U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATES
Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices - 2000
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
February 23, 2001
Vietnam
The Socialist Republic of Vietnam
is a one-party state, ruled and controlled by the Vietnamese Communist Party
(CPV). The CPV's constitutionally mandated leading role and the occupancy
of all senior government positions by party members ensure the primacy of party
Politburo guidelines and enable the Party to set the broad parameters of national
policy. In recent years, the party has reduced gradually its formal
involvement in government operations and allowed the Government to exercise
significant discretion in implementing policy. The National Assembly
remains subject to party direction; however, the Government made progress in
strengthening the capacity of the 450-member National Assembly and in reforming
the bureaucracy. The National Assembly, chosen in elections in which most
candidates are approved by the Party (only about 85 percent of delegates are
party members) played an increasingly independent role as a forum for local and
provincial concerns and as a critic of local and national corruption and
inefficiency. The Assembly was more active in revising legislation,
criticizing officials' performance, screening ministerial and other senior
candidate appointments, and dismissing senior officers. The judiciary
remains subservient to the CPV and to external pressure and influence by the
Government.
The military services, including
the border defense force, are responsible for defense against external
threats. The military forces are assuming a less prominent role as the
ultimate guarantor of internal security, which is primarily the responsibility
of the Ministry of Public Security (MPS). However, in some remote areas,
the military forces are the primary government agency, providing infrastructure
and all public safety functions, including maintaining public order in the
event of civil unrest. The Government continued to restrict significantly
civil liberties on grounds of national security and societal stability.
The MPS controls the police, a special national security investigative agency,
and other units that maintain internal security. It enforces laws and
regulations that significantly restrict individual liberties and violate other
human rights. It also maintains a system of household registration and
block wardens to monitor the population, concentrating on those suspected of
engaging, or being likely to engage in, unauthorized political
activities. However, this system has become less obvious and pervasive in
its intrusion into most citizens' Daily lives. Members of the public
security forces committed human rights abuses.
Vietnam is a very poor country of
79 million persons undergoing transition from a centrally planned to a
market-oriented economy. Estimated annual gross domestic product (GDP)
per capita is $375, continuing an improving trend through the 1990's.
While the Asian financial crisis caused a significant slowdown, with trade and
foreign investment declining markedly, economic growth officially was estimated
at 6.7 percent in 2000. Agriculture, primarily wet rice cultivation,
employs 70 percent of the labor force, and accounts for 24 percent of total
output. Industry and construction contribute 34 percent, while services
account for 42 percent. Disbursed official development assistance in 1999
was $970 million, roughly 4 percent of GDP. Particularly in Ho Chi Minh
City and Hanoi, economic reforms have raised the standard of living and reduced
party and governmental control over, and intrusion into, citizens' daily
lives. Reforms have created a popular expectation in urban areas of
continued social, legal, educational, and physical improvements. For many
large rural populations close to larger cities, this is also true.
However, many citizens in isolated rural areas, especially members of ethnic
minorities in the northern uplands, central highlands, and the north central
coastal regions continue to live in extreme poverty. Gains from
agricultural reform in recent years have improved the lives of many farmers,
but the rural poverty level is approximately 30 percent.
The Government's human rights
record remained poor; although there was some measurable improvement in a few
areas, serious problems remain. The Government continued to repress
basic political and some religious freedoms and numerous abuses by the
Government continue. Although the CPV continued its efforts to strengthen
the mechanism for citizens to petition the Government with complaints, the
Government continued to deny citizens the right to change their
government. Prison conditions remain harsh, particularly in some isolated
provinces. Police sometimes beat suspects during arrest and arbitrarily
arrested and detained citizens, including detention for peaceful expression of
political and religious views. The judiciary is not independent, and the
Government denied some citizens the right to fair and expeditious trials.
The Government continued to hold a number of political prisoners. Several
political and religious prisoners were freed in two general amnesties during
the year--journalist and poet Nguyen Ngoc Tan, Catholic priest Mai Huu Nghi,
and Hmong Protestant minister Vu Gian Thao in April and Cao Daiist Le Kim Bien
and Protestant house church leader Nguyen Thi Thuy in September. The
Government restricts citizens' privacy rights, although the trend toward
reduced government interference in the daily lives of most citizens continued.
The Government significantly restricts freedom of speech, the press, assembly,
and association. The Government continued its longstanding policy of not
tolerating most types of public dissent; however, it made exceptions in some
instances. For example, a number of persons continued to circulate
letters that were highly critical of senior leaders and called for political
reform; these authors were subjected to close surveillance by public security
forces. The Government allowed citizens somewhat greater freedom of
expression and assembly to express grievances, including by delegates in the
National Assembly, citizens in local forums with delegates, and small groups of
protesters outside government offices. In Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and
other cities, several "sit-in" demonstrations, some involving dozens
of protesters camped in front of government buildings for weeks at a time, were
permitted. In Ho Chi Minh City, the Government stopped such
demonstrations late in the year. The Government prohibits independent
political, labor, and social organizations; such organizations exist only under
government control. The Government restricts freedom of religion and
significantly restricts the operation of religious organizations other than
those entities approved by the State. Dissident groups of Buddhists, Hoa
Hao, and Protestants, in particular, faced harassment by authorities. In
June a festival gathering of up to 300,000 Hoa Hao in An Giang province took
place with official permission, and in August an estimated 100,000 Roman
Catholics attended the annual La Vang pilgrimage. The Government imposes
some limits on freedom of movement. The Government does not permit local
private human rights organizations to form or operate. Violence and
societal discrimination against women remained problems. Child
prostitution is a problem. Government and societal discrimination against
some ethnic minorities is a continuing problem. The Government restricts
worker rights, such as freedom of association, although the Government is
cooperating with the International Labor Organization (ILO) and international
donors to improve implementation of provisions of the Labor Law. Child
labor is a problem. There were reports that children worked in
exploitative situations and that prisons required inmates to work for little or
no pay. Trafficking in women and children for the purpose of prostitution
within the country and abroad continued to be serious problems, and there were
reports of the trafficking of women to mainland China and Taiwan for arranged
and forced marriages. The Government made efforts to combat these
problems.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity
of the Person, Including Freedom From:
a. Political and Other
Extrajudicial Killing
There were no known politically
motivated killings. Little information was available on the extent of
deaths in police custody or on official investigations into such
incidents.
There were no reports of deaths of
inmates due to prison conditions during the year.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of
politically motivated disappearances.
c. Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The law prohibits physical abuse;
however, police beat persons, including suspects during arrests, and also beat
street children in their attempts to get them off the streets. There were
no known reports of torture of detainees. Little information is available
on the extent of police brutality during interrogations.
Prison conditions are harsh.
Conditions generally did not threaten the lives of prisoners. There were
no reported differences in male and female death rates in prison.
Overcrowding, insufficient diet, and poor sanitation remained serious
problems. Prison guards sometimes treat prisoners badly and frequently
beat them. Solitary confinement is a problem. Conditions in
pretrial detention reportedly were particularly harsh, and there were credible
reports that authorities sometimes denied inmates access to sunlight, exercise,
and reading material. The pretrial detention system provides few
amenities. Prisoners who await trial and remain "under
investigation" sometimes experience harsher conditions than those
convicted and sentenced. After trial, a prisoner is sent to a different
location, and conditions often improve in instances in which a prisoner has
money.
Most prisoners had access to basic
health care and, for those with money, to supplemental food and medicine.
However, some political and other prisoners were denied visitation rights, and
there were reports that some prisons required inmates to work for little or no
pay (see Section 6.c.). Prisoners sentenced to hard labor complained that
their diet and medical care were insufficient to sustain health, especially in
remote, disease-ridden areas. There were credible reports that three
political and religious prisoners with serious medical conditions are held
under harsh conditions in remote prisons, such as Xuan Loc prison z30a in an
isolated part of Dong Nai province, with limited medical care.
The Government did not permit
independent monitoring of its prison and detention system.
d. Arbitrary Arrest,
Detention, or Exile
The Government continued to arrest
and detain citizens arbitrarily, including arrest and detention for the peaceful
expression of their political and religious views. The Criminal Procedure
Code provides for various rights of detainees, including time limits on
pretrial detention and the right of the accused to have a lawyer present during
interrogation; however, in practice the authorities often ignored these legal
safeguards. Moreover, a directive on administrative detention gives
security officials broad powers if they believe that a suspect is a threat to
"national security."
A revised Criminal Code came into effect
on July 1 and with it a number of amendments to the Criminal Procedure Code to
conform to the new code. The Criminal Procedure Code was amended to
shorten the time for investigations and reinvestigation. It also places
more strict limits (12 months) on the time allowed for the procuracy to end its
investigation, and allows less time for the judge's panel to rule on a
case. By shortening investigation and trial time, the procedure code also
limits the time in which officials can interfere in the investigation
process. Prior to formal charge, a detainee has a statutory right to
contact with an attorney or to notify family members. However, in most
cases, police inform family of the person's whereabouts.
The Government continued to utilize
its l997 decree on "administrative detention," which gives
authorities extremely broad powers to place persons under surveillance and to
monitor citizens closely. Government officials refer to this decree as
the "administrative probation" decree. The decree allows the
MPS to detain a person without trial. The regulations define
administrative detention as an administrative penalty imposed on persons over
the age of 18 who break the law and violate national security, as determined by
the definition of crimes in the Criminal Code, but whose offenses are not yet
at the level that warrants "criminal responsibility." The
detention can last from 6 months to 2 years; persons under administrative
detention must live and work in designated places, and remain subject to the
"management and education of the local administration and
people." The MPS is the lead agency in implementing the decree and
uses these measures mainly against suspected political dissidents.
