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HRW World Report 2000: Vietnam | FREE Join the HRW Mailing List |
Human Rights Issues in Vietnam Press Backgrounder |
While dissent is seriously punished by isolation of critics and through a legal system that is highly politicized, Human Rights Watch notes that there have been areas of gradual improvement in Vietnam in recent years. Restrictions on everyday life for most citizens have eased noticeably as the market economy has taken hold. Travel within Vietnam is easier. Surveillance of ordinary citizens through the country's extensive network of monitors has become less intrusive, although individuals the government considers to be "subversive" or plotting "peaceful evolution" continue to be watched closely. Worship services of many major religions now go ahead unhindered, while at the same time the government exercises control over virtually every other aspect of religion, from ordination of Catholic clergy to prohibition of flood relief efforts by the non-sanctioned Buddhist organization, the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam.
Repression of Dissent The 1997 Administrative Detention Decree 31/CP remains in force. It allows officials to detain individuals suspected of posing a threat to national security without a warrant or prior judicial approval. Article 30 of Vietnam's criminal code enables local authorities to place people convicted of national security offenses under supervision and surveillance for a probationary period of up to five years after release from prison. Formerly imprisoned political dissidents and re-education camp inmates, including religious dissidents, appear to be routinely subject to such monitoring. In early 2000, the CPV's ideological commission accused Nguyen Thanh Giang, a leading geologist and outspoken intellectual who had been detained for two months in 1999, of writing documents which showed "close collusion with reactionary forces abroad to disrupt the social order." Giang remains under surveillance as of this writing. On May 12, police in Dalat put dissident intellectual Ha Si Phu (Nguyen Xuan Tu) under house arrest and threatened to charge him with treason under Article 72 of the Criminal Code. Authorities apparently linked him to dissident intellectuals who were drafting an open appeal for greater democracy. On April 28, police searched his house and confiscated his computer and diskettes. As of October, Ha Si Phu remained under investigation and confined to his home, although he had not yet been officially charged. The government announced several times during 2000 that it was taking steps against terrorist plots allegedly supported by overseas Vietnamese and "imperialist countries." On August 16, Nhan Dan (The People) newspaper stated that more than forty people had been arrested since March 1999 for "directly participat[ing] in the reactionaries' sabotage plan," but it was unclear whether those arrested were indeed saboteurs or peaceful critics.
Several religious leaders and former political prisoners have been recently denied exit visas to attend conferences abroad, including prominent dissident Nguyen Dan Que, Thich Tue Sy of the banned Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam (UBCV), and Thich Thai Hoa, a leader of the Despite government repression, several dissidents have issued critical public statements during the last year, though, typically, they have been able to do so only on the Internet and primarily reach an overseas audience. On May 19, five prominent dissidents issued a public appeal to the National Assembly for greater democracy, the withdrawal of charges against fellow dissident Ha Si Phu, and the repeal of Administrative Detention Decree 31/CP. In April, Thich Huyen Quang, supreme patriarch of the UBCV, who remains under pagoda arrest in Quang Ngai province, issued a letter to the party leadership calling for greater religious freedom.
Internet and Press Controls Provisions in the 1999 Press Law, which enable media outlets to be sued for defamation whether the information they publish is accurate or not, were applied for the first time in September 2000. The Haiphong Agriculture Materials and Transport Company sued Tuoi Tre Hanoi (Youth News) for damaging the company's prestige because of its critical reporting on the company's operations. As of October, the case had not yet gone to trial. The potential for press censorship increased in August 2000 when the Ministry of Culture proposed new regulations that would more than triple the number of activities, from 200 to 650, defined as offensive to Vietnamese culture. The regulations, which had not been officially adopted as law as of October, would impose fines for the production or possession of "culturally inappropriate" materials, including those which "distorted Vietnam's history or defamed its national heroes." Foreign journalists based in Vietnam receive strong warnings from government officials after trying to contact and interview dissidents. On December 26, 1999, Pham The Hung, a French journalist for Radio France International, was expelled from Vietnam after meeting with Catholics whose names were not on a list of interviewees he had submitted with his journalist visa request. In April, French reporter Arnaud Dubus, traveling on a tourist visa, was interrogated and had his notes confiscated by police after he met with several dissidents. On April 12, security police in Ho Chi Minh City arrested Sylvaine Pasquier, a reporter for the French weekly L'Express, after she tried to meet dissident Nguyen Dan Que. Pasquier was deported on April 14. Vietnamese listeners have access to most international radio stations, but the government has jammed access to Radio Free Asia and Hmong-language Christian broadcasts from the Far East Broadcasting Company. In June 2000, the Foreign Ministry confirmed that the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), which had an application pending since 1993, would be authorized to open a Vietnam bureau.
While foreign language newspapers and magazines can be purchased in the major cities, an internal Customs Department bulletin in December 1999 announced a crackdown on illegally imported foreign publications because of their "poisonous" content. Singled out were the South China Morning Post, the Asian Wall Street Journal, Singapore's Straits Times, and Thailand's Nation. Foreign publications were occasionally censored. In May government censors blacked out an editorial in the International Herald Tribune that criticized Vietnam's human rights In March, the Ministry of Culture and Information ordered the confiscation and withdrawal from circulation of a book by Hanoi author Bui Ngoc Tan. The only book to be banned during the year, "Chuyen Ke Nam 2000" (An Account of the Year 2000) described the author's experiences in North Vietnamese prisons between 1968 and 1973. Internet access remains tightly controlled for Vietnam's approximately 85,000 subscribers (about .1 percent of the country's population). The government maintains control over Vietnam's only Internet access provider, Vietnam Data Communications (VDC), as well as over five Internet service providers operated by state organizations, including one owned by the army. VDC is authorized to monitor subscribers' access to sites and to use firewalls to block connections to sites operated by groups critical of the government. In January 2000, the Foreign Ministry stated that all information relayed through the Internet in Vietnam must comply with broadly worded national security provisions in Vietnam's press laws and could not damage the reputations of organizations or citizens. These measures have been selectively applied in the past to keep critical voices out of public media. In September, the government launched a new domestic Internet service, which, unlike other services does not require users to register with the government. The new service, however, restricts subscribers to Vietnamese websites only.
