INTERNATIONAL OFFICE OF CHAMPA
P.O. Box 28024, ANAHEIM, CA 92602, USA
T13I.,: 1.949.351.8234
EMAIL: loccAmPA4,vAHoo.com
United Nations
BOARD OF ADVISORS
Chief Adv.: Mr. Dat Lanh
(408) 937-7736
Deputy: Mr. Phan S.
Thien
(415) 494-5410
Secretary: Mr. An Tai
aniai21 @yahoo.com
(714) 519-9400
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Honorary President:
Mr. Hassan Po Klaun
htucongthu@yahoo.com
(714) 209-1693
President: Mr. Musa
Porome
Musaporome@gmail.com
(714) 334-6992
ice .President: Mr. Rohim
Abram
rohimabe@yahoo.com
(408) 920-0495
Human Rights Council
Forum on Minority
Issues
Guaranteeing the rights of minority WOM ell
Geneva, Switzerland
-November 29 - 30, 2011
RECOMMENDATIONS
Madam Chair, Ladies and Gentlemen,
The International Office of Champa is a non-governmental organization whose aim is to
defend the interests of the Cham ethnic minority and to preserve their distinct identity.
Viet Nam has 54 ethnic groups, including the Cham. The Cham are descendants of the ancient
kingdom of Champa, whose temples still stand throughout central and south Viet Nam,
recognized by UNESCO as World Heritage. The Cham have been in present-day Viet Nam for at
least 2,000 years. Today, they number about .130,000 people in Viet Nam. The Cham are
matrilineal, which means that the women
inherit property and run the affairs of the family.
In central Viet Nam, the'Cham community survives by agriculture. Land ownership is vital to
their . survival and to the maintenance of the cultural well being of the Community:
The Cham culture is becoming endangered due to the economic policies of the government,
whose aim is to abolish the traditional right of inheritance for Chain minority women.
The International Office of Champa exercises its Mission in this Forum by giving the
following recommendations to protect the Cham minority women in Central Viet Nam:
1.
We ask the Vietnamese government consider a fair and just compensation for the
private land owned by the ethnic Cham. This land has been nationalized after 1975. Yet
thisiand rightly belongs to the matrilineal Chum.
Treasurer: Mr. Kevin
Champa
kvchampa@yahoo.com
(408) 728-3200
2.
Sec. General: Mr, Sean
Tu
emailseantu@yahoo,com
(949) 351-8234
Before 1975, the Chain minority benefited from an affirmative action policy allowing
their integration into larger society. We ask the Vietnamese government to reinstate this
affirmative action policy, especially for the Cham women, so that they can eliminate
hardship and disease in order to improve.their economic situation.
3.
Asst, to Sec. General:
Mr, Vinh Tha)
vt_linathanh@yahoo,com
_(408) 219-9849
We ask the Vietnamese government to help protect the degradation of places of
worship, as well as the ancestral burial places currently threatened by looting and
vandalism.
4.
As a developing country, Viet Nam has implemented a policy to eradicate poverty. As a
result of fast economic growth, poverty has been decreasing in the country. However,
the Cham minority remains far below the poverty line. They lag behind in living
standards, With less access to education, employment, utilities, and health care,
showing a clear disadvantage compared with the ethnic majority.
We are asking the Vietnamese government to consider the issues of minority poverty to
be the national priority, since minorities are the most disadvantaged groups in Viet Nam.