To put someone on probation, the
chairperson of a district people's committee first collects dossiers on the
persons recommended for detention, then submits the dossiers to the chairperson
of the Provincial People's Committee for a final decision. The district
police, people's committees, wards, and townships all help collect information
for the dossier. The dossier includes a person's curriculum vitae, his or
her past criminal record, as well as any comments from the people's committee,
the Fatherland Front, and the district police. The chairperson of the
Provincial People's Committee uses the information to make a final decision on
the detention. The Government claims that the decree's restriction on
movement does not constitute a detention, but merely puts a person on
probation; however, by limiting a person's movement to his or her residence,
and allowing travel outside that area only with government approval, the
measure effectively constitutes detention without the benefit of trial.
The Supreme People's Procuracy
approves the issuance of arrest warrants, but law enforcement officials appear
able to arrest and incarcerate persons without presenting arrest
warrants. Once arrested, detainees often are held for periods of up to 1
year without formal charges or trial. In general time spent in pretrial
detention counts toward time served upon conviction and sentencing.
The MPS prohibits contact between a
detainee and his lawyer as long as the procurator's office is investigating the
case, which may be up to 1 year. In April police in Dalat confiscated the
computer and writing materials belonging to dissident writer Ha Sy Phu (Nguyen
Xuan Tu). Ha was required to remain in his home during investigation,
although he was not charged with any crime by year's end. He remained
isolated from outside contact throughout this period.
Persons arrested for the peaceful
expression of views opposed to official policy were subject to charge under any
one of several provisions in the Criminal Code that outlaw acts against the
state.
At year's end, 3 Cao Dai believers
remain imprisoned. In March An Giang province police detained eight Hoa
Hao believers and blocked roadways and waterways to forestall incidents in
connection with the death anniversary of the group's founder (see Section
2.c.).
Prisoners who are "under
investigation" sometimes experience harsher conditions than those who have
been convicted and sentenced to prison terms (see Section 1.c.). No
official statistics are available on the percentage of the prison population
that consists of pretrial detainees or the average period of time that such
detainees have been held.
It is difficult to determine the
exact number of political detainees, in part because the Government usually
does not publicize such arrests and because the Government does not consider
these persons to be detained for political reasons.
The Government continued to isolate
certain political and religious dissidents by placing restrictions on the
movements of some dissidents and by pressuring the supporters and family
members of others. For the past 6 years, Thich Huyen Quang, the Supreme
Patriarch of the banned Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam (UBCV), has been at
a pagoda in Quang Ngai province under conditions resembling administrative
detention. From 1981 until 1994, he was held at another pagoda in that
province. In March 1999 he was visited by senior UBCV leader Thich Quang
Do for the first time in 18 years, but after 3 days of meetings both were held
for questioning by police, and Thich Quang Do was escorted by police to his
pagoda in Ho Chi Minh City. Thich Huyen Quang has confirmed that he must
request permission before leaving the pagoda and is not allowed to lead prayers
or participate in worship activities as a monk. He is able to receive
visits from sympathetic monks and lay person supporters relatively
frequently. After meeting with him, visitors often are questioned by
police. Thich Huyen Quang has called for the Government to recognize the
UBCV. Government officials reportedly suggested that he move to Hanoi,
where more modern medical facilities are available, but he has refused (see
Section 2.c.).
Dissident Nguyen Dan Que and his
family members in Ho Chi Minh City continued to be questioned by police.
Their telephone service continued to be suspended periodically, and the
family's Internet account was cut off following the publication abroad of
several of his writings critical of the Government.
The Government does not use forced
exile.
e. Denial of Fair Public
Trial
The Constitution provides for the
independence of judges and jurors; however, in practice the Party controls the
courts closely at all levels, selecting judges primarily for their political
reliability. Constitutional safeguards are significantly lacking.
Credible reports indicate that party officials, including top leaders, instruct
courts how to rule on politically important cases. CPV and government
officials may exert influence over court decisions by pressuring both the lay
assessors and the judges who sit on a panel together to decide cases. The
CPV has strong influence over high-profile cases, or in cases where a person is
charged with challenging or harming the CPV or the State. The National
Assembly votes for judicial candidates that are presented by the President for
Supreme People's Court (SPC) president and Supreme People's Procurator. The
National Assembly also controls the judiciary's budget, including judges'
salaries, while the executive branch pays judges' salaries at the local
level. By contrast the procuracy, also a separate branch that reports to
the National Assembly, has a unified line of command and controls its own
budget. The President appoints all other judges.
The system of appointing judges and
lay assessors also reflects the lack of judicial independence. Court
panels at all levels include judges and lay assessors. However, while lay
assessors help decide cases, they have no legal training. District and
provincial people's councils appoint the lay assessors at the lower
levels. The standing committee of the National Assembly appoints and
discharges the SPC lay assessors. The Fatherland Front must approve
candidates for SPC lay assessors. The President appoints the District
People's Council and Provincial People's Council judges to 5-year terms.
The President also appoints SPC judges at the suggestion of the central
selection council. The CPV's influence over the courts is amplified both
because the people's councils appoint the lay assessors, and because the judges
serve limited terms and are subject to review.
The judiciary consists of the
Supreme People's Court, the local people's courts, military tribunals, and
other tribunals established by law. Each district throughout the country
has a district people's court, which serves as the court of first instance for
most domestic, civil, and criminal cases. Each province has a Provincial
People's Court, which serves as the appellate forum for district court cases,
as well as courts of first instance for other cases. The SPC is the
highest court of appeal and review. The Ministry of Justice administers
most district and provincial courts, and the National Assembly administers the
SPC. The judiciary also includes military tribunals, economic courts,
labor courts, and administrative courts that resolve disputes in those
specialized fields. Administrative courts deal with complaints by
citizens about official abuse and corruption. The economic and
administrative courts have addressed few cases since their creation in 1994 and
1995, respectively. Local mass organizations, such as those under the
Fatherland Front, are empowered to deal with minor breaches of law or
disputes. In addition the CPV and Government have set up special
committees to help resolve local disputes.
The Supreme People's Procuracy has unchecked power to bring charges against the
accused and serves as prosecutor during trials. A judging council, made
up of a judge and one or more people's jurors (lay judges), determines guilt or
innocence and also passes sentence on the convicted. The relevant
people's council appoints people's jurors, who are required to have high moral
standards but need not have legal training. The legal institutional
framework and legal culture, which favor the procuracy over the judiciary and
preserve a presumption of guilt in criminal cases, constitute a major obstacle
to free and fair trials. Although the Constitution asserts that citizens
are innocent until proven guilty, in practice this principle often is
ignored. A Western legal expert who analyzed the court system during the
year found that more than 95 percent of the persons who are charged with a
crime are convicted.
Many judges and other court
officials lacked adequate legal training, and the Government conducted training
programs to address this problem. A number of foreign governments and the
United Nations Development Program provided assistance to the Government to
strengthen rule of law and develop a more effective judiciary. However,
the lack of openness in the judicial process and the continuing lack of
independence of the judiciary undermined the Government's efforts to develop a
fair, effective judicial system.
The July Criminal Code amendments
define crime more precisely than the 1999 code. The new code provides two
or three levels of punishment for each crime, depending on the crime's
seriousness and circumstances. The new code provides punishment brackets
for a larger percentage of the crimes; less than 10 percent have no punishment
bracket at all. The changes were intended to discourage abuse by law
enforcement officials, allow courts to render verdicts and punishments more
appropriate to the particular offense, hinder arbitrary sentencing by judicial
panels, and allow crime to be punished more uniformly.
There is a shortage of trained
lawyers and judges and no independent bar association. At the Supreme
Court level, there is a 10 to 20 percent shortage of qualified judges; at the
provincial level, the shortage ranges from 30 to 40 percent, according to a
U.N. official. Low salaries hinder development of a trained judiciary.
The few judges who have formal legal training often have studied abroad in
countries with Socialist legal traditions and are slow to change. Young
educated judges have little influence within the system.
Although the Constitution provides
for legal counsel for persons accused of criminal offenses, the scarcity of
lawyers makes this provision impossible to enforce. With few qualified
attorneys, the procurator often handles both the prosecution and the
defense. With so few lawyers and so many defendants, legal counsel
frequently is of little help to the defendant. Consistent with its
Marxist-Leninist political system, the Government requires that the Vietnamese
Bar Association be a subordinate part of the Vietnam Fatherland Front (VFF),
the mass front organization controlled by the Communist Party. At the
provincial level, the Bar Association is subordinate to representatives of the
central Government, the VFF, the provincial people's council, and people's
committee.
Trials generally are open to the
public; however, judicial authorities sometimes closed trials or strictly
limited attendance in sensitive cases. Defendants have the right to be
present at their trial and to have a lawyer. The defendant or the defense
lawyer have the right to cross-examine witnesses. However, in
political cases, there are credible reports that defendants are not allowed
access to government evidence in advance of the trial, to cross-examine
witnesses, or to challenge statements. Little information is available on
the extent to which defendants and their lawyers have time to prepare for
trials. Those convicted have the right to appeal.
The December 1999 conviction of
Nguyen Thi Thuy, a Protestant house church leader in Phu Tho province sentenced
to 1 year in prison for "interfering with an officer doing his duty,"
was upheld on appeal despite claims by her defense lawyer that she had been
arrested for her religious activities. She was released in September in a
national prisoner amnesty.
The Government continued to imprison
persons for the peaceful expression of dissenting religious and political
views. There are no reliable estimates of the number of political
prisoners, in part because the Government usually does not publicize such
arrests, and sometimes conducts closed trials and sentencing sessions.
Amnesty International stated that there are more than 20 prisoners sentenced
for political reasons. Other sources estimated that as of October there
were up to 150 political prisoners. However, many of the names included
on these lists are difficult to verify. The number of confirmed political
prisoners is much lower than the number publicized. For example, one
prisoner released in April from Xuan Loc prison z30a in Dong Nai province
circulated a list of 55 persons whom he described as political prisoners.
