How can a new political order emerge?
Vietnam’s National Assembly last week
ratified a new constitution, but there is little cause for celebration because
the political system that permitted the constitutional abuses remains
unchanged.
That is a disappointment. The
government solicited comments from the public, reportedly receiving millions of
responses demanding change. The lawmakers ignored a petition from 72 scholars
and intellectuals to the Constitutional Amendment Drafting Committee, leaving
flagging, bloated and unprofitable state-owned enterprises in place and
ignoring calls for liberalization that would allow for foreign investment,
which would bring rationality to the economy. Instead, the socialist-oriented
market economy remains in place.
It is thus widely believed that the
new constitution, which takes effect Jan. 1, represents equivocation and delay
rather than euphoria for a new age. There appear to be few changes in either
economics or politics, but it will serve the Communist Party of Vietnam well.
Unfortunately there is little hope that it would ensure stable and sustainable
growth for the country’s long-term future. Observers have followed the development
of the document with trepidation rather than hope.
The basic question involving the new
constitution is how to deal with the infamous Article 4, which continues to
insist that paramount power remains with the Communist Party. That has incurred
criticism that the party is incapable of launching comprehensive reforms. The
document, which will take effect on Jan. 1, was approved by 97.59 percent of
the 488 lawmakers in the National Assembly.
Although the party’s loss of
credibility appears irreparable, there is no sign of an emerging revolutionary
movement among the wider population. The reasons for this are understandable.
There is concern that the party has learned the brutal lesson of Tiananmen in
1989, when the Chinese government crushed a student movement with hundreds of
deaths, and that widespread protest would be similarly crushed. Others argue
that the only way out should be peaceful means because nobody wishes to
experience state failure and civil chaos.
Recently, human rights issues
suffered a major setback when anti-Chinese demonstrations in June were shut
down decisively by police, who hauled away the protesters in buses. These
violations are impermissible but government, without any fear of being called
to account for its actions, is loath to surrender control.
While Vietnam’s selection to the
United Nations Human Rights Council on Nov. 19 could be of greater and more
immediate symbolic effect, Vietnam is not ready to lay the basis for any human
rights commitments. Rather, recent evidence suggests the opposite. Many police
and the courts are part of the problem, rather than the solution. An
international campaign to free any particular political prisoner from detention
means he or she will probably be quickly replaced by a new one.
Obviously, income inequality is
widening. Economic reform doesn’t benefit the poor, and the rich often benefit
disproportionately from growth. While peasants and workers are angry about the
lack of reward for their contributions to the national economy, they have no
alternative but acceptance and debt. The peasants want radical reform to the
land law to keep developers from simply stealing land outright from farmers.
Workers are asking for poverty reduction through increased social welfare.
Their protest unnerves the government.
Strikes occur daily but if government
acts at all, they usually deliver temporary palliatives. Although some recent
protests with guns and explosives have triggered concerns about widespread
insecurity, the prognosis for the revolution is bleak.
The
post-revolutionary elites understand well how bad the government is, but they
are avoiding addressing the political questions in public discourse, hoping a
better material life. Most senior officials of pensionable age think only of
their claims of payment and dream of an enjoyable retirement. The few get
richer and seek patronage in determining the chance for promotion. The number
of extremely wealthy Vietnamese has grown by 14.7 percent in 2013, with
ultra-high net worth individuals with assets of US$30 million or more has risen
to 195 according to a report by UBS and a Singapore research company, Wealth X.
Communist Party chief Nguyen Phu Trong told a party meeting in October that the
wealth gap poses the most worrying threat to the organization’s survival.
While many of the elites are buying
housing and sending their children to study abroad, a growing number of college
graduates are jobless and afraid to discuss political issues, arguing that they
have no way of affecting government policy. A debilitating sense of fear,
indifference and apathy is permeating the whole society. To overcome, some
argue that civil society should empower people to break out of the nonviolent
opposition mindset.
Thus encouragingly, there is growing
demand for more forms of political information. Fortunately, despite the cyber
security, bloggers enjoy online freedom of speech as a safety valve for pent up
social discontent.
Critics claim that bloggers have no
agenda in expressing public concerns. But these complaints miss the point. They
are an alarm, an expression of civic duty in raising awareness and mobilizing
action. The police should cease their cyber-attacks instead of arresting them
for posting criticism of government or contacting foreign supporters.
However, the virtual link of
activists cannot replace personal engagement. Direct participation provides a
better platform for deliberative democracy. The current atmosphere does not
allow for participation in the political landscape. The reasons are various.
First, fed for years with empty
promises and now growing impatient, the public want to make their voices heard.
Arguing that claims by outsiders do not really help the process, some hope
civil society can do better than either the political community or the market. Unfortunately,
online activists are not referred as to a powerful opposition. Also, opposition
voices do not have a leading figure such as Aung San Suu Kyi or a famous public
meeting place such as Tahrir Square.
The time is not ripe.
Second, crony capitalism plus the one
party system model are not providing any way forward. Some inside the Communist
Party suggest that the party should transform itself into a real political
party and compete with others for power, as the Kuomintang did in Taiwan. The
endemic culture of impunity must be replaced with a sense of accountability.
To realize that potential, politics
depends heavily on having the debate now - and not just rhetorically, morally
or top down. In so doing, hopefully, faith would be restored and public support
would be strengthened. If government, business, and civil society could work
together, the public would perceive that a new order might thrive in the new
age despite the poor prospects.
In any case, there is a growing sense
of the need for change within the country that could put Vietnam back on the
right track and that the system could gradually work. The new Constitution does
not deliver that promise.
(Kim Them Do works with UNCTAD in
Geneva on International Competition Law and Policy, Rule of Law. He researches
on Buddhism and country reports on Vietnam.)
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