 Rusting French artillery still lies on the battlefield of Dien Ben Phu
      Rusting French artillery still lies on the battlefield of Dien Ben Phu   When  France lost control of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos nearly 60 years ago,  hundreds of people who had served the French colonial system - and were  at risk of persecution - were rehoused in a disused army camp in  south-west France. It was meant to be a temporary home, but some are  still there.
First a brief history lesson.
In the 1950s, like Britain, France saw its overseas colonial  empire begin to unravel rapidly, and its far-Eastern colony, Indochina  or Indochine, was no exception. 
The French packed their bags and left in a hurry. 
However thousands of local residents who had worked for the  French colonial administration or had married French citizens were  considered traitors by much of the local population and their lives were  in danger.
So Paris allowed some of them to come to France. They were called the French expatriates of Indochina. 
Some 1,200 of them were brought over by boat and were told  they could stay in a run-down former army camp near the small town of  Sainte-Livrade. 
 Pierre Charles Maniquant: We had to wait half a century for proper housing
      Pierre Charles Maniquant: We had to wait half a century for proper housing   The living conditions were cramped. Sanitation and heating were  nearly non-existent and the new residents faced severe restrictions on  their movements - so as not to antagonise the local population.
It was all supposed to be temporary - just for a few months -  until something better was found. Except nearly 60 years later they are  still there. 
To be precise, 30 of the original residents are still there.  They are now in the late 80s and 90s. The rest have died and their  children have moved on and made their own lives.
The local French population referred to the camp as Vietnam sur Lot - Vietnam on the River Lot. 
The camp had its own Asian shops and restaurants on base, and  while the children were taught in French, the adult refugees spoke  Vietnamese and the remaining survivors still do. 
But interestingly, whatever language they used, they all took French names.
The hundreds of families lived in  rows of long, narrow, grey, low-ceilinged concrete buildings that  resemble farm outhouses more than homes. 
Most are now abandoned, except for the last 30 families still there. 
And when you go inside the homes, you are hit by two distinct  sensations. One, that you are clearly somewhere in Asia, and secondly  that you have been thrown back to another era, when France had an  empire.  
There are photos of French soldiers parading proudly in  Indochina, and hats on the wall, of the kind once worn by French  colonial officials. 
It is the same feeling one gets when visiting say a British  expatriate club in some parts of East or Southern Africa, with models of  Spitfires and hunting trophies on the wall.
Ninety-one-year-old year old Emile Lejeune, who spent seven  years in jail in Indochina for fighting alongside the French, is still  bitter about what happened to him. 
Surrounded by Buddha statues, he says there was never any effort to integrate the Indochina expatriates into French life. 
He told me integration was a dirty word back then and the  only solution for them was to adapt to the new situation and not kick up  a fuss.
The men went to work in local factories and the women in the fields nearby. Contact with the French was kept to a minimum.
Another of the original survivors is Pierre Charles Maniquant. 
 Not all residents want to move into new homes
      Not all residents want to move into new homes   When I meet him he is watching Vietnamese TV, thanks to a satellite dish. 
When he arrived, he told me, his family of 10 were housed in two rooms and shared outdoor toilets with other families. 
Contact with the outside world was strictly controlled until the 1970s. 
He tells me the French people are no better or worse than  anyone else, but the French state had let down the Indochina  expatriates. 
Health and safety in the camp had never been a priority until  2004, when one of the elderly residents died in a house fire caused by  faulty electrics. The French authorities finally decided it was time to  act. 
Some of the disused barrack homes have been knocked down,  small new houses with an Asian look are going up in their place and the  last residents are now being urged to move in.
But the irony is that most do not want to. 
Having lived in their homes for nearly 60 years they cannot face the idea of being uprooted again. 
"We have had to wait more than half a century for proper  housing to be built but all the elderly residents have died. There are  just 30 of us left," Pierre Charles Maniquant told me.
"All our children have moved on to make their own lives." 
 
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