While this report may be credible, there is not sufficient identification or
information about these persons to confirm that they are in fact political
prisoners. The Government claims that it does not hold any political and
religious prisoners and that persons described as political prisoners were
convicted of violating national security laws.
A total of more than 15,000
prisoners reportedly were granted amnesty during the year or released from
their sentences early for good behavior. In April journalist and poet
Nguyen Ngoc Tan was released. Most of those released were common
criminals. Among those believed to be imprisoned at year's end for
peaceful political activities are: Political activists Nguyen Dinh Huy
and Pham Hong Tho, Truong Van Thuc, Nguyen Chau Lan, Tran Van Be Cao, Tran
Nguyen Hon, and Le Van Mong.
No current information is available
concerning imprisoned dissidents Nguyen Van Thuan and Le Duc Vaong who were
arrested in 1998.
The Government does not allow
access by humanitarian organizations to political prisoners.
f. Arbitrary Interference with
Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution provides for the
right to privacy of home and correspondence; however, the Government restricts
this right significantly. It operates a nationwide system of surveillance
and control through household registration and block wardens who use informants
to keep track of individuals' activities. The authorities continued to
monitor citizens but with less vigor and thoroughness than in the past.
The authorities largely focused on persons whom they regarded as having
dissident views or views critical of the Government, or whom they suspected of
involvement in unauthorized political or religious activities. Citizens
formally are required to register with police when they leave home, remain in
another location overnight, or when they change their residence (see Section
2.d.). However, these requirements rarely are enforced; many citizens move
around the country to seek work or to visit family and friends without being
monitored closely, and many families who sought employment moved to other
locations without prior government permission. However, there were
reports that some "spontaneous migrant" families have been unable to
obtain household registration or residence permits in their new locations,
causing them serious legal and administrative problems. In urban areas,
most citizens were free to maintain contact and work with foreigners, but police
questioned some individual citizens and families of citizens with extensive or
close relations with foreigners. The Government also exerts control over
citizens who work for foreign organizations by requiring that citizens be
screened and hired through a government service bureau. However, many
foreign organizations hire their own personnel and only "register"
them with the service bureau.
The Government opened and censored
targeted persons' mail, confiscated packages, and monitored telephone,
electronic mail, and facsimile transmissions. However, this practice
appears sporadic and is not applied consistently. Citizens'
membership in mass organizations remained voluntary, but often is
important for career advancement. Membership in the CPV remains an aid to
advancement in the Government or in state companies and is vital for promotion
to senior levels of the Government. At the same time, diversification of
the economy has made membership in CPV-controlled mass organizations and the
CPV less essential to financial and social advancement.
Groups of protesters in Ho Chi Minh
City claimed that local officials compensated them inadequately for land that
the Government seized for various public purposes. The protesters had
come from several Mekong Delta provinces and from Ho Chi Minh City.
The Government continued to implement a family planning policy that urges all
families to have no more than two children; this policy emphasizes exhortation
rather than coercion. In principle the Government can deny promotions and
salary increases to government employees with more than two children, and local
regulations permit fines based on the cost of extra social services incurred by
a larger family. These penalties rarely are enforced. There is
anecdotal evidence that party members are more likely to be penalized than
nonparty members.
Foreign language periodicals are
widely available in cities. The Government occasionally censors articles
about the country in periodicals that are available for sale.
The Government monitors e-mail,
searching the text for sensitive key words, and regulates Internet content (see
Section 2.a.).
By law access to satellite
television was limited to top officials, foreigners, luxury hotels, and the
press. The law was not enforced uniformly, and some persons in urban and
rural areas have access via home satellite equipment. The Government
generally did not limit access to international radio; however, it jammed Radio
Free Asia.
Section 2 Respect for Civil
Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for
freedom of speech and of the press; however, the Government significantly
restricts these freedoms, especially concerning political and religious
subjects. Reporters and editors practice self-censorship concerning
sensitive subjects. A new press law, passed by the National Assembly in
May 1999, provides for monetary damages to be paid by journalists to
individuals or organizations who are harmed by reporting, regardless of whether
the reports are true or false. This law poses a threat to investigative
reporting. For example, in September the Capital Youth newspaper in Hanoi
was sued by the Haiphong Agricultural Materials and Transport Company for
harming its prestige with a series of investigative articles about the
company's operations. The case had not gone to trial by year's end.
Several media continued to test the limits of government press restriction by
publishing articles that criticized actions by party and government officials;
however, the freedom to criticize the Communist Party and its highest
leadership remains restricted.
Both the Constitution and the
Criminal Code include broad national security and antidefamation provisions
that the Government used to restrict such freedoms severely. The Party
and Government tolerate public discussion and permit somewhat more criticism
than in the past. In December 1999, the Government established a
mechanism for citizens to petition the Government with complaints.
Citizens could and did complain openly about inefficient government,
administrative procedures, corruption, and economic policy. However, the
Government imposed limits in these areas as well. Senior government and
party leaders traveled to several provinces to try to resolve citizen
complaints.
The Government requires journalists
to obtain approval from the Ministry of Culture and Information before
providing any information to foreign journalists.
Retired general and war hero Tran
Do was expelled from the Communist Party in January 1999 after he refused to
cease circulating writings critical of the party and the Government.
Friends of Tran Do reported that they were able to visit him in his home, and
police surveillance of him lessened by mid-year.
The Government continued to
prohibit free speech that strayed outside narrow limits to question the role of
the party, criticize individual government leaders, promote pluralism or
multiparty democracy, or question the regime's policies on sensitive matters
such as human rights. The few persons who dared to speak out on these
matters in recent years, such as Nguyen Dan Que and Thich Quang do, were
subjected to periodic questioning and close monitoring by security
officials. There continued to be an ambiguous line between what
constituted private speech about sensitive matters, which the authorities would
tolerate, and public speech in those areas, which they would not. Several
authors whose works attracted official censure in past years continued to be
denied permission to publish, to speak publicly, or to travel abroad.
Security forces continue to harass novelist Duong Thu Huong intermittently, and
authorities would not allow her to travel abroad. However, Huong is
allowed to meet with some foreigners and Vietnamese colleagues. Some
persons who express dissident opinions on religious or political issues also
are not allowed to travel abroad (see Section 2.d.).
The Party, the Government, and
party-controlled mass organizations controlled all print and electronic
media. The Government exercises oversight through the Ministry of Culture
and Information, supplemented by pervasive party guidance and national security
legislation sufficiently broad to ensure effective self-censorship in the
domestic media. With apparent party approval, several newspapers
published reports during the year on high-level government corruption and
mismanagement as well as sometimes-heated debate on economic policy. The
Government occasionally censors articles about the country in foreign
periodicals that are sold in the country. The Government generally did
not limit access to international radio, except to Radio Free Asia, which it
jammed (see Section l.f.). In July thousands of explicit comic books
imported from Korea were destroyed by customs officials.
Foreign journalists must be approved by the Foreign Ministry's Press Center and
must be based in Hanoi. A visiting Western freelance journalist was
detained and expelled in April after seeking to interview political dissident
Nguyen Dan Que at his home in Ho Chi Minh City. The number of foreign
staff allowed each foreign media organization is limited, and most Vietnamese
staff who work for foreign media are provided by the Foreign Ministry.
The Press Center monitors journalists' activities and decides on a case-by-case
basis whether to approve their interview, photograph, film, or travel requests,
all of which must be submitted 5 days in advance. The Government censored
television footage and sometimes delayed export of footage by several days,
such as during coverage in April of the 25th anniversary of the end of war.
The Government allowed artists
broader latitude than in past years in choosing the themes of their works,
although artists are not allowed to exhibit works of art that censors regard as
criticizing or ridiculing the Government or the Party. Many artists
received permission to exhibit their works abroad, receiving exit permits to
attend the exhibits and export permits to send their works out of the country.
The Government allows access to the
Internet; however, it owns and controls the country's only Internet access
provider, Vietnam Data Communications. Five Internet service providers
compete for subscribers. The Government postal department reports that
there are 82,000 Internet subscribers and an increasing number of cyber cafes
in major cities. High prices for owning computers and Internet access
limit home usage, and the Government keeps access fees high to discourage
Internet use. However, in cyber cafes and universities, students and many
other persons have wide access to the Internet, although much self-censorship
keeps many customers away from sensitive sites of a political nature. The
Government uses firewalls to block access to some sites operated by Vietnamese
exile groups abroad. Vietnam Data Communications is authorized by the
Government to monitor the sites that subscribers access. Police suspended
telephone service and thus Internet access for Nguyen Dan Que in Ho Chi Minh
City and Nguyen Thanh Giang in Hanoi after they circulated articles critical of
the Government (see Section 1.d.), but they have continued to communicate with
friends and supporters through cellular telephones.
The French nongovernmental
organization (NGO) Reporters Sans Frontieres, which monitors freedom of speech
and treatment of the press worldwide, placed the country on its list of 20
countries that it deemed "enemies of the Internet."
The Government permitted a more
open flow of information within the country and into the country from abroad,
including the university system. Foreign academic professionals
temporarily working at universities can discuss nonpolitical issues widely and
freely in the classroom. Government monitors regularly attended, without
official notification, classes taught by foreigners and citizens.
Academic publications usually reflected the views of the Party and the
Government and exhibited greater freedom for differing views on nonpolitical
subjects than for political ones.
b. Freedom of Peaceful
Assembly and Association
The right of assembly is restricted
in law and practice, and the Government restricts and monitors all forms of
public protest. Persons who wish to gather in a group are required to
apply for a permit, which local authorities can issue or deny
arbitrarily. However, persons routinely gather in informal groups without
government interference. During the year, there were a number of protests
(from 10 to 25 persons) outside government and party office buildings and the
National Assembly hall. These protests, which technically were illegal,
usually focused on local land compensation grievances, and the authorities
generally allowed them to run their course without interference. The
protesters claimed, among other grievances, that local officials had
compensated them inadequately for land seized by local governments for various
purposes (see Section 1.f.). One group of 30 protesters demonstrated
peacefully in public in Hanoi outside the home of a senior CPV official.
