Tag: United States

  • Vietnam Briefing: Vietnam Seeks To Strengthen Cooperation With The United States On Multiple Fronts

    Vietnam Briefing: Vietnam Seeks To Strengthen Cooperation With The United States On Multiple Fronts

    The Vietnam Briefing, which is released every Monday morning Vietnam time, looks at Vietnam’s social and political developments of the past week.

    Source:  The Vietnamese Magazine .


    Vietnamese billionaire arrested on market manipulation charges

    • Vietnam’s state media on March 29 reported that the investigation unit of the Public Security Ministry had arrested Trinh Van Quyet, a Vietnamese billionaire and director of the local real estate developer FLC, for further investigation in connection with  his alleged activities of “manipulating the stock market” and “concealing personal stock exchange activities.”
    • Quyet’s activities were allegedly in violation of Vietnam’s Article 211 of the 2015 Penal code, which has a maximum sentence of seven years of imprisonment for activities that undermine the country’s stock market exchange regulations.
    • State media also quoted police sources who said that other individuals at FLC were also under investigation for similar charges. Quyet’s arrest was a result of his selling of more than 70 million FLC stocks on January 1 without disclosing the transaction information and notifying the authorities in charge and investors of such activities.
    • The FLC director was fined 1.5 billion dong (US$65,677) and banned from making transactions for a period of five months. In 2017, he also received a 65 million dong fine for the same misconduct.
    • Quyet’s real estate conglomerate FLC was also accused by some of Vietnam’s environmental organizations, such as the Save Tam Dao, of colluding with local authorities to clear natural forests for real estate development projects, such as building golf courses. For example, FLC’s plan to cut down the Dak Doa pine forest in Gia Lai Province for golf course development in 2021 has caused a public stir. The project was reportedly suspended after Trinh Van Quyet was arrested.

    Vietnam’s automaker Vinfast signs a deal to build an electric automobile factory in the United States

    • Reuters on March 29 reported that the Vietnamese automaker Vinfast had signed a deal to invest US$2 billion to build a factory in North Carolina for the manufacture of its electric buses, SUVs, as well as batteries for electric vehicles.
    • Vinfast, owned by Vietnam’s largest conglomerate Vingroup, said that it plans to have a total investment of US$4 billion in the U.S.-based factory complex which is expected to finish by July 2024. It added that the initial manufacturing capacity will be 150,000 units per year.
    • In an official statement, U.S. President Joe Biden praised Vinfast’s investment in North Carolina as “the latest example” of his economic strategy at work. Biden also added that the electric SUV manufacturing investment is in line with the U.S. government’s efforts to build a clean energy economy as he encouraged other companies to make more in America and rebuild the supply chains domestically.
    • In 2021, Vingroup established its Singapore-based holding company called Vinfast Singapore and transferred a total of 51.5 percent of its stake to its subsidiary. The move was seen as part of the company’s plan to list shares of its car units in the United States, Reuters reported.
    • Despite its increasing global recognition, Vingroup and its subsidiary Vinfast are also a target of criticism in Vietnam for their opaque economic relationship with the Vietnamese government, where cronyism and favoritism are said to be the main drivers of their fast expansion.
    • Last year, Vinfast made headlines after the company announced that it would report one of its car buyers to the police after the customer uploaded videos on Youtube complaining about several technical problems with his newly bought Vinfast car. The Vietnamese automaker claimed that the uploaded videos contained “untrue content” which “affected the reputation of VinFast.”
    • Tran Van Hoang, the car owner, later decided to take down his video, but a Vinfast statement said that they “saved all the evidence” and subsequently sent their complaints to the police. “If a similar incident were to occur when operating in the United States, we will also submit a request to the authorities in accordance with local law, and to protect our legal rights,” the company said.

