The problems that previously
have stood in the way of closer bilaterals ties have largely been, for Vietnam,
the legacies of war. These legacies and their effects upon the post–war
generation are most often seen through the lens of what the Americans left
behind, including unexploded ordnance and Agent Orange.
The US–Vietnam Joint Vision
Statement, released as Communist Party of Vietnam General Secretary Nguyen Phu
Trong visited the White House to meet with President Obama, states that: ‘The
achievements in United States–Vietnam relations are possible thanks to constructive
joint efforts to rise above the past, overcome differences, and promote shared
interests looking toward the future’.
And yet rarely is the war
legacy understood in terms of religious persecution. But the central highlands
hill tribes who converted to Protestantism and assisted American forces remain
some of the poorest, most isolated and in Vietnam today.
The persecution of the
‘Montagnards’ – a catch–all term used by the French for hill tribe
minority groups – has been in the news this year as groups of Gia Rai (a
central Vietnam indigenous group) have been sneaking into Cambodia’s Ratanakiri
province and claiming refugee status due to religious persecution. Phnom Penh
has rebuffed them, leaving human rights and refugee groups outraged. Approximately
85 are .
Meanwhile, Hanoi is easing
back on repression as ties with the United States once again grow and the
Trans–Pacific Partnership is finally being fast–tracked in the US Congress. A
high profile Catholic blogger was released from prison recently, although
former political prisoner Cu Huy Ha Vu has claimed that political prisoners are
collected as useful bargaining chips by Hanoi.
Religious persecution in
Vietnam is important to the United States. Yet the persecution of Protestant
hill tribes receives less attention than the locking up of politically engaged
and educated bloggers, some of whom are religious. In many cases US
missionaries converted these people and many later fought for US forces in
central Vietnam. Like other Vietnamese, they are suffering even generations on.
But this is not the first order of business when the issue of greater ties
versus less oppression comes up.
Though the term ‘Montagnard’
is generally used by western news, it is more often reserved for those in the
northern mountains near the Chinese border, while ‘Degar’ is more traditionally
applied for those in the remote central areas bordering Laos and Cambodia.
The Cham, a now mostly
Muslim group who once had an empire that stretched through central and south
Vietnam, fall into neither category. The same is true of the Hoa, ethnic
Chinese with a long history in Vietnam who have also suffered at varied times
post–1975. But both the Dao and the Hmong, who migrated from China from the
middle of the 19th century, as well as the Gia Rai, a central–dwelling
indigenous group, come under the same state–mandated appellations despite their
varied backgrounds and greatly differing cultures.
The US government has done
much good work, helped along by a vocal and well–organised diaspora, on
religious oppression in Vietnam. Wikileaks has revealed details of US
investigations into religious tolerance at a local level across northern
Vietnam. The conclusion of these investigations was that freedom or lack of it
at this level was partly a product of distant directives from Hanoi but centred
more upon the goodwill of local officials; some hindered Christian ceremonies
whilst one man used to attend them as a sign of good will.
But the problems for those
in the highlands go back to the 1950s, when the communists began land
confiscation and relocation of ethnic minorities, along with targeting
Christian groups. The groups formed the United Front for the Liberation of
Oppressed Races (FULRO) in 1958. With a common religious background, they later
helped the United States in the deep jungles. Many groups were Protestant, Tin
Lanh or Catholic. Many other groups also assisted Vietnamese forces.
While many of the ethnic
minority people – some 40,000 of whom fought for the United States
– may have left Vietnam post–1975, there has been little concerted help
for them since. Compare this with Laos, where Hmong are also
persecuted. General Vang Pao, the Hmong warlord who assisted in America’s
‘secret war’ in Laos and Cambodia, gained US citizenship and was commemorated
at Arlington on his death a few years ago. There is a small but concerted group
in the US campaigning for Hmong rights in Laos, but the same issue rarely comes
up in any public or meaningful way in US–Vietnam dialogues.
Today many of these minority
peoples remain poor, isolated, and often have their lands confiscated. Travel
to parts of Vietnam’s central highlands is still forbidden, making it hard to
even verify human rights abuses. As much as Catholics in northern central Nghe
An province still suffer setbacks generations on – for instance, a poor
family record may prevent a person from obtaining better work or education
– so too do groups who have had passing alliances with either FULRO or the
United States. The United States knows this, but a lack of accessibility means
verification is harder and bloggers are in some ways easier to argue for.
The anniversary of
normalised ties and General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong’s visit to
the US may once again bring up human rights and the legacies of war but it is
unlikely that the minority groups affected by this particular, sad intersection
of the two will see much progress.
Helen Clark is a Masters
student in International Relations at Deakin University, Melbourne. She spent
six years as a foreign correspondent in Vietnam.
No comments:
Post a Comment