From March until November in Ho Chi Minh City, there were demonstrations of up
to 125 protesters. In general the Government does not permit
demonstrations that could be seen as having a political purpose. The
Government was more tolerant than in the past of occasional demonstrations by
citizens about specific grievances against local officials and tolerated
extended demonstrations in some cases. Several "sit-in"
demonstrations in Ho Chi Minh City involved dozens of persons who remained on
the sidewalks opposite government offices for weeks at a time. However,
in mid-November, police removed these demonstrators and prohibited further
demonstrations. On at least two occasions later in the year, police
blocked attempts by protesters to reestablish themselves at that
location. The Government allowed large gatherings of Roman Catholic and
Hoa Hao religious believers for preapproved festivals (see Section 2.c.).
The Government restricts freedom of
association. With a few exceptions, the Government prohibits the
establishment of private, independent organizations, insisting that persons
work within established, party-controlled organizations, often under the aegis
of the Fatherland Front. Citizens are prohibited from establishing
independent organizations such as political parties, labor unions, and religious
or veterans' organizations. Such organizations exist only under
government control.
c. Freedom of Religion
Both the Constitution and
government decrees provide for freedom of worship; however, the Government
continued to restrict significantly those organized activities of religious
groups that it declared to be at variance with state laws and policies.
The Government generally allowed persons to practice individual worship in the
religion of their choice, and participation in religious activities throughout
the country continued to grow significantly. However, government
regulations control religious hierarchies and organized religious activities,
in part because the Communist Party fears that organized religion may weaken
its authority and influence by serving as political, social, and spiritual
alternatives to the authority of the central Government.
The Government requires religious
groups to be registered and uses this process to control and monitor church
organizations. Officially recognized religious organizations are able to
operate openly, and they must consult with the Government about their religious
operations, although not about their religious tenets of faith. In
general religious organizations are confined to dealing specifically with spiritual
and organizational matters. The Government holds conferences to discuss
and publicize its religion decrees.
Religious organizations must obtain
government permission to hold training seminars, conventions, and celebrations
outside the regular religious calendar, to build or remodel places of worship,
to engage in charitable activities or operate religious schools, and to train,
ordain, promote, or transfer clergy. Many of these restrictive powers lie
principally with provincial or city people's committees, and local treatment of
religious persons varied widely. In some areas such as Ho Chi Minh City,
local officials allowed religious persons wide latitude in practicing their
faith, including allowing some educational and humanitarian activities.
However, in other areas such as the northwest provinces, local officials
allowed believers little discretion in the practice of their faith. In
general religious groups faced difficulty in obtaining teaching materials,
expanding training facilities, publishing religious materials, and expanding
the clergy in training in response to the increased demand from congregations.
Buddhism is the dominant religious
belief, and three-fourths of the population are at least nominally Buddhist.
The Government officially recognizes
Buddhist, Roman Catholic, Protestant, Hoa Hao, and Muslim religious
organizations. However, some Buddhists, Protestants, and Hoa Hao
believers do not recognize or participate in the government-approved
associations and thus are not considered legal by the authorities.
For example, the Government
requires all Buddhist monks to work under a party-controlled umbrella
organization, the Central Buddhist Church of Vietnam. The Government
opposed efforts by the non-government-sanctioned Unified Buddhist Church of
Vietnam (UBCV) to operate independently, and tension between the Government and
the UBCV continued. Several prominent UBCV monks, including Thich Quang
Do, were released in wide-ranging government amnesties in September and October
1998; however, the Government continued to harass members of the UBCV and
prevent their conducting independent religious activities, particularly outside
of their pagodas.
The Government continued to isolate
certain political and religious dissidents by placing restrictions on the
movements of some dissidents and by pressuring the supporters and family
members of others. For the past 6 years, Thich Huyen Quang, the Supreme
Patriarch of the UBCV, has been held at a pagoda in Quang Ngai province under
conditions resembling administrative detention. From 1981 until 1994, he
was held at another pagoda in that province. In 1999 he was visited by
senior UBCV leader Thich Quang Do for the first time in 18 years, but after 3
days of meetings both were held for questioning by police, and Thich Quang Do
was escorted by police to his pagoda in Ho Chi Minh City. Thich Huyen
Quang has confirmed that he must request permission before leaving the pagoda
and is not allowed to lead prayers or participate in worship activities as a monk.
He is able to receive visits from sympathetic monks, sometimes several per
week; UBCV monk Thich Khong Thanh visited in November 1999. After meeting
with Thich Huyen Quang, visitors frequently are questioned by police.
Thich Huyen Quang has called for the Government to recognize the UBCV.
Local officials suggested that Thich Huyen Quang move to Hanoi where more
modern medical facilities are available, but he refused. On July 5, the
police and an official from the provincial committee for religion interrogated
Quang concerning a letter that he wrote that criticized the Government and
called on the Party and State to repent for their past mistakes. The
letter was publicized on the Internet by the official information service of
the UBCV based in France just before April 30, the 25th anniversary of national
reunification.
Buddhist monks in Hue complained
that petitions to local authorities for permission to repair or renovate
pagodas go unanswered.
The local Catholic Church hierarchy
remained frustrated by the Government's restrictions but has learned to
accommodate itself to them for many years. A number of clergy reported a
modest easing of government control over church activities in certain dioceses
during the year. In some locales, local government officials allowed
Catholic Church officials to participate in religious education and charitable
activities. However, in many areas, officials strictly prohibited these
activities. In recent years, the Government eased its efforts to control
the Roman Catholic hierarchy by relaxing the requirements that all clergy
belong to the government-controlled Catholic Patriotic Association. Few
clergy actually belonged to this association.
The degree of government control of
church activities varied greatly among localities. In some areas,
especially in the south, churches and religious groups operated kindergartens
and engaged in a variety of humanitarian projects. A priest, Pham Minh
Tri, and a lay brother, Mai Huu Nghi, belonging to the Congregation of the Mother
Co-redemptrix reportedly remain imprisoned.
The Government allowed many bishops
and priests to travel freely within their dioceses and allowed greater, but
still restricted, freedom for travel outside these areas, particularly in many
ethnic areas. The Government discourages priests as well as Buddhist
monks from entering Son La, Lai Chau, and some other border provinces.
Upon return from international travel during the year, citizens, including
clergy, officially were required to surrender their passports; this law is
enforced unevenly. Some persons who express dissident opinions on
religious or political issues are not allowed to travel abroad (see Section
2.d.). Seminaries throughout the country have approximately 500 students
enrolled. The Government limits the Church to operating 6 major
seminaries and to recruit new seminarians only every 2 years. All
students must be approved by the Government, both upon entering the seminary
and prior to their ordination as priests. The Church believes that the
number of graduating students is insufficient to support the growing Catholic
population.
The network of Tin Lanh (Good News)
churches, originally founded by the Christian and Missionary Alliance early in
the 20th century, generally operated with greater freedom than did the house
churches. The roughly 300 Tin Lanh churches in the country are
concentrated in the major cities, including Ho Chi Minh City, Danang, Hanoi,
and lowland areas. Some 15 Tin Lanh churches in the northern provinces are
the only officially recognized Protestant churches. At year's end, the
Government and Protestant church leaders in the south were engaged in
discussions that could lead to future official recognition for their churches.
There were credible reports that up
to a dozen Hmong Protestants continued to be imprisoned in Lai Chau and other
northwestern provinces for religious reasons.
More than half the country's
Protestants belong to a large number of unregistered evangelical "house
churches" that operate in members' homes or in rural villages, many of
them in ethnic minority areas. Members of Protestant house churches,
particularly in the northwestern provinces, continued to face severe
restrictions on religious freedom. There were multiple reports that local
police beat Protestants during detention or questioning in the central
highlands and central coastal provinces. Credible reports from multiple
sources stated that up to a dozen Hmong Protestants were imprisoned, primarily
in Lai Chau province, for "teaching religion illegally" or
"abusing the rights of a citizen to cause social unrest." These
included Va Sinh Giay, Vang Sua Giang, Phang A Dong, Ly A Cho, and Ma Van
Chinh. A number of others were released during the year, including Vu Giang
Thao, Sung Seo Chinh, Ho A Tong, and Giang A To, who were freed from prison in
April. The Government also stated that Vang Gia Chua and Sinh Pay Pao
were released (see Section 1.e.).
Cao Daist Le Kim Bien was released
in September in a prisoner amnesty. Bien's Cao Daist colleague Pham Cong
Hien was released in October after completing a 2-year sentence. The two
had been imprisoned since October 1998, when they requested to meet with
visiting U.N. Special Rapporteur Amor.
The December 1999 conviction of
Nguyen Thi Thuy, a Protestant house church leader in Phu Tho province sentenced
to 1 year in prison for "interfering with an officer doing his duty,"
was upheld on appeal despite claims by her defense lawyer that she was arrested
for her religious activities. She was released in the September national
day amnesty, 1 month prior to the scheduled end of her sentence.
Reports from believers indicated
that Protestant church attendance grew substantially, especially among the
house churches, despite continued government restrictions on proselytizing
activities. The Government restricts Protestant congregations from
cooperating on joint religious observances or other activities, although in
some localities there was greater freedom to do so. Membership in house
churches reportedly continued to grow.
The Government conferred legal
recognition on Cao Daism in 1997 after a government-controlled committee wrote
a new Cao Dai constitution and elected a new Cao Dai Executive Council.