    Counselor of the U.S. Department of State visits Vietnam, reaffirming the U.S. commitment to the Indo-Pacific region

    • Counselor of the U.S. Department of State Derek Chollet made a visit to the Philippines, Vietnam, and Japan from March 28 to April 2 as he sought to consolidate the U.S. commitment to its Indo-Pacific allies and partners, according to a statement from the State Department’s spokesperson.
    • While in Hanoi, Counselor Chollet is expected to meet with senior government officials to affirm the United States-Vietnam Comprehensive Partnership and the U.S. commitment to ASEAN, discuss the ongoing crisis in Burma and talk about regional economic and security cooperation, as well as highlight the importance of respect for human rights, according to the statement.
    • At a press conference on April 1, Chollet said that Vietnam is an important partner of the U.S. in the region and he vowed to work closely with Vietnam to ensure freedom of maritime in the South China Sea, also known as the East Sea in Vietnam, and to promote cooperation.
    • On March 30, U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam Marc Knapper spoke at the reception ceremony for his new position, saying that the United States “will make every possible effort to support Vietnam.”
    • Knapper pledged to develop mutual cooperation between the United States. and Vietnam on multiple fronts, from helping the Southeast Asian country’s economy recover from COVID-19, boosting the effectiveness of its climate change response, in addition to providing Vietnam with workforce training and digital transformation programs.
    • Also at the ceremony, Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh claimed that Vietnam wished to work together with the United States on the basis of “respecting each other’s independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity, political institutions, and differences.”

    Social networking platforms reportedly removed “toxic content” upon the Vietnamese government’s request

    • Vietnam’s state-owned media on March 29 quoted official statistics and reported that foreign social networking sites, including Facebook, Youtube, and Tiktok, had complied with the government’s request to remove thousands of pieces of content that “defy the Communist Party and the Vietnamese government.”
    • The social networks have reportedly removed up to 90 percent of “anti-state posts” requested by the Vietnamese authorities.
    • According to government statistics, from January 1 to March 21, 2022, Facebook blocked and removed more than 525 posts that “publish false information and distribute information defying the Party and the government.”
    • At the same time, local authorities claimed that Google had removed 2,678 videos on its video-sharing platform Youtube while Tiktok deleted around 71 pieces of content that “promote false information and negative content which undermine [Vietnam’s] COVID-19 prevention strategy.”

    Former state journalist being tried for “defame provincial leaders”

    • Vietnam’s state-run media reported that the Quang Tri provincial court on March 30 held a trial for the former journalist Phan Bui Bao Thy, along with Le Anh Dung and Nguyen Huy, on charges of “abusing democratic rights and freedom to infringe on State and individual interests” under Article 331 of Vietnam’s 2015 Penal Code.
    • According to their indictment, Thy, Dung, and Huy had written, edited, and posted information that “distort and defame several leaders of Quang Tri Province.” This information has consequently “created public skepticism towards the political qualities, morality, lifestyle, and capabilities of these individuals,” it added.
    • Thy got arrested on February 5, 2021, and was previously set to be tried on October 31. However, at that time, the Quang Tri court returned his case to the Procuracy’s Office for further investigation due to the lack of evidence.
    • On March 31, the Procuracy said it had gathered “well-grounded evidence” to prosecute and announced its suggested sentencing for the defendants. According to its suggestions, Thy and Dung are expected to receive from 9 to 12 months in prison, while Huy is expected to receive correctional training for up to 12 months.

    A truck driver was sentenced to 1 year in jail for expressing opinions on Vietnam’s COVID-19 strategy

    • Le Minh Tai, 38, a truck driver living in the southern province of Ca Mau, was convicted of “abusing democracy rights and freedom” and sentenced to one year in prison, State media reports.
    • According to his indictment, from September 17 to November 27, 2021, when Vietnam imposed strict lockdowns to combat spiking COVID-19 infections, Tai used his personal Facebook account to publish a total of “28 posts and nine videos” to complain about how the Ca Mau authorities’ stringent antivirus strategy had negatively affected the livelihoods of many truck drivers.
    • Tai’s online posts were regarded by local authorities as “containing negative information” as well as “distorting, defaming and slandering provincial leaders.” Last June, he was also fined 10 million dong for “using social networks to provide distorted information and defame other individuals’ reputation.”

