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VIETNAM: Ahead of Biden visit, Vietnam backsliding on religious freedoms

VIETNAM: Ahead of Biden visit, US watchdog says Vietnam backsliding on religious freedoms

Reuters (06.09.2023) – Days before a visit by President Joe Biden to Vietnam in which he aims to upgrade diplomatic ties, a U.S. government commission accused the country of backsliding on commitments to ensure religious freedoms.

In a report on Tuesday, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) said that since Washington dropped Vietnam from a list of “countries of particular concern” (CPC) over religious freedom in 2006, the Hanoi government had created “more space in some areas” for expressions of belief.

However, a “recent crackdown on civil society, increased pressure on independent religious communities, alarming reports of forced renunciations of faith, and other growing religious freedom violations add up to a clear reversal in that once-positive trajectory,” it said.

The report said a May visit to Vietnam by USCIRF Vice Chair Frederick Davie and Commissioner Eric Ueland found that while religious groups experienced relatively greater freedom in urban areas, “serious challenges are pervasive in many rural areas.”

Vietnam’s requirement for religious groups to register contrasted with Hanoi’s obligation to provide religious freedom to all its people, it said.

“Government authorities continue to closely monitor all religious activity, often harassing, detaining, or otherwise preventing unregistered faith communities from exercising their fundamental right to religious freedom,” the report said.

Vietnam was on a “similar trajectory to China in terms of its regulation and control of religion,” the report said.

Washington sees Vietnam as an important partner in the face of China’s growing power in the Indo-Pacific region. It is looking to elevate its diplomatic relations with Hanoi to the top level when Biden is in Hanoi on Sept. 10, but analysts say human rights concerns could be an obstacle to certain cooperation.

Vietnam’s constitution allows for freedom of religion and government media have rejected criticisms from groups such as USCIRF.

In its 2023 annual report, the USCIRF recommended the redesignation of Vietnam as a CPC, accusing it of “systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.”

Last year, the U.S. State Department added Vietnam to its Special Watch List for violations of religious freedom under the 1998 U.S. Religious Freedom Act, a lesser designation than that of a CPC, but its first since 2006.

The act provides for a range of policy responses, including sanctions or waivers, but they are not automatic.

Reporting by David Brunnstrom; Editing by Leslie Adler

HRWF additional information:

77 FoRB Prisoners in Vietnam

Christians – Catholics (11)

A JEN

A KUIN

A TACH

A TIK

DINH KUH

HO DUC HOA

JU

KUNH

LUP

RUN

RUNH

Christians – Protestants (28)

A DAO

DINH NONG

DINH YUM

KPUIH KHUONG

KSOR KAM

KSOR PHIT

KSOR PUP

KSOR RUK

PUIH BOP

RAH LAN HIP

RAH LAN RAH

RMAH BLOANH

RMAH KHIL

RO LAN KLY

RO MA DAIH

RO MAH PLA

RO MAH THEM

SIU CHON

SIU DIK

SIU DOANG

SIU HLOM

SUNG A KHUA

Y HRIAM KPA

Y MIN KSOR

Y PUM BYA

Y TUP KNUL

Y WO NIE

Y YICH

Buddhists – Hoa Hao (6)

BUI VAN THAM

BUI THI BICH TUYEN

BUI VAN TRUNG

LE THI HONG HANH

NGUYEN BAC TRUYEN

NGUYEN HOANG NAM

Buddhists – Unspecified (28)

CAO THI CUC

DO THI HONG

DOAN DINH NAM

DOAN VAN CU

LE DUC DONG

LE DUY LOC

LE PHUC

LE THANH HOAN NGUYEN

LE THANH NHAT NGUYEN

LE THANH NHI NGUYEN

LE THANH TRUNG DUONG

LE TRONG CU

LE TUNG VAN

LUONG NHAT QUANG

NGUYEN DINH

NGUYEN KY LAC

NGUYEN THAI BINH

PHAN THANH TUONG

PHAN THANH Y

PHAN VAN THU

TA KHU

TRAN PHI DUNG

TRAN QUAN

VO NGOC CU

VO THANH LE

TU THIEN LUONG

VO TIET

VUONG TAN SON

Duong Van Minh Religion (4)

DUONG VAN LANH

DUONG VAN TU

LY VAN DUNG

LY XUAN ANH

Photo: U.S. President Joe Biden arrives at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Washington, U.S., 

Further reading about FORB in Vietnam on HRWF website





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VIETNAM: Vietnamese police disrupt Xmas celebration of Montagnard Christians

Vietnamese police disrupt Christmas celebration of Montagnard Christians

Authorities confiscate a banner and beat the church pastor.