The government-approved Executive Council controls the affairs and manages the
operations, the hierarchy, and clergy of the Cao Dai faith. However,
numerous Cao Dai believers and clergy actively have challenged the edicts of
the Executive Council, stating that they are not faithful to Cao Dai principles
and tradition. Early in the year, the Executive Council and clergy came
to an agreement on the modification of traditional rites that are performed
during rituals for clerical promotion that had been banned by the
Government. The compromise changed a part of the rite that the Government
had deemed to be "superstitious," but maintained enough
"spiritual direction" in the rite to be acceptable to Cao Dai
principles. Many Cao Dai followers and clergy initially objected to the
tradition, but later accepted it. The agreement resulted in the promotion
of several hundred clerics, the first promotions in more than 25 years.
However, the Government has prohibited ordination into the Cao Dai priesthood
since 1975, and continued to do so throughout the year. Three Cao Daists,
Lam Thai The, Do Hoang Giam, and Van Hoa Vui, who were arrested several years
ago, remain imprisoned in Xuan Loc prison in Dong Nai province.
Hoa Hao followers are concentrated
in the Mekong Delta, particularly in provinces such as An Giang, where the Hoa
Hao were dominant as a political and religious force before 1975. The Hoa
Hao faced restrictions on their religious and political activities after 1975
because of their previous armed opposition to the Communist forces. After
1975 all administrative offices, places of worship, and social and cultural
institutions connected to the faith were closed, thereby limiting public
religious functions. However, believers continue to practice their
religion at home. The lack of access to public gathering places
contributed to the Hoa Hao community's isolation and fragmentation. In
1999 following official recognition of a Hoa Hao religious organization, up to
500,000 Hoa Hao believers gathered for a religious festival in An Giang
province in the largest Hoa Hao gathering since 1975. The second of these
traditional annual gatherings drew approximately 300,000 persons in June.
The authorities continued to restrict the distribution of the sacred scriptures
of the Hoa Hao, and believers say that a number of church leaders continue to
be detained. Hoa Hao leader Me Minh Triet, who was arrested several years
ago, remained in prison at year's end.
In March police in An Giang
arrested eight Hoa Hao believers for planning to organize a commemoration of
the death anniversary of the group's founder. Police also placed Hoa Hao
elder Ha Hai under house arrest in An Giang province and blocked roads and
waterways to prevent large numbers of persons from gathering at the founder's
ancestral home and pagoda for the anniversary. This anniversary had not
yet been approved as an official anniversary or commemoration day by the
Government or the Hoa Hao Council. Many Hoa Hao believers consider this
to be an important date, and because of this and other disputes have refused to
recognize the Hoa Hao Council. Of the eight persons arrested, three
subsequently were released. The remaining five were tried in September
and received prison terms of from 1 to 3 years. One of the three who were
released, Vo Van Buu, also known as Nguyen Van Buu, was arrested again in June
together with his wife, Mai Thi Dung. In September Buu was tried and
sentence to 30 months in prison. Dung was tried and sentenced to 18
months' house arrest. Later in the September, Dung slashed her stomach in
protest. She was hospitalized, then released the following day.
A total of 13 other Hoa Hao
followers were arrested in March in a separate incident unrelated to the
founder's death anniversary. Eight of these persons subsequently were
released. Three were tried in May and the other two were tried in
June. All were convicted and received sentences of from 12 to 30 months'
imprisonment.
In May police in An Giang province
also arrested Hoa Hao followers Le Huu Hoa. He remained in prison at
year's end.
In November five Hoa Haoists who
reside in An Giang province were detained In Ho Chi Minh City for planning a
demonstration there. Two of them, Ha Hai and Mai Thi Dung officially were
under house arrest in An Giang province at the time. Three of the
detainees subsequently were returned to An Giang province and released.
Mai Thi Dung again was placed under house arrest in An Giang province. Ha
Hai was returned to prison in An Giang province and awaited trial at year's
end.
In December Le Quang Liem, a Hoa Hao
elder who resides in Ho Chi Minh City, organized a group of from 400 to 500
persons to march in procession to the Hoa Hao founder's ancestral home and
pagoda in commemoration of the founder's birth anniversary. When police
blocked the procession, a fight ensued and a number of Liem's group were
injured. The police made no arrests.
The Muslim Association of Vietnam
was banned in 1975 but authorized again in 1992. It is the only official
Muslim organization. Association leaders say that they are able to
practice their faith, including daily prayer, fasting during the month of
Ramadan, and the pilgrimage to Mecca, Saudi Arabia. The Government no
longer has a policy of restricting exit permits to prevent Muslims from making
the hajj. Small numbers have been able to participate in the hajj each
year.
The Government does not favor a
particular religion. In some respects, conditions for religious freedom
improved over 1999. In many areas, religious activity and observance
increased; however, at the same time, government restrictions remained.
Worshipers in several Buddhist, Catholic, and Cao Dai centers of worship
reported that they believed that undercover government observers attended
worship services and monitored the activities of the congregation and the
clergy. Protestant and Hoa Hao services occasionally were disrupted by
local police.
Operational and organizational
restrictions on the hierarchies and clergy of most religious groups remain in
place. While there were releases of some religious prisoners, detention
and imprisonment of other persons for the illegal practice of their religion
continued.
In April 1999, the Government
issued a new decree on religion that prescribes the rights and responsibilities
of religious believers. Similar to the Government's 1991 decree on
religion, the decree also states for the first time that no religious
organization can reclaim lands or properties taken over by the State following
the end of the 1954 war against French rule and the 1975 Communist victory in the
south. The decree also states that persons formerly detained or
imprisoned must obtain special permission from the authorities before they may
resume religious activities.
There were credible reports in both
1999 and 2000 that Hmong Protestant Christians in several northwestern villages
were forced to recant their faith. The Penal Code, as amended in 1997,
established penalties for offenses that are defined only vaguely, including
"attempting to undermine national unity" by promoting "division
between religious believers and nonbelievers." In some cases,
particularly involving Hmong Protestants, when authorities charge persons with
practicing religion illegally, they do so using provisions of the Penal Code
that allow for jail terms up to 3 years for "abusing freedom of speech,
press, or religion." There were reports that officials fabricated
evidence, and some of the provisions of the law used to convict religious
prisoners contradict international covenants such as the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights.
The Government bans and actively
discourages participation in "illegal" religious groups, including
the UBCV, Protestant house churches, and an unapproved Hoa Hao group. The
Government restricts the number of clergy that the Buddhist, Catholic, Protestant,
and Cao Dai churches may train. Restrictions are placed on the numbers of
Buddhist monks and Catholic seminarians. Protestants are not allowed to
operate a seminary or to ordain new clergy.
Police authorities routinely
question persons who hold dissident religious or political views, such as UBCV
monks and Hoa Hao leaders.
The Government restricts and
monitors all forms of public assembly, including assembly for religious
activities. On some occasions, large religious gatherings have been
allowed, such as the annual celebrations at La Vang. Within the past 2
years, the Hoa Hao also have been allowed to hold large public gatherings.
Religious and organizational
activities by UBCV monks are illegal, and all UBCV activities outside private
temple worship are proscribed. In February a group of Hoa Hao believers
led by Le Quang Liem established an association separate from the
government-sanctioned Hoa Hao Committee. Their petitions to the
Government for official recognition were unsuccessful. Protestant groups
in central and southern provinces also petitioned for official recognition, but
met with a favorable response from the Government. Serious discussions
were underway at year's end regarding the drafting of a new charter that could
lead to future official recognition.
Most evangelical house churches do
not attempt to register because they believe that their applications would be
denied, and they want to avoid government control.
The Government generally does not
permit religious instruction in public schools. However, in some
provinces, religious instruction is allowed outside regular classroom
hours. Khmer Buddhists and Cham Muslims routinely hold religious (and
language) instruction after regular school hours.
The Government restricts persons
who belong to dissident and unofficial religious groups from speaking about
their beliefs. It officially requires all religious publishing to be done by
government-approved publishing houses. Many Buddhist sacred scriptures,
Bibles, and other religious texts and publications are printed by
government-sanctioned organizations and allowed to be distributed to
believers. The Government allows and in some cases encourages links with
coreligionists in other countries when the religious groups are approved by the
Government. The Government actively discourages contacts between the
illegal UBCV and its foreign Buddhist supporters, and between illegal
Protestants, such as the house churches, and their foreign supporters.
Contacts between the Vatican and the domestic Catholic Church are permitted,
and the Government maintains a regular, active dialog with the Vatican on a
range of issues, including organizational activities, the prospect of
establishing diplomatic relations, and a possible papal visit. The Government
allows religious travel for some, but not all, religious persons; Muslims are
able to undertake the hajj, and many Buddhist and Catholic Church officials
also have been able to travel abroad. Persons who hold dissident
religious opinions generally are not approved for foreign travel.
The Government does not designate
persons' religions on passports, although citizens' "family books,"
which are household identification books, list religious and ethnic
affiliation.
The law prohibits foreign
missionaries from operating in the country. Proselytizing by citizens is
restricted to regularly scheduled religious services in recognized places of
worship. Immigrants and noncitizens must comply with the law when practicing
their religions. Catholic and Protestant foreigners exercise leadership
in worship services that are reserved for foreigners.
The Government's Office on
Religious Affairs hosts periodic meetings to address religious issues according
to government-approved agendas that bring together leaders of diverse religious
traditions.
Adherence to a religious faith
generally does not disadvantage persons in civil, economic, and secular life,
although it likely would prevent advancement to the highest government and
military ranks. Avowed religious practice bars membership in the
Communist Party, although anecdotal reports indicate that a handful of the 2
million Communist Party members are religious believers.
