Clampdowns on dissent by
the country’s rulers are more targeted and smarter.
On 19 July, Vietnam released one of its most prominent dissidents,
former policewoman turned legal blogger, Tạ Phong Tần, exiling her to the
United States.This was clearly a concession ahead of President Obama’s November
2015 visit to Hanoi, and one that highlights Vietnam’s growing human rights
predicament.
Vietnam
Communist Party (VCP) General Secretary Nguyễn Phú Trọng’s unprecedented visits
to Washington DC and Tokyo are a clear indication that Hanoi sees both its
economic development and security tied to the West.
Naive
hope of bandwagoning with its fraternal socialist neighbor, China, in an
attempt to sate its appetite for domination over the South China Sea, has been
laid to rest by the Party. It has committed itself to an omnidirectional
foreign policy.
But with
greater international integration will come further scrutiny of Vietnam’s human
rights.
By most
measures, Vietnam’s human rights protections remain woefully inadequate; it
scores amongs the lowest in Southeast Asia in terms of civil liberties,
political rights, legal protections, freedom of religion, and freedom of
association.
Tightly controlled
The VCP brooks no dissent or challenges to its monopoly of power. Vietnam has one of the most controlled media environments in the world, and is one of the world’s leading jailers of journalists and bloggers.
The VCP brooks no dissent or challenges to its monopoly of power. Vietnam has one of the most controlled media environments in the world, and is one of the world’s leading jailers of journalists and bloggers.
The
government has shut down entire newspapers, such as The Elderly,
for their aggressive reporting on government corruption, sacked and
arrested editors, leading to pervasive self- censorship. Most
recently a well-respected journalist was sacked from the country’s most
progressive daily, Thanh Nien, for his satirical comments on Ho Chi Minh.
Vietnam’s
rulers have also tried to control the Internet,
though they have failed to keep pace with the spread of 3G and 4G technology
and the ubiquity of social media. Civil society remains weak and broadly
curtailed. The government continues to rely on vaguely worded national
security laws, such as Articles 88 and 258 of the penal codes, which trump
constitutionally enshrined rights.
And yet,
Vietnam is fundamentally a different place than it was even five years ago,
with profound changes in access to information, economic freedoms, the
development of civil society, the right to practice one’s faith, and recent
reforms to end the once prevalent practice of police torture and
coerced confessions.
And this
is frustrating, as so much of the criticism from the West, in particular by
politicians and overseas Vietnamese groups, remains unchanged since the 1990s.
Committing to human rights?
During his July trip to Washington DC, General Secretary Trọng affirmed that “Vietnam attaches great importance to human rights,” though he acknowledged “limitations.”
During his July trip to Washington DC, General Secretary Trọng affirmed that “Vietnam attaches great importance to human rights,” though he acknowledged “limitations.”
While he
recognised that human rights remained an irritant in the US-Vietnam
relationship, he was clear that it “should not be allowed to hinder the growing
momentum of bilateral ties as well as to affect trust building between the two
countries.”
With the
party now behind improved ties with the West, the government has had to find
ways to curb dissent while minimising adverse diplomatic reactions.
Security forces are operating with uncharacteristic restraint.
The
peaceful resolution of an unprecedented
labor strike in March and April 2015 is indicative of international
pressure on Hanoi as negotiations for the TPP entered their final stages.
Likewise, Vietnam has only arrested two dissidents in 2015, a sharp drop from
2014. Security forces have become more targeted and shrewder.
But ahead
of the 12th Party
Congress in early 2016, dissent is even less tolerated.
Despite
the amnesty of
18,298 in celebration of the 70th anniversary of the declaration of
Vietnam’s independence, not one person convicted of a national security
violation, that is political dissidents, was pardoned. Clearly there are still
limits to the concessions that the government will make, though it also
suggests that all personnel selections are still not finalised ahead of the
party congress.
Attacks on lawyers, activists and bloggers
As arrests and trials of bloggers and activists such as Tạ Phong Tần and Phạm Thanh Nghiên attract adverse media and diplomatic attention, the government is doing five things to silence critics and deter others.
As arrests and trials of bloggers and activists such as Tạ Phong Tần and Phạm Thanh Nghiên attract adverse media and diplomatic attention, the government is doing five things to silence critics and deter others.
First,
they are targeting lawyers who represent political prisoners. While China’s
recent arrest of over 100 lawyers has been in the news,
Vietnam has been doing this for several years. The government’s willingness to
arrest Lê Công Định,
their most famous lawyer who won a major trade case against the United States
at the WTO, is telling.
Định was
imprisoned from 2009 to 2013, for nothing more than defending other dissidents.
Though now free, he is disbarred, a stark reminder to other lawyers considering
human rights cases.
Other
lawyers such as Dr Cù Huy Hà
Vũ, Nguyễn Văn
Đài and Võ An Đôn
have been either arrested, detained, or disbarred for their human rights work,
resulting in a lack of adequate legal representation for others.
The
second tactic is the use of other criminal charges to deflect criticism that
those sentenced are political prisoners. Recently released lawyer Lê Quốc Quân,
as well as Nguyễn Văn
Hải, who in 2008 was re-sentenced to prison for violating Article 88
of the Criminal Code, were both charged for tax evasion.
Likewise,
the government is starting to use libel laws to silence critics. In July 2012,
a court sentenced three activists for defaming the VCP. Once the laws are in
place, the government could replicate Singapore’s and Malaysia’s use of
defamation lawsuits to bankrupt political opponents.