Radio Free Asia (29.12.2021) – https://bit.ly/3Jw522g – Authorities harassed about 60 followers of the Montagnard Evangelical Church of Christ as they prepared to celebrate Christmas in Phu Yen province on Vietnam’s south-central coast, confiscating a banner and beating the pastor, members of the church in Ea Lam village said.

The authorities have accused the church of wanting to overthrow the government. though church members deny the allegation.

Police first assaulted and detained Y Cuon Nie, the church’s pastor and a missionary, on Dec. 22 while he was at a printing shop to make the celebratory banners.

“When I was at Viet Long Printers to make a Christmas banner costing 240,000 dong [U.S. $11], they came, confiscated it, and hit me on my back. They took me to the headquarters of Tan Lap town’s police, saying it was not permitted,” he told RFA on Monday.

Authorities, who arrested Nie at 2:30 p.m. that day, did not release him until five hours later, he said.

On Christmas Eve, when Nie and church members were holding a Christmas ceremony in his home, police led by Lieutenant Colonel Dinh Ngoc Dan entered and demanded that they stop.

“At around 10 p.m. Lieutenant Colonel Dinh Ngoc Dan came to my place and said, ‘Stop it all! What are you doing? Who allowed you to do this?’” Nie said. “He shouted. He did not respect the host, and he noisily disrupted our ceremony.”

The police official threatened Nie and took him to the Song Hinh district station for questioning.

When contacted by RFA, the Song Hinh district police denied harassing the members of the church.

“You’d better contact the People’s Committee,” said an officer who did not give his name, referring to the provincial subordinate of the Communist Party of Vietnam.

“We police did not carry out any crackdown at all,” he said. “Not only in Song Hinh district but also in the whole country, our religious policy is very clear and favorable for religious practitioners. If they want to make complaints or petitions, they should write to the [relevant] agencies.”

RFA contacted To Van Giang, chief of staff of Song Hinh district’s Fatherland Front Committee, an umbrella group of mass movements in Vietnam aligned with the country’s Communist Party, but he said he was busy with a meeting. He could not be reached again later in the day.

Vietnam’s constitution mandates protection for religious freedom and states that citizens can follow any religion or none. But it also permits authorities to override rights including religious freedom for purposes of national security, social order, social morality and community well-being.

The country’s Law on Belief and Religion, which went into effect in early 2018, requires religious communities to formally register their organizations and places of worship, though only organizations that have operated for at least five years can apply for registration. Once registered, the organizations are granted status as legal entities.

Nie said that his religious group tried to meet the requirements for registering under the law, but that he had not received any responses from authorities during the past few years.

In the meantime, police had pressured church members to renounce their religion, he said.

RFA reported in January that local authorities from the Ea Lam commune and Song Hinh district forced members of the church to publicly denounce their faith in front of other villagers.

A Dao, a former pastor of the Montagnard Evangelical Church of Christ, was arrested in August 2016 when returning from a conference on East Timorese religious freedom. He was tried and sentenced to five years in prison in neighboring Gia Lai province for helping individuals to escape abroad illegally. In September 2020, he was released to exile in the United States after serving nearly four years in prison.

“Authorities continued to actively persecute independent religious minority communities, including Protestant Hmong and Montagnard Christians, Hoa Hao Buddhists, the Unified Buddhists, Cao Dai followers, Catholics, and Falun Gong practitioners,” said the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom about Vietnam in its annual report issued in April.

“Ethnic minority communities faced especially egregious persecution for the peaceful practice of their faith, including physical assault, banishment, detention, imprisonment, and forced renunciation of faith,” the report said.

By the end of 2020, the Vietnamese government officially recognized 16 religions and 43 religious organizations, although many groups refused to register out of fear of persecution or concern for their independence, the commission said.

Reported by RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Anna Vu. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

 

Photo: Members of the Montagnard Evangelical Church of Christ are forced to publicly denounce their faith in front of other villagers in Ea Lam commune of Vietnam’s Phu Yen province, Jan. 15, 2020. Photo courtesy of church members

 


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