The Government remained sensitive
about international and nongovernmental organization investigations. In
October 1998, U.N. Special Rapporteur on Religious Intolerance Amor visited
Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Hue, and Tay Ninh province. He met with
government officials and representatives of the government-sanctioned Central
Buddhist Church, the Catholic Church, Cao Dai, a Protestant church, and the
small Muslim community. However, security officials prevented Amor from
meeting several senior representatives of the non-government-sanctioned UBCV,
including Thich Huyen Quang and Thich Quang Do, despite his repeated requests
to do so.
d. Freedom of Movement Within
the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and Repatriation
The Government imposes some limits
on freedom of movement. Most citizens enjoyed freedom of movement within
the country; however, some local authorities required members of ethnic
minority groups to obtain permission to travel outside certain highland
areas. Officially, citizens had to obtain permission to change their
residence (see Section 1.f.). In practice many persons continued to move
without approval, especially migrant or itinerant laborers moving from rural
areas to cities in search of work. However, moving without permission
restricted their ability to obtain legal residence permits. Holders of
foreign passports must register to stay in private homes. In practice
visitors of Vietnamese origin from overseas do not appear to have problems with
this requirement and are allowed to stay with family and friends. Other
foreigners complain that they are not allowed to do so.
The Government employs internal
isolation to restrict the movement of political and religious dissidents (see
Section 1.d.). The Government continued to use its l997 decree on
administrative detention to restrict where citizens live and work (see Section
1.f.).
Foreigners generally are free to
travel throughout the country, except in some areas restricted on grounds of
national security. The Government retained the right to approve travel to
border areas, to some areas in the central highlands, and to some islands, but
in practice foreigners can travel to most border areas without prior
approval. However, on several occasions, local police detained and fined
foreigners whom police found had ventured too close to international borders
and other sensitive military areas.
Although the Government no longer
required citizens traveling abroad to obtain exit or reentry visas, the
Government sometimes prevents persons from traveling by refusing to issue
passports to persons who wished to travel. Persons who depart the country
using passports marked dinh cu or "resettlement" appear to need a
reentry permit to return.
Some persons who publicly or
privately have expressed dissident opinions on religious or political issues
are not allowed to travel abroad (see Section 2.c.).
Citizens must demonstrate
eligibility to emigrate to another country and show sponsorship abroad before
the Government issues passports for emigration. Persons who emigrate
under refugee status are required to have a letter of introduction from the Ministry
of Public Security in order to obtain a passport. Citizens' access to
passports sometimes was constrained by factors outside the law, such as bribery
and corruption. Refugee and immigrant visa applicants sometimes
encountered local officials who arbitrarily delayed or denied passports based
on personal animosities or on the officials' perception that an applicant did
not meet program criteria, or in order to extort a bribe.
Because citizens who live overseas
are considered a valuable potential source of foreign exchange and expertise
for the country but also a potential security threat, the Government generally
encourages them to visit but monitors many of them carefully.
The United States continued to
process immigrants and refugee applicants for admission and resettlement,
including Amerasians, former reeducation camp detainees, and family
reunification cases. There are some concerns that some members of
minority ethnic groups, particularly nonethnic Vietnamese such as the
Montagnards, may not have ready access to these programs. The Government
denied passports for emigration to certain Montagnard applicants.
The Government generally permits
citizens who emigrate to return to visit, but it considers them Vietnamese
citizens and therefore subject to the obligations of a Vietnamese citizen under
the law, even if they have adopted another country's citizenship. The
Government no longer requires reentry visas for citizens holding regular
passports but who reside in another country. Holders of Vietnamese
passports marked dinh cu or "resettlement" appear to need a reentry
visa. However, emigrants are not permitted to use Vietnamese passports
after they adopt other citizenship.
Vietnam and the United States
continued to work together on the Resettlement Opportunity for Vietnamese
Returnees Program (ROVR) in processing the residual ROVR persons who had
returned from refugee camps elsewhere in southeast Asia. This program is
nearing completion.
The Constitution allows
consideration of asylum under certain circumstances for foreigners persecuted
abroad. Otherwise, the country does not have provisions for the granting
of asylum or refugee status in accordance with the provisions of the 1951 U.N.
Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its l967 Protocol. The
Government cooperates with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and
other humanitarian organizations in assisting refugees. There were no
reports of the forced return of persons to a country where they feared
persecution.
Section 3 Respect for
Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their
Government
Citizens do not have the right to
change their government. Party control over the selection of candidates
in elections for the National Assembly, the presidency, the prime ministership,
and local government undermines this right. All authority and political
power is vested in the CPV; political opposition movements and other political
parties are not tolerated. The CPV central committee is the supreme
decisionmaking body in the nation, with the Politburo as the locus of
policymaking. A standing board, consisting of the five most senior
members of the Politburo, oversees day-to-day implementation of leadership
directives. Senior advisors to the Party, including the former party
general secretary, President, and Prime Minister, also continue to exert
significant influence on Politburo decisionmaking. The Government limited
public debate and criticism to certain aspects of individual, state, or party
performance determined by the CPV itself. No public challenge to the
legitimacy of the one-party State is permitted; however, there were isolated
instances of unsanctioned letters from private citizens critical of the
Government that circulated publicly (see Section 2.a.).
Eligible citizens are required to
vote in elections, although there is no penalty for not voting. Citizens
elect the members of the National Assembly, ostensibly the main legislative
body, but the Party must approve all candidates, most of whom are Party members.
Most National Assembly members belong to the CPV; 15 percent do not.
Three members of the assembly are self-nominated independents, not nominated by
the party-controlled Vietnam Fatherland Front, even though it approved their
candidacies.
The National Assembly, although
subject to the control of the Party (all of its senior leaders are party
members), played an increasingly independent role, as a forum for the
expression of local and provincial concerns and as a critic of corruption and
inefficiency. However, the National Assembly generally does not initiate
legislation and may not pass legislation that the Party opposes. Party
officials occupied most senior government and National Assembly positions and
continued to have the final say on key issues. During the year, the
National Assembly continued to engage in vigorous debate on economic, legal,
and social issues, including a business enterprise law and a press law.
Legislators questioned and criticized ministers in sessions broadcast live on
television.
The law provides the opportunity
for equal participation in politics by women and minority groups; however, in
practice they are underrepresented. Most of the top leaders are
men. There is one woman in the Politburo. Women are better represented
in the National Assembly, where more than one-fourth of the 450 members are
women. Women hold some important positions. The Vice President is a
woman, as are several ministers and vice ministers.
The President of the National
Assembly, who is also a Politburo standing committee member, is a member of an
ethnic minority.
Section 4 Governmental
Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental Investigation of
Alleged Violations of Human Rights
The Government does not permit
private, local human rights organizations to form or operate. It
generally prohibits private citizens from contacting international human rights
organizations, although some dissidents were able to do so despite opposition
from the Government. The Government permitted the UNHCR and international
visitors to monitor implementation of its repatriation commitments under the
Comprehensive Plan of Action (CPA) and carried on a limited dialog with foreign
human rights organizations based outside the country.
The Government generally was willing
to discuss human rights problems bilaterally with some other governments if
such discussions take place under the rubric of "exchanges of ideas"
rather than as "investigations." Several foreign governments
held official talks during the year concerning human rights.
Section 5 Discrimination
Based on Race, Sex, Religion, Disability, Language, or
Social Status
The Constitution prohibits
discrimination based on gender, ethnicity, religion, or social class; however,
enforcement of these prohibitions was uneven. Persons formerly interned
in reeducation camps on the basis of pre-l975 association with the government
of the former Republic of Vietnam continued to report varying levels of
discrimination as they and their families sought access to housing, education,
and employment. Some military veterans of the former Republic of Vietnam
still face economic hardship as a result of employment restrictions and
discrimination, but none are known to be incarcerated for their activities
after 1975. These veterans and their families generally are unable to
obtain employment with the Government. This prohibition is less
restrictive than in past years because of the growth in private sector job
opportunities.
Women
International NGO workers and many
women reported that domestic violence against women was common. The law
addresses the problem of domestic violence, and officials increasingly
acknowledge the problem; however, authorities do not enforce the law
effectively. Many divorces reportedly are due to domestic violence, but
many women likely remain in abusive marriages rather than confront the stigma
and economic uncertainty of divorce.
Prostitution, although officially
illegal, appears to be tolerated widely. Some women are forced to work as
prostitutes. The Ho Chi Minh City people's committee recently has
acknowledged that more than 10,000 women in the city engaged in
prostitution. Hanoi, the port cities of Danang and Haiphong, and smaller
cities such as Can Tho and Nha Trang also have large numbers of women engaged
in prostitution. There are reports that some exploiters in Ho Chi Minh
City addicted young girls to heroin and forced them to work as prostitutes to
earn money for drugs. Many more women are compelled to work as
prostitutes because of poverty, a lack of other employment opportunities, or
because they are victimized by false promises of lucrative work (see Section
6.f.). The Vietnam Women's Union and Youth Union, as well as
international and domestic NGO's, are engaged actively in education and
rehabilitation programs to combat these abuses.
Trafficking in women for the
purpose of forced prostitution, both domestically and internationally, is a
serious problem (see Section 6.f.). Women and girls are trafficked from
southern delta and highland provinces to Cambodia, and from northern provinces
into China. There are reports that some women from Ho Chi Minh City and
the Mekong Delta who married men from Taiwan were forced into prostitution
after their arrival in Taiwan. Women and girls frequently are misled by
promises of well-paying jobs in those places.
While there is no legal
discrimination, women face deeply ingrained societal discrimination.
Despite extensive provisions in the Constitution, in legislation, and in
regulations that mandate equal treatment, and although some women occupy high
government posts, few women compete effectively for higher status
positions. The Government has ratified ILO conventions on Equal
Remuneration and Discrimination in Employment. The Constitution provides
that women and men must receive equal pay for equal work; however, the
Government does not enforce this provision. Very poor women, especially
in rural areas but also in cities, perform menial work in construction, waste
removal, and other jobs for extremely low wages. Despite the large body
of legislation and regulations devoted to the protection of women's rights in
marriage as well as in the workplace, and Labor Law provisions that call for
preferential treatment of women, women do not always receive equal
treatment. Nevertheless, women play an important role in the economy and
are widely engaged in business and in social and educational
institutions. Opportunities for young professional women have increased
markedly, with greater numbers entering the civil service, universities, and
the private sector.
