

would be unlikely to welcome Vietname se immigration while illegal

immigrants from China are being repatriated daily. There is always

the danger, that further absorption by Hong Kong would trigger more

Nevertheless, i f the flow of Vietnamese

arrivals can be slowed and an adequate way found to deal with future

arrivals, it would be reasonable to expect Hong Kong to absorb a

proportion of those

centres, as part of a general programme of

resettlement or repatriation for the remainder. But the Hong Kong

Government would only consider this on the strict understanding that

it was a once and for all gesture, which would need to be linked to

an international effort, with UK participation, to deal with what would then be a fixed number of refugees in Hong Kong.

departures from Vietnam.

in

CONFIDENTIAL

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.