Third, as
trials garner international attention, physical attacks by the secret police
have become more commonplace than formal charges. In November 2014, a freelance
journalist was nearly beaten to death outside of Ho Chi Minh City. In
December 2014, a female democracy activist and blogger, Nguyễn Hoàng
Vi, was beaten by suspected female officers.
And it’s
not just independent bloggers: in September 2014, four state-owned media
journalists were assaulted in the course of an investigation in Quảng Ngãi
province. Human Rights
Watch reports that in 2014, 14 journalists were beaten.
Then
there are the attacks on activists. Although the Hanoi city government gave in
to a public campaign by online petition groups, such as “For a Green
Hanoi” and “6,700 people
for 6,700 trees” to not fell 6,700 trees,
and even sacked government officials, several protest organisers were severely
beaten. Most recently, Nguyễn Ngọc Như Quỳnh, who writes under the name “Mẹ
Nấm,” was severely
beaten while temporarily detained – though not charged – in July
2015.
Two
activists have been detained at the airport in the past pear on their return
from overseas: Doan Trang,
a citizen journalist behind the Vietnam Right
Now human rights news portal and Dr Nguyen
Quang A. Though neither was charged, the lengthy detention and
interrogation was meant to intimidate.
The
fourth tactic is to concentrate the government’s online monitoring to key
nodes. Hanoi’s army of online censors can barely keep pace with the
nation’s 30 million Facebook accounts, as well as blogs and other social media,
increasingly mirrored on overseas servers. Thus authorities use their own
algorithms to find the nodes. These are based on what groups people join, or
what postings are the most shared, “liked”, or commented on.
Finally,
the government has focused its coercive powers on websites that are trying to
make the critical jump from individual blogs to multi-authored and edited news
portals, a critical transition for the development of an independent media.
Shutting down platforms of dissent
Vietnam has plenty of courageous bloggers, but it is the organising, not necessarily the reporting, that has gotten individuals into the most legal trouble. Nguyễn Ngọc Như Quỳnh has expressed more concern that her Network of Vietnamese Bloggers activities are more threatening to the state than her actual writing.
Vietnam has plenty of courageous bloggers, but it is the organising, not necessarily the reporting, that has gotten individuals into the most legal trouble. Nguyễn Ngọc Như Quỳnh has expressed more concern that her Network of Vietnamese Bloggers activities are more threatening to the state than her actual writing.
She’s
right. The state is obsessed about the growth of organised independent media.
This is
demonstrated in their sentencing. The average sentence for 16 of 23 bloggers
and journalists who were imprisoned in 2014 was 8.1 years. The average sentence
for four bloggers/journalists who primarily wrote on religious issues and
engaged in faith based activism, was 11.3 years.
The
sentences of the three who were trying to organise independent civil society,
the founders of the Free Journalist Club, was 13.5 years. Dissent is a crime,
organised dissent, a greater crime.
In that
context, the decision in May 2015 by 20 writers to quit the official Việt Nam
Writer’s Association and establish their own independent
organisation, the League of Independent Vietnamese Writers is immensely
brave. The development of a robust and independent civil society is the
regime’s greatest threat.
There are
hopes that there will be tangible improvements. Despite all of its efforts, the
government simply cannot keep pace and monitor all of social media. Vietnam’s
Internet penetration is 44 per cent – well above other countries in the region
that are wealthier and more economically developed. In the cities, it is far
higher.
Room for reform?
Though the personnel selection for the 12th Party Congress is still not set, currently it does look good for advocates of further reform and integration with the West. It’s hard to see ideological conservatives emerging as the dominant force. As such, there will be the gradual evolution of the rule of law.
Though the personnel selection for the 12th Party Congress is still not set, currently it does look good for advocates of further reform and integration with the West. It’s hard to see ideological conservatives emerging as the dominant force. As such, there will be the gradual evolution of the rule of law.
In
addition, leaders constantly speak of corruption as being an “existential
threat” to the Party’s monopoly of power. And yet, their attempts to curb
corruption by going after a few high profile actors, has failed to deter
corruption in an economy that is still largely stuck between the plan and the
market.
Moreover,
journalists rightly complain that when they are allowed to investigate these
high profile figures, who are undoubtedly tied to a senior official, that they
are being used to take down political rivals, not serve as true ombudsmen.
While a
free press is not a panacea for corruption, as the Philippines so aptly shows,
it is a requisite. If the party is to maintain its legitimacy, it has to free
up the press, which is increasingly irrelevant faced with competition from the
growing number of independent blogs and new sites.
Finally,
there are modest calls for reform from the highest levels. For example,
in mid-2014, President
Truong Tan Sang spoke out against the prevalent police practice of
torture and coerced confessions. Since then, it has been a priority reform.
There
have been several cases in which those wrongly convicted have been freed and
paid compensation, while police and judges have been convicted. Vietnam
has a long way to go, but there has been a meaningful improvement in the past
year.
This
month, Nguyen Sinh Hung, the Chairman of Vietnam’s legislature and a politburo
member, publicly called for amending the
vague national security laws, the primary tools of repression:
“We should not let the [overly vague national security] laws exist,
paving the way for virtually anyone to be detained.”
Well
said, but let’s see it implemented, and all the other bloggers freed.
Zachary Abuza is a professor at the National
War College where he focuses on Southeast Asian politics and security.
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