Vietnam Issues Social Media ‘Code of Conduct,’ Putting Repression Into Rules
The move forbids the posting of 'inappropriate' content and encourages account
holders to inform on other users.
RFA | 2021-06-18
Vietnam’s government has introduced a nationwide code of conduct for users of
social media, forbidding the posting of ‘inappropriate’ content and urging
account holders to inform on other users deemed to be breaking the rules, state
media said this week.
Issued on Thursday by the Ministry of Information and Communications (MIC), the
new regulations apply to all social media users in Vietnam: public servants,
private individuals and organizations, and service providers.
The new code states it is designed to “ensure the right to freedom of
individuals,” but calls at the same time for users not to post information that
“violates the law, offends the honor and dignity of other organizations and
individuals, [or] affects their legitimate rights and interests.”
The regulation’s language closely mirrors that of Article 331 of Vietnam’s 2015
Criminal Code, under which democracy advocates and independent journalists have
often been jailed for “abusing the rights to freedom and democracy to violate
the interests of the State, the legitimate rights and interests of organizations
and individuals.”
International human rights organizations and press freedoms watchdog groups have
called for the Article’s removal from the criminal code on the grounds that it
violates Vietnamese citizens’ rights to freedom of speech and expression and is
used only to punish dissent.
The new code of conduct also calls on public servants encountering “conflicting
and unlawful information” related to their work to report these violations to
their “governing organization,” and on service providers to cooperate with the
government to remove “unlawful content.”
“Vietnam today is one of the most repressive environments in the world with
regards to freedom of expression online,” human rights group Amnesty
International said in a November 2020 report, “Let Us Breathe—Censorship and
Criminalization of Online Expression in Vietnam.”
“While the internet has provided an unprecedented opportunity for the Vietnamese
people to express and exchange political opinions, it has also left users at
increased risk of harassment, intimidation, physical assault and prosecution by
state authorities bent on eliminating dissent,” Amnesty said in its report.
Harsh forms of persecution
With Vietnam’s media all following Communist Party orders, “the only sources of
independently-reported information are bloggers and independent journalists, who
are being subjected to ever-harsher forms of persecution,” the press freedoms
watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) says in its 2021 Press Freedoms Index.
Measures taken against them now include assaults by plainclothes police, RSF
said in its report, which placed Vietnam at 175 out of 180 countries surveyed
worldwide, a ranking unchanged from last year.
“To justify jailing them, the Party resorts to the criminal codes, especially
three articles under which ‘activities aimed at overthrowing the government,’
‘anti-state propaganda’ and ‘abusing the rights to freedom and democracy to
threaten the interests of the state’ are punishable by long prison terms,” the
rights group said.
In its Freedom in the World 2021 report, Washington D.C.-based Freedom
House gave Vietnam an overall score of 19 out of a possible 100, a one-point
drop from last year’s rating. Vietnam scored three out of 40 in political
rights, and 16 out of 60 in civil liberties.
”Freedom of expression, religious freedom, and civil society activism are
tightly restricted [and the] authorities have increasingly cracked down on
citizens’ use of social media and the internet,” Freedom House said.
Vietnam’s already low tolerance of dissent deteriorated sharply last year with a
spate of arrests of independent journalists, publishers, and Facebook
personalities as authorities continued to stifle critics in the run-up to the
ruling Communist Party Congress in January. But arrests continue in 2021.
Reported by RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Anna Vu. Written in English
by Richard Finney.
[Home] [About us] [Bills of Rights] [Documents] [H R Reports] [VNHR Awards] [HR Forum] [Links]
|