    Vietnam publishes its voluntary midterm report on the implementation of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR)

    • The State-controlled VietnamPlus on March 31 reported that the Vietnamese Foreign Ministry had published the country’s voluntary midterm report on the implementation of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) third cycle recommendations, in addition to announcing Hanoi’s candidacy to the UN Human Rights Council for the 2023-2025 term.
    • According to Do Hung Viet, Vietnam’s Assistant Foreign Minister, Vietnam “has been actively engaged with the UPR process” and the country’s efforts and accomplishments have been recognized while its shortcomings and challenges have also been identified.
    • Viet added that Hanoi has received and accepted “hundreds of recommendations” from the international community and these guidelines are important for Vietnam to “further improve the enjoyment of all human rights” in the country.
    • Nevertheless, the Vietnamese government has been widely condemned for the serious violation of the basic human rights of its citizens, including freedom of expression, movement, press, and association.
    • Human Rights Watch in February released a report documenting Hanoi’s systematic restriction of the rights to freedom of movement of political and human rights of activists, claiming that these unlawful activities from the Vietnamese government are “serious infringements on basic rights.”
    • The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) last December also urged the Hanoi authorities to “immediately release” human rights defenders Trinh Ba Phuong, Nguyen Thi Tam, Do Nam Trung, the independent author Pham Doan Trang, and citizen journalist Le Trong Hung, as well as “many others arbitrarily detained for exercising their rights to freedom of opinion and expression.”
    • “All the cases follow similar worrying patterns that raise serious issues concerning the presumption of innocence, the legality of their detention, and the fairness of their trial,” said  Ravina Shamdasani, spokeswoman for the OHCHR.

    Vietnam Insight: Learn more about Vietnam

    Climate change accelerates US-Vietnam cooperation

    Asia Times/ James Borton/ March 30

    “Hanoi’s political leadership recognizes that Washington can increase its financial and technical assistance to help the nation meet climate challenges and support its renewable-energy developments. The Vietnam Green Growth Strategy (VGGS) has set targets to achieve low-emission development and help the nation’s efforts to mitigate climate change.

    USAID continues to play a supporting role in Asia’s Low Emission Development Strategy partnership, which provides training, knowledge sharing, and cooperation to more effective use of LEDS tools and practices in development decision-making and financing.”

    Vietnam’s Mediascape Amid the War in Ukraine: Between Method and Mayhem

    Fulcrum/ Hoang Thi Ha/ March 30

    “In contrast to mainstream media’s disciplined coverage, social media, especially Facebook and YouTube, provide the platforms for many Vietnamese to express their ‘wild and loud’ opinions and share information that has often been labeled by different groups as mis- and dis-information. Dozens of new Facebook groups with memberships ranging from a thousand to around 200,000 have been created to focus on the war in Ukraine while many YouTube posts covering the war by both individuals and quasi-private media outlets draw thousands to millions of views. This buzz on Vietnam’s social media platforms suggests that the disciplined approach of Vietnam’s mainstream media in their coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war has not been able to satisfy the hunger for alternative news sources and commentary among many Vietnamese.”

    Vietnam and the Russian ties that bind them

    Southeast Asia Globe/ Govi Snell/ March 17

    “A 2019 study by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute found Vietnam imported 84% of its total arms from Russia between 1995 and 2019. The submarines, tanks, fighter jets, and assorted weaponry totaled $7.4 billion during the time period.

    Sanctions also could impact Vietnam with a disruption in remittances for Russian transactions, problems for Vietnamese nationals living in Russia, and lost tourism revenue.”


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  • Pham Doan Trang in VOA Tiếng Việt: Phạm Đoan Trang được tôn vinh tại lễ trao giải ‘Phụ nữ Can đảm Quốc tế 2022’

    Pham Doan Trang was honored at the award ceremony “International Women of Courage 2022.”  US First Lady Jill Biden and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken were present at the online award ceremony.  US Ambassador to Vietnam Marc Knapper and IWOC laureate Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh offered their praises to the acclaimed journalist.


    Excerpt:

    Note:  Original texts in Vietnamese.

    On March 14, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken chaired the awarding ceremony of the “International Women of Courage” (IWOC) award to independent journalist Pham Doan Trang in Vietnam along with 11 other women around the world, praising their exceptional courage, strength and leadership in advocating for peace, justice, human rights… despite the danger to their lives.

    Foreign Minister Blinken commented on the contribution of independent female journalist Pham Doan Trang being imprisoned in Vietnam:

    “In December, Pham Doan Trang was sentenced to 9 years in prison in Vietnam for writing about democracy and human rights. She wrote about the crackdown on protesters and secretly recorded police interrogations. While the media stopped printing her articles, she founded her own website. Despite facing constant threats, she continued to communicate to others about their rights.”