The party-controlled Women's Union
has a broad agenda to promote women's rights, including political, economic,
and legal equality, and protection from spousal abuse. The Women's Union
operates micro-credit consumer finance programs and other programs to promote
the advancement of women. International NGO's and other international
organizations regard the union as effective, but they and Women's Union
representatives believe that much time is required to overcome societal
attitudes that relegate women to lower status than men. The Government
also has a committee for the advancement of women, which coordinates
intraministerial programs that affect women.
Children
International organizations
reported that despite the Government's promotion of child protection and
welfare, children increasingly were at risk of economic exploitation.
While education is compulsory through the age of 14, the authorities did not
enforce the requirement, especially in rural areas where government and family
budgets for education are strained. Thousands of children work in exploitative
child labor (see Sections 6.c. and 6.d.). These practices occur almost
exclusively in private, small-scale, or family enterprises. The Government
continued a nationwide immunization campaign, and the government-controlled
press regularly stressed the importance of health and education for all
children. Reports from domestic sources indicate that responsible
officials generally took these goals seriously but were constrained by severely
limited budgets. According to the World Bank, despite growth in incomes
over the past decade, severe malnutrition remains an entrenched problem; about
45 percent of children under 5 years of age suffer from stunted growth.
Widespread poverty contributed to
continued child prostitution, especially of girls, but also some boys as well,
in major cities. Many prostitutes in Ho Chi Minh City are girls between
the ages of 15 and 17. One NGO advocate stated that some child
prostitutes, such as those from abusive homes, are forced into prostitution for
economic reasons, having few other choices available to them. There are
reports that some exploiters in Ho Chi Minh City addicted young girls to heroin
and forced them to work as prostitutes to earn money for drugs.
Some children are trafficked
domestically, and others are trafficked to foreign destinations for the purpose
of forced prostitution. Although statistics are not reliable, children
are trafficked from southern delta and highland provinces to Cambodia, and from
northern provinces into China. Government agencies were engaged in
combating these abuses, and municipal and NGO groups organized publicity
campaigns to warn of predatory child sex abusers in resort areas (see Section
6.f.). The Vietnam Women's Union and Youth Union are especially active in
drawing attention to these problems and helping with education programs to warn
vulnerable families of the dangers of deception by those who would lure young
women and children into prostitution. Press reports documented the
conviction and imprisonment of some traffickers (see Section 6.f.).
Street children are vulnerable to
abuse and sometimes are slapped and harassed by police (see Section 1.c.).
People with Disabilities
Government provision of services to
the disabled is limited, and the Government provides little official protection
or effective support for the disabled. Government agencies responsible
for services to the disabled worked with domestic and foreign groups to
"identify measures" to provide protection, support, and physical
access for the disabled. Implementation is hampered by limited
budgets. The 1995 Labor Law requires the State to protect the rights and
encourage the employment of the disabled. It includes provisions for
preferential treatment of firms that recruit disabled persons for training or
apprenticeship and a special levy on firms that do not employ disabled
workers. It is uncertain whether the Government enforces these provisions.
The Government permitted international groups to assist persons disabled by war
or by subsequent accidents involving unexploded ordnance and has developed
indigenous prosthetics-manufacturing capabilities. There are no laws
mandating physical access to buildings.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Although the Government states that
it is opposed to discrimination against ethnic minorities, societal
discrimination against minorities is widespread. In addition there
continued to be credible reports that local officials sometimes restricted
ethnic minority access to some types of employment and educational
opportunities. The Government continued to implement policies designed to
narrow the gap in the standard of living between ethnic groups living in the highlands
and richer lowland ethnic Vietnamese by granting preferential treatment to
domestic and foreign companies that invest in highland areas. The stated
goal of government resettlement policy in mountainous provinces is for
disadvantaged minorities to relocate from inaccessible villages to locations
where basic services are easier to provide; however, the effect of the policy
sometimes has been to dilute the political and social solidarity of these
groups. Moreover, large-scale government-sponsored as well as spontaneous
migration of ethnic Vietnamese to the central highlands have diluted further
the indigenous culture and traditional heritage of the minorities located
there. The Government continued to repress some highland minorities,
particularly the Hmong, for practicing their religion without official approval
(see Section 2.c.).
In August about 150 members of the
Ede ethnic minority attacked a village of ethnic majority Vietnamese (Kinh) who
had migrated into the area where they lived; the Ede injured four ethnic
Vietnamese and destroyed several homes. The attack underscored increased
tensions that have resulted from the migration of ethnic Vietnamese to areas
that traditionally were populated by ethnic minorities.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
Trade unions are controlled by the
Party and have only nominal independence; however, union leaders influence some
key decisions, such as on health, safety, and minimum wage standards.
Workers are not free to join or form unions of their choosing; such action
requires approval from the local office of the Party-controlled Vietnam General
Confederation of Labor (VGCL), and any union that forms must affiliate with the
VGCL. The VGCL is the umbrella organization under which all local trade
unions must operate. It claims that it represents 95 percent of public
sector workers and 90 percent of workers in state-owned enterprises. In
1999 the Government stated that trade unions had not fulfilled their role of
protecting workers in foreign-invested companies, many of whom it claimed did
not respect labor regulations. The VGCL asserted that authorities did not
prosecute some violations of the Labor Law.
About 500,000 union members work in the private sector, including foreign-based
enterprises. The vast majority of the work force live in rural areas, is
engaged in small-scale farming, and is not unionized.
The 1994 Labor Law requires the
federation of labor at the provincial level to establish unions within 6 months
at all new enterprises with more than 10 employees as well as at existing
enterprises that operate without trade unions. Management of those
companies is required by law to accept and cooperate with those unions.
In addition, while the Labor Law states that all enterprise level and
professional trade unions are affiliated with the VGCL, in practice hundreds of
unaffiliated "labor associations" have been organized in occupations
such as those of taxi, motorcycle and cyclo drivers, cooks, and market
porters. Foreign governments and international organizations, such as the
ILO and other U.N. system organizations, provide technical assistance and
training to the Ministry of Labor, Invalids, and Social Affairs (MOLISA) and
the VGCL.
The Labor Law provides for the
right to strike under certain circumstances. The law requires that
management and labor resolve labor disputes through the enterprise's own labor
conciliation council. However, many labor organizations failed to
establish labor conciliation councils. In the case of the absence of a
labor conciliation council or if one fails to resolve a labor dispute, it is
referred to the provincial labor arbitration council. If the council's
decision is unsatisfactory to the union or if the province does not have an
arbitration council, unions have the right to appeal to the provincial people's
labor arbitration council. However, such councils do not exist in some
provinces. Labor courts, a division of the people's courts, heard
approximately 500 cases between their inception in mid-1996 and mid-1999; most
cited wrongful dismissal and matters of labor discipline. Since 1995 the
Labor Ministry has organized hundreds of training courses on the Labor Law for
its staff and for managers of large enterprises. The ILO and the U.N. Development
Program are cooperating on a large multiyear technical assistance program to
strengthen Labor Law implementation.
The government-controlled labor
unions stipulate written procedures for managing labor disputes that permit
unresolved disputes to be arbitrated before a court. Unions have the
right to appeal a council decision to the provincial people's court and the
right to strike.
There were 72 strikes during the
year. Approximately 450 strikes have been reported since 1993, primarily
against foreign-owned or joint venture companies, but some involved state-owned
and private firms. The majority took place in Ho Chi Minh City, Dong Nai
province, and other southern provinces. Most strikes are symbolic and
last 1 or 2 days. Strikes are caused by disputes over wages and related
problems, including late payment of overtime pay and inappropriate labor
discipline. Although most of the strikes did not follow an authorized
conciliation and arbitration process, and thus were of questionable legitimacy,
the Government tolerated the strikes and did not take action against the
strikers. Although the VGCL or its affiliate unions did not sanction
these strikes officially, many were supported unofficially at the local and
provincial levels of the VGCL. The Labor Law prohibits retribution
against strikers, and there were no credible reports of such retribution.
In some cases, the Government disciplined employers for illegal practices that
led to strikes.
The Labor Law prohibits strikes at
enterprises that serve the public and those considered by the Government to be
important to the national economy and defense. A subsequent decree
defined these enterprises to be those involved in: Electricity
production; post and telecommunications; railway, maritime, and air transportation;
banking; public works; and the oil and gas industry. The law also grants
the Prime Minister the right to suspend a strike considered detrimental to the
national economy or public safety. Strikes are prohibited in 54
occupational sectors and businesses.
Individual unions legally are not
free to affiliate with, join, or participate in, international labor bodies,
and they do not do so in practice. However, the VGCL has relations with
95 labor organizations in 70 countries, and the VGCL's president traveled
internationally, including to Western industrial countries, on labor matters.
b. The Right to Organize and
Bargain Collectively
Workers must have the approval of
the provincial or metropolitan branch of the VGCL in order to organize unions
in their enterprises. The Labor Law provides that party-approved unions
have the right to bargain collectively on behalf of workers. It also
provides for collective labor agreements that cover employees and
employers. Since 1999 collective bargaining became more important.
Many contracts were negotiated that ended the practice of annual renewal, and
multiyear contracts have become more common despite initial resistance from
foreign companies. Labor leaders became more active in supporting their workers
by agreeing in 1999 to place more workplace issues in collective bargaining
agreements. Issues previously not covered in contracts, such as work on
Sundays, have been spelled out so that companies cannot order workers to work a
seventh day. As the country transitions away from central planning,
market forces play a much more important role in determining wages. The
Labor Law prohibits antiunion discrimination on the part of employers against
employees who seek to organize.
The growing number of export processing
zones and industrial zones are governed by the same labor laws as the rest of
the country.
c. Prohibition of Forced or
Compulsory Labor
The Labor Law prohibits all forms
of forced and bonded labor, including such labor by children; however, there
were reports that thousands of children work in exploitative situations (see
Section 6.d.). Some women are forced into prostitution, and trafficking
in women for the purpose of forced prostitution is a problem (see Sections 5
and 6.f.). Children were trafficked both domestically and internationally
and forced to work as prostitutes (see Sections 5 and 6.f.). A study of
child labor in Ho Chi Minh City found cases in which poor families had entered
into "verbal agreements" with employers, who put the families'
children to work; their salaries generally are sent to their parents.
The Government denies the use of
prison labor without compensation; however, prisoners routinely are required to
work, producing food and other goods used in prisons for little or no pay.
Officials state that juveniles in Education and Nourishment Centers, which
function much as reform schools or juvenile detention centers do elsewhere, are
assigned work for "educational purposes" that does not generate
income.
Late in 1999, the Government issued
an ordinance requiring all adult citizens between the ages of 18 and 45 for men
and between 18 and 35 for women to perform 10 days of annual public
labor. However, the ordinance permits citizens to excuse themselves from
this obligation by finding a substitute or paying a fee. While some have
alleged that such laborers were recruited to construct the Ho Chi Minh Highway,
the Government issued a decree in October that gives the force of law to its
existing policy that all labor on this project must be voluntary and
paid. Foreign diplomats urged labor officials to consult with ILO experts
as to whether the ordinance and its implementation constitute forced labor
under internationally recognized standards. There is a long local tradition
under which persons living along flood-prone levees voluntarily help to build
or repair the ubiquitous and centuries-old flood control system.
d. Status of Child Labor
Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
The Labor Law prohibits most child
labor but allows exceptions for certain types of work. It sets the
minimum age for employment at 18 years of age, but enterprises may hire
children between the ages of 15 and 18 if the firm obtains special permission
from their parents and the MOLISA. However, a widely-publicized MOLISA
survey found that about 40,000 children between the ages of 8 and 14 years of
age worked part-time or full-time in violation of the Labor Law. That
estimate may be low, since most of these children worked in the informal
sector. An employer must ensure that young workers do not undertake
hazardous work or work that would harm their physical or mental
development. Prohibited occupations are specified in the Labor Law.
Children may work a maximum of 7 hours per day and 42 hours per week and must
receive special health care. Restrictions on working in hazardous operations
apply to persons under the age of 18. However, authorities do not have
sufficient resources to enforce these regulations; international donor
assistance targets this problem.
The Labor Law permits children to
register at trade training centers, a form of vocational training, from the age
of 13.
There were no reports that
state-owned enterprises or companies with foreign investors used child labor.
In rural areas, children work
primarily on family farms and in other agricultural activities. They can
begin working as young as 6 years of age and are expected to work as adults by
the time they are 15 years of age. In urban areas, children also may work
in family-owned small businesses. Compulsory education laws are not
enforced effectively in rural areas, where children are needed to work in
agriculture. However, the culture's strong emphasis on education leads
parents who can send children to school to do so, rather than allow them to
work. Many urban schools operate two sessions, allowing children to
attend classes and to work.
In 1997 the U.N. Children's Fund
(UNICEF) announced that children below the age of 16 faced increased risk of
economic exploitation. In 1997 UNICEF cited evidence of children working
in gold mines and as domestic servants, or working up to 14 hours per day in
hazardous conditions for meager pay or no pay. The ILO stated that some street
children both in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi participate in night education
courses.
Government officials have the power
to fine and, in cases of Criminal Code violations, prosecute employers who
violate child Labor Laws. While the Government commits insufficient
resources to enforce laws providing for children's labor safety, especially for
children working in mines and as domestic servants, it has detected cases of
child exploitation, removed the children from the exploitative situations and
disciplined the employers. In a 1999 case in which children were working in
a private sector gold mine, the Government prosecuted and convicted those
responsible.
In November The Government ratified
ILO Convention 182 on Worst Forms of Child Labor.
The Labor Law prohibits force and
bonded labor by children; however, thousands of children work in exploitative
situations, and children were trafficked both domestically and internationally
for the purpose of forced prostitution (see Section 6.f.).
e. Acceptable Conditions of
Work
The Labor Law requires the
Government to set a minimum wage, which is adjusted for inflation and other
economic changes. The official monthly minimum wage for
foreign-investment joint ventures is $45 (637,650 dong) in Hanoi and Ho Chi
Minh City, and $40 (566,800 dong) elsewhere. The Government can exempt temporarily
certain joint ventures from paying the minimum wage during the first months of
an enterprise's operations, or if the enterprise is located in a very remote
area, but the minimum wage in these cases can be no lower than $30 (425,100
dong). State-owned enterprises consistently pay above the official
monthly minimum wage of $13 (180,000 dong). These minimum wages are
inadequate to provide a worker and family with a decent standard of
living. A decreasing number of workers receive government-subsidized
housing. However, many workers receive bonuses and supplement incomes by
engaging in second-job entrepreneurial activities, and households often include
more than one wage earner. The Government enforces the minimum wage only
at foreign and major Vietnamese firms. A recent ILO study found that
minimum wage requirements are well applied in all sectors, with the exception
of smaller private sector enterprises.
In October 1999, the Government
reduced the length of the workweek for government employees and employees of
companies in the state sector from 48 hours to 40 hours. The Government
encourages the private business sector and foreign and international
organizations that employ Vietnamese workers to reduce the number of hours in
the work week but has not made mandatory.
The Labor Law sets working hours at
a maximum of 8 hours per day, with a mandatory 24-hour break each week.
Additional hours require overtime pay at 1.5 times the regular wage and 2 times
the regular wage on holidays. The law limits compulsory overtime to 4
hours per week and 200 hours per year. Annual leave with full pay for
various types of work also is prescribed by the law. The ILO has pointed
out that the limit of 200 hours a year of overtime work is too low, and that
workers and employers should have the right to agree to a greater amount of
overtime work. It is uncertain how well the Government enforces these
provisions.
According to the law, a female
employee who is to be married, is pregnant, is on maternity leave, or is
raising a child under 1 year of age cannot be dismissed unless the enterprise
is closed. Female employees who are at least 7 months pregnant or are
raising a child under 1 year of age cannot work overtime, at night, or in
distant locations.
The Labor Law requires the
Government to promulgate rules and regulations that ensure worker safety.
The Ministry of Labor, in coordination with local people's committees and labor
unions, is charged with enforcing the regulations. In practice enforcement
is inadequate because of the Ministry's inadequate funding and a shortage of
trained enforcement personnel. The VGCL reported that there are 300 labor
inspectors in the country but that at least 600 are needed. There is
growing evidence that workers, through labor unions, have been effective in
improving working conditions. In 1994 the Government ratified ILO
Convention 155 on occupational safety and health.
Some foreign companies with
operations in the country have established independent monitoring of problems at
their factories. In some instances, they used NGO's and other nonprofit
organizations to monitor workplace conditions and report abuses to the Ministry
of Labor.
The Labor Code provides that
workers may remove themselves from hazardous conditions without risking loss of
employment.
f. Trafficking in Persons
The Penal Code prescribes harsh
punishment for persons convicted of trafficking in women and children; however,
some women are forced to work as prostitutes, and trafficking in women and
children for the purpose of forced prostitution, both domestically and
internationally, is a serious problem. The Government, international
NGO's, and the press reported an increase in recent years in trafficking in
women. Women and girls are trafficked from the Mekong Delta and highland
provinces into Cambodia and from northern provinces into China. There are
reports that some women from Ho Chi Minh City and the Mekong Delta who married
men from Taiwan were forced into prostitution after their arrival in Taiwan.
Women and girls are misled by promises of well-paying jobs in those places.
Prostitution, although officially
illegal, is tolerated widely. The Ho Chi Minh City people's committee
recently acknowledged that more than 10,000 women in the city engage in prostitution.
Hanoi and the port cities of Danang and Haiphong also have large numbers of
women engaged in prostitution. There are reports that some persons in Ho
Chi Minh City addicted young girls to heroin, then forced them to work as
prostitutes to earn money to support their drug addiction. Many more
women are compelled to work as prostitutes because of poverty, a lack of other
employment opportunities, or because they are victimized by false promises of
lucrative work. The government-affiliated Vietnam Women's Union and Youth
Union, as well as international and domestic NGO's, are engaged actively in
education and rehabilitation programs to combat these abuses.
The Government is working with
international NGO's to supplement law enforcement measures and is cooperating
with other national governments to prevent trafficking. In September it
signed an agreement with the government of Australia stating a mutual
commitment to combat trafficking in women and children.
Organized groups, including
duplicitous job recruiters, lure poor, often rural, women with promises of jobs
or marriage and force them to work as prostitutes (see Sections 5 and
6.c.). Press and NGO reports noted that some women were kidnaped and
transported to China and other countries against their will, where they were
sold into forced marriages. The Government and the Vietnam Women's Union
addressed this problem by a program of public information to warn women and
girls of these dangers and by repatriation programs to help female returnees.
The Government also increased its efforts to prosecute traffickers.
There is reported trafficking in
women to the Macau Special Administrative Region of China with the assistance
of organizations in China that are ostensibly marriage service bureaus, international
labor organizations, and travel agencies. After arrival women can be forced
into conditions similar to indentured servitude; some may be forced into
prostitution.
Children also are trafficked
domestically and overseas to work as prostitutes. MOLISA, the Vietnamese
Committee for the Protection and Care of Children, and the Vietnam Women's
Union were engaged in efforts to combat this abuse. One NGO advocate has
estimated that the average age of trafficked girls was between 15 and 17 years;
many were trafficked to Cambodia and China.
Some traffickers have been
convicted and imprisoned. The Vietnam Women's Union and Youth Union's
programs, as well as state-owned media, publicized the problem. Women's
Union advocacy and rehabilitation efforts help women and girls who have been
trafficked.
[End.]