Peasant and Worker Unrest In August, a group of 150 ethnic Ede highlanders in Dak Lak province stormed a lowland Vietnamese settlement in protest over encroachment on their land, part of which was being developed for coffee plantations and gem mining. In September, more than one hundred protesters from several provinces camped outside government offices in Ho Chi Minh City for several weeks to lodge complaints against graft and land confiscation. Labor unrest is a growing problem in Vietnam, with the official Vietnamese news agency reporting more than 50,000 labor disputes and 400 strikes - mostly in Ho Chi Minh City and the southern provinces - since Vietnam's Labor Code was passed in 1995. During the third quarter of 2000 alone, some 6,000 workers have taken part in nine strikes at enterprises in Ho Chi Minh City. According to VNA, most of the labor disputes have involved violations of labor contracts and collective labor agreements. Rural grievances over unfair taxation were exacerbated by the unpopular decree introduced by Prime Minister Vo Van Kiet in 1996 on compulsory labor "contributions." Under the slogan of "the state and the people working together", citizens are required to contribute ten days' labor to national infrastructure projects, such as road-building. Most urban dwellers pay off local authorities rather than undertake the labor, but few poor peasants can afford to buy their way out, contributing to their resentment against local authorities. As the Ninth Party Congress nears, scheduled for March 2001, Party officials appear increasingly apprehensive about the potential for rural unrest to boil over, as it did in Thai Binh and Dong Nai provinces in 1997. Party Secretary Le Kha Phieu announced in September 2000 that cabinet-led inspection teams would be dispatched to fifteen cities and provinces to look into citizen complaints about corruption and abuses by officials. In October, Nhan Dan reported that more than 2,000 government and party officials had been disciplined in Thai Binh as a result of peasant demonstrations in 1997 against graft and unfair taxation.
Religious Repression Conflict continues between the government and the UBCV. In April 2000, police made late-night visits to the pagodas of church leaders Thich Quang Do and Thich Tue Sy, ostensibly to conduct identity checks. On April 24, police took leaders Thich Khong Tanh and Thich Quang Hue to a Ho Chi Minh City police station for questioning. In July, Quang Ngai provincial officials and police interrogated UBCV Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang about a statement critical of the government that he had issued in April. In late September and early October, UBCV monks clashed with local authorities when they attempted to conduct independent flood relief missions in the Mekong Delta and distribute aid packages marked with UBCV labels. This was in defiance of government regulations, which limited flood relief operations to state-sanctioned organizations. On September 21, authorities brought an end to a UBCV flood relief mission in An Giang province, led by Thich Nguyen Ly. In early October, a contingent of UBCV monks, including Thich Quang Do and Thich Khong Tanh, travelled to An Giang, where security police blocked their flood relief plans. Police reportedly detained the monks for twelve hours on October 7 before ordering them to leave the province and return to their pagodas in Ho Chi Minh City. The Foreign Ministry later denied that the monks had been detained. The government also continues its attempts to suppress the growth of Protestant evangelical churches, which has gained converts among Vietnam's ethnic minorities. While two dozen ethnic Hmong Protestants reportedly were released from detention at the end of 1999, at least eight other Hmong and Hre remained in prison or police custody as of October 2000. At the same time, the government is beginning to recognize more "Tin Lanh" (Good News) churches, mostly in the North, and hundreds of Protestants are able to regularly attend un-recognized Tin Lanh churches in southern and central Vietnam. Catholics, too, are not immune from state meddling, with the government continuing to restrict the number of parishes, screen candidates for the priesthood and for appointments as bishops, and to reject requests for a papal visit. One member of the Catholic Congregation of the Mother Co-Redemptrix was released in April 2000, but at least three other Catholics remain in prison. Unregistered sects and religious activities labeled "superstitious," prohibited by a 1999 decree on religion, have come under increasing pressure. In November 1999, the state press reported that Vietnam had more than thirty illegal cults. That same month, officials fined members of an unregistered religious sect in Hanoi known as Long Hoa Di Lac (Chinese Dragon Buddha Sect) for unlawful assembly and use of religion for propaganda purposes. In June 2000, the state press reported that police in Thai Binh were "cracking down on heresy." The target was the Thanh Hai Vo Thuong Su sect, originally established in Taiwan but led by a Vietnamese woman. In August, police in Quang Binh reportedly confiscated religious texts from the Tam Giao Tuyen Duong sect, forcing members to destroy altars and pledge to abandon the sect, and fined the group's leader for allegedly providing illegal medical treatment.
Prison Conditions and Political Prisoners While the government insists it has no political prisoners, in March 2000 the Public Security Ministry stated that more than one hundred people were then imprisoned for crimes against national security. This figure could include many people imprisoned for their political or religious beliefs, while other such prisoners may also be serving sentences imposed under different laws. In its largest ever prisoner amnesty, Vietnam released 12,264 prisoners on April 30 to commemorate the reunification of the country, and a further 10,693 on National Day on September 2. The government did not publicly release the names of those freed, but political and religious prisoners known to have been released in the two amnesties included Catholic Brother John Euder Mai Duc Chuong, Hmong Protestant Vu Gian Thao, political dissident Nguyen Ngoc Tan (alias Pham Thai), Protestant Nguyen Thi Thuy, and Cao Daist Le Kim Bien.
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