Set Benchmarks for Progress at Bilateral Rights Dialogue
Twelve Vietnamese rights activists and bloggers currently detained for exercising their basic rights. Top row from left to right: Bui Tuan Lam, Le Manh Ha, Dinh Van Hai, Bui Van Thuan. Center row: Pham Doan Trang, Trinh Ba Phuong, Nguyen Thi Tam, Truong Van Dung. Bottom row: Nguyen Lan Thang, Mai Phan Loi, Dang Dinh Bach, Tran Van Bang. © 2023 Human Rights Watch
(Bangkok) – The European Union should make use of a
bilateral dialogue on June 9, 2023 in Hanoi to press the Vietnamese government to end
its systemic violations of human rights, Human Rights Watch said today. Vietnam
has disregarded the human rights commitments made when signing the EU-Vietnam
Free Trade Agreement in 2020 and intensified its repression by wrongfully
sentencing activists to long prison terms, restricting civil and political
liberties, and violating the freedom of religion and belief.
“The EU claimed its 2020 Free Trade Agreement would
encourage Vietnam to improve its human rights record, but just the opposite has
happened,” said Phil
Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Hanoi’s disregard
for rights has already made it clear that the EU needs to consider actions that
go beyond simply issuing statements and hoping for the best.”
Through the creation of a Domestic Advisory Group, the
EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement was also supposed to promote the participation
of independent civil society groups to help oversee the
implementation of the trade and sustainable development chapter of the
agreement. However, on July 2, 2021, Vietnamese police arrested Mai
Phan Loi and Dang
Dinh Bach, two active leaders of the nongovernmental organization trade
agreement network that civil society groups created to promote their
participation in the Domestic Advisory Group. On July 14, the EU group published a letter protesting the arrests of Loi and
Bach. In January 2022, they were convicted on baseless charges of tax evasion
and sentenced to three years and nine months, and five years in prison,
respectively.
Of the Domestic Advisory Group’s seven members approved by
the Vietnamese government, at least four organizations are closely linked to
the ruling Communist Party of Vietnam and chaired by senior party members.
On May 31, Vietnamese authorities arrested Hoang Thi Minh Hong, another prominent
environmentalist and climate change campaigner, also on wrongful tax evasion
charges.
Human Rights Watch in May made a submission to
the EU on the human rights situation in Vietnam, and urged the bloc to press
the Vietnamese authorities to immediately release all political
prisoners and detainees. Specifically, Human Rights Watch raised the
cases of Le Manh Ha, Dinh Van Hai, Bui
Van Thuan, Pham
Doan Trang, Trinh
Ba Phuong, Nguyen
Thi Tam, Truong
Van Dung, Nguyen
Lan Thang, Tran
Van Bang, Bui
Tuan Lam, Mai
Phan Loi, and Dang
Dinh Bach. Currently, Vietnam holds more than 150
political prisoners.
On June 6, three days before the human rights dialogue,
Vietnam sentenced yet another human rights campaigner, the music
teacher Dang Dang Phuoc, to eight years in prison and four years’ probation
for expressing his critical views on social, environmental, and political
issues.
Human Rights Watch also urged the EU to press the Vietnamese
government to amend or repeal the penal code articles
109, 116, 117, 118, and 331, which the authorities frequently use to repress
civil and political rights. The government should also repeal or amend articles
14(2) and 15(4) of the constitution, which allow for restrictions on human rights
for reasons of national security that go beyond what is permissible under
international human rights law.
Vietnam should also end its abusive restrictions on the
right to freedom
of movement. Human rights and pro-democracy activists frequently face
restrictions on leaving their homes or neighborhood, are confronted with
intimidation and violence by officials or government-connected thugs, and are
prevented from leaving the country. In May, police at Noi Bai airport in Hanoi
prohibited the prominent rights defender Nguyen Quang A from leaving for a trip to Europe.
“The EU should get serious about pressing the Vietnamese
government to convert rights pledges into genuine reform,” Robertson said.
“It’s not much of a rights dialogue if Vietnam officials are just going through
the motions, expressing platitudes, and waiting for the meeting to end.”
https://www.hrw.org
No comments:
Post a Comment