    Secretary of State Blinken added: “We condemn her unjust detention. We call for her immediate release.”

    US Ambassador to Vietnam Marc Knapper said via video:

    “Pham Doan Trang, who fearlessly pursues an inclusive society and a wider space for free speech in Vietnam, has attracted international recognition.”

    “Through the Vietnamese press, the United States values ​​our comprehensive partnership with Vietnam. We work to help promote a strong, prosperous and independent Vietnam, and we firmly believe that for this country to thrive it needs openness, transparency and inclusion and respecting the rights of all citizens that Pham Doan Trang has constantly sought out through his writings and advocacy.”

    Ambassador Knapper added: “We applaud you, Pham Doan Trang, for your work as a human rights activist. Your bravery continues to inspire people in Vietnam and around the world.”

    First Lady Jill Biden, US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield, Assistant Secretary of Education and Culture Lee Satterfield attended and delivered speeches at the 16th annual IWOC ceremony held at the Department of Education and Training. US Diplomacy.

    First Lady Biden said:

    “Today, we honor these 12 women, and we’ve gone even further, giving them a platform to speak the truth with their voices.

    “We recognize the strength they hold to face the most formidable challenges of our time.”

    In a message to the honored women, First Lady Biden said: “We will continue to work with passion and persistence, with development and with democracy to stop those who want to be silenced. your mouth. And we will tell your stories even if you can’t.”

    Pham Doan Trang is the third woman in Vietnam to be awarded the IWOC award, after Blogger Me Nam or Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh, awarded in 2017, and Blogger Ta Phong Tan, awarded in 2013. The common point of the three people This woman was awarded the award by the US Department of State while they were serving 9-10 years in prison in Vietnam, for the same charge of “conducting propaganda against the State”, under Article 88 of the 1999 Penal Code.

    Currently living in Houston, Texas, Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh, who was sentenced to 10 years in prison by the Vietnamese government in 2017, commented to VOA about journalist Pham Doan Trang being awarded the IWOC 2022:

    “Congratulations to Ms. Pham Doan Trang for the title of International Woman of Courage 2022. This is the recognition of the United States in particular and the world in general for Pham Doan Trang personally with her hard-fought and sustained efforts. for human rights and freedom of speech in Vietnam. The 9-year prison sentence that the Hanoi People’s Court has pronounced is the revenge that the Vietnamese government has spent in response to Pham Doan Trang’s courage.”

    “I hope that Ms. Doan Trang’s commitment will create positive change in a society full of fear and terror. And most importantly, no more Vietnamese citizens will be convicted for speaking out politically, for resisting oppression and injustice. Not a single Vietnamese citizen has been jailed for showing his courage in front of the authoritarian government,” added Nhu Quynh.


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  • Pham Doan Trang in RFA Tiếng Việt:  Ngoại trưởng Hoa Kỳ vinh danh nhà báo Phạm Đoan Trang, lên án Việt Nam bỏ tù bất công

    Pham Doan Trang in RFA Tiếng Việt: Ngoại trưởng Hoa Kỳ vinh danh nhà báo Phạm Đoan Trang, lên án Việt Nam bỏ tù bất công

    US Secretary of State honors journalist Pham Doan Trang, condemns Vietnam’s unfair imprisonment

    Title: Ngoại trưởng Hoa Kỳ vinh danh nhà báo Phạm Đoan Trang, lên án Việt Nam bỏ tù bất công
    Publish Date: March 14, 2022
    Publisher: RFA Tiếng Việt


    Full Article in English:

    Note:  Original texts in Vietnamese

    The US State Department condemns the unfair imprisonment of dissident journalist Pham Doan Trang and calls on the Vietnamese Government to immediately release her.

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken made such remarks during the 16th International Women of Courage Award ceremony, 2022, taking place on the morning of March 14, at the US Department of State, with the participation of Mr. First Lady Jill Biden.

    Journalist and human rights activist Pham Doan Trang was sentenced to nine years in prison in December 2021 by the Hanoi first instance court for “conducting propaganda against the state”.

    The US State Department’s annual Women of Courage Award honors brave women around the world. This year, 12 women worldwide were honored by the US Department of State, including Ms. Pham Doan Trang. They are honored for their exceptional courage, strength and leadership in advocating for peace, justice, human rights, equity and gender equality, and the empowerment of women and girls…

    Activist Pham Doan Trang was praised by the head of the US State Department Antony Blinken:

    “In December, Ms. Pham Doan Trang was sentenced to nine years in prison in Vietnam for writing about democracy and human rights. She wrote about the crackdown on protesters and secretly recorded police questioning her.

    When the media in Vietnam stopped publishing her articles, Doan Trang found her own path. Despite facing constant threats, she continues to educate others about their rights.

    We condemn unjust imprisonment. We call for her immediate release.”

    In a video shown during the award ceremony, the US Ambassador to Vietnam, Marc Knapper, introduced in more detail the work of journalist Pham Doan Trang in promoting freedom of expression in Vietnam. :

    “I am pleased to introduce journalist, author, and recipient of the 2022 International Women of Courage Award, Ms. Pham Doan Trang, who has fought for the right to expression in Vietnam.

    Through articles and interviews, she has used legal arguments to advocate for human rights, the rule of law and to bring all voices into the political space.

    As an author, Doan Trang has made political complexities accessible to citizens with the aim of expanding political representation. She talked about issues that Vietnamese media are not allowed to talk about.”

    Dr. Nguyen Ba Tung, President of the Vietnam Human Rights Network shared that he was touched to hear that another Vietnamese woman had been awarded this award. He said it was the international recognition in general and the US Government in particular for the work of human rights defenders in Vietnam, despite the risks and threats that await:

    “Firstly, we are very happy and feel that Pham Doan Trang is very deserving to receive this noble award. Today, Pham Doan Trang received this award, but until now, Pham Doan Trang has received many awards, even the Human Rights Network award, for Pham Doan Trang’s contributions in the field of fighting for the right to work. people in Vietnam and especially her courage. I am very touched.

    This award is given to Pham Doan Trang, not just Pham Doan Trang, but to all the fighters in the country. Pham Doan Trang is a flower in that garden, not only Doan Trang, then this is the international and US government’s recognition that the fight for human rights in the country is just and right. religion.”

    Mr. Will Nguyen, a Vietnamese democracy campaigner, is also an associate of journalist Pham Doan Trang in the publication of the Dong Tam Report (a publication about the police attack on Dong Tam village, Hanoi earlier in the year). 2020), told RFA what this award means for Doan Trang and the movement for democracy in general:

    I think this award is a very important symbolic act for Vietnamese human rights activists, and of course I am always excited to know that the United States notices and recognizes such figures. leader in the Vietnamese democracy movement.

    On the other hand, Trang still has no freedom. I think the US can put stronger pressure on the Vietnamese government to abide by its international commitments and respect the basic constitutional rights of citizens like Trang. In the end, we all want a better Vietnam, including Trang and me.

    US Ambassador Marc Knapper, in a video broadcast at the awards ceremony, pledged to work to help and encourage a strong, prosperous Vietnam. He believes that in order to develop, Vietnam needs to embrace openness, transparency, inclusion and respect for the rights of all citizens, which Ms. Doan Trang has constantly done:

    “We applaud you for your work as human rights activists. Your bravery continues to inspire people in Vietnam and around the world.”

    Speaking at the award ceremony, First Lady Jill Biden emphasized that this award is a declaration that the United States always stands with those who courageously act for justice, truth:

    “For the past 16 years, this award has empowered women around the world. It illuminates the struggles and strengths of women across the globe.

    It is a declaration that the United States is on the side of these heroes. They are not alone. Today we honor these 12 women, and more than that, we create a platform where they can speak the truth in their own words.

    We see the power they hold to confront the most formidable challenges of our time and push us to do more…”

    Before Ms. Pham Doan Trang, there are two other Vietnamese women who have also been awarded the International Women of Courage Award by the United States: Ms. Ta Phong Tan in 2013 and Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh who was honored in 2017.


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  • Pham Doan Trang in The Diplomat: Why the West Has Gone Soft on Human Rights in Vietnam

    The Diplomