Early contacts (7th to 18th century) The earliest record of historic contact between present-day Malaysia and Vietnam dates back to 7th century, when according to the
Tang dynasty's annals, Buddhist monks from northern Vietnam ventured to the Malay peninsula during their trips to India. In 767,
Srivijaya or Javanese fleets invaded northern Vietnam. Soldiers referred to Penang in its Sino-Vietnamese terminology, Tân Lang dữ (
Chinese character: 檳榔嶼); a royal narrative in 1810 showed the Vietnamese began to refer to Penang as
Cù lao Cau, meaning Palm Island. Vietnamese Catholics travelled to Penang for seminary studies from the 1840s; these included illuminary
Pétrus Ky.
ethnic Chinese from
Cochinchina sailed to the east in the Sultanate of Terengganu to trade in poultry and rice; some also settled there and assimilated with the local Chinese. In the late 1920s and early 1930s,
Ho Chi Minh played a key role in facilitating the formation of the Nanyang Communist Party—later renamed the
Malayan Communist Party (MCP)—and visited Malaya on several occasions, such as presiding over a ceremony to mark the formation of the Malayan Communist Party in
Buloh Kasap, Johor, in April 1930. Ho Chi Minh's influence on the MCP paved the way for
Lai Teck, who was also of Vietnamese origin, to be appointed as the MCP's Secretary General between 1934 and 1938. Collaboration and communications between the MCP and the Vietnamese Communists increased following Lai Teck's disappearance in the late 1940s; the MCP briefly facilitated the shipping and transport of light ammunitions to the
Viet Minh around this time. During
World War II, both the Viet Minh and
Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA) opposed the
Japanese invasion of French Indochina and
Malaya. Closer ties between communist cadres from Malaya and Vietnam were forged following successful efforts by the Communist victory at
Dien Bien Phu in 1954; the Viet Minh provided small-scale logistical and communication support and training to the MCP in the 1950s and 1960s.
Vietnamese refugees (1975 to 2005) refugee camp 1985, where up to 10,000 refugees may have been housed at any point of time. The camp was closed in 1991. In May 1975, shortly after the
Fall of Saigon at the end of the
Vietnam War, the first Vietnamese refugees arrived in Malaysia, and the first boat that arrived carried 47 refugees. Until 1978, more Vietnamese fled their country, and many of them were of Chinese descent. According to Malaysian government statistics, the country hosted 19,000 refugees in November 1978, compared to 500 in 1977. The Malaysian government responded by directing its
Home Ministry to set up Federal Task Force VII in 1978, which was tasked with limiting the rising number of refugees from landing in Malaysia. The press reported incidents of Malaysian police and army personnel turning away the refugees, but some refugees resorted to deliberately sinking their boats to gain admittance to Malaysia. When the government was informed of boat-sinking attempts made by the refugees, then
Deputy Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad announced in June 1979 that legislation would be introduced to empower the police and navy to shoot refugees attempting to land. The government quickly recanted Mahathir's shooting threat. The first Vietnamese refugee camp was opened in
Pulau Bidong in August 1978 with
United Nations assistance; the island accommodated up to 25,000 refugees. Other refugee camps were set up at
Pulau Tengah,
Pulau Besar,
Kota Bharu,
Kuantan,
Sarawak and
Sabah. In 1982, a transit centre was established at
Sungei Besi, where refugees awaiting deportation to Western countries that were willing to accept them would be housed. The number of Vietnamese refugee arrivals fluctuated between 1981 and 1983, before a period of significant decrease from 1984 to 1986. In 1987, Malaysia and other neighbouring countries saw a sudden increase in the number of Vietnamese refugees landing in Malaysia. At an
ASEAN summit in June 1987, member countries chastised the Vietnamese government for not having sufficiently addressed the refugee problem. In August 1988, Malaysia and Vietnam jointly proposed an involuntary repatriation agreement, which provided for Vietnamese refugees that failed to gain admittance to Western countries to be counselled to return to Vietnam. A few Vietnamese government delegations were deployed to conduct outreach sessions at some of the refugee camps. This arrangement was considered unsuccessful because less than 40 individuals registered for the voluntary repatriation programme between 1988 and 1989. A deadline was set for 14 March 1989, whereby all Vietnamese who arrived before that date would automatically be considered refugees and all refugees arriving after that date would undergo a screening process to assess whether they qualified for refugee status. The screening process was proposed by the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in June 1988; it involved thorough background checks on arrivals to determine whether they qualify for refugee status to be sent to any Western countries that were willing to accept them. and Malaysia's refugee populace reduced to 6,000 by 1994. Most of the remaining arrivals were not able to pass the UNHCR screening process and were classified as illegal immigrants. The majority of them expressed their reluctance to be repatriated to Vietnam; demonstrations and rioting broke out when news of the camp's impending closure was announced in 1995. Sungei Besi refugee camp was later closed in June 1996. The last refugees returned to Vietnam in 2005. == Diplomatic ties ==