Senate and House Introduce Bills to Sanction Individuals for Ongoing Human Rights Abuses in Vietnam
Congressman Anh "Joseph" Cao Washington, November 22, 2010
WASHINGTON - On Thursday, both
chambers of the U.S. Congress introduced identical legislation to impose
sanctions on individuals who are complicit in human rights abuses committed
against nationals of Vietnam or their family members and for other purposes.
Since the U.S. State Department removed Vietnam from its “Countries of Particular Concern” list for violations of religious freedom in 2006, government leaders have observed that Vietnam's human rights record has grown steadily worse. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell noted that Vietnam is “backsliding” on human rights and religious freedom issues. The U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam has said publicly that he is “troubled by the overall human rights problems in Vietnam,” and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on a recent visit to Vietnam that “the United States remains concerned about the arrest and conviction of people for peaceful dissent, the attacks on religious groups, the curbs on Internet freedom, including of bloggers”
In introducing the Vietnam Human Rights Sanctions Act, the
co-sponsors observed that anyone in Vietnam who expresses criticism of the
government is harassed and in some cases arrested. Those suffering such
harassment include lawyers, journalists, bloggers, democracy and human rights
activists, independent trade union leaders, non-state-sanctioned publishers,
members of ethnic minorities, and unsanctioned religious groups. The
co-sponsors pointed out that Vietnam is also a source country for commercial
sexual exploitation and forced labor and is a destination country for child
trafficking. Source: http://josephcao.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=215628
Vietnam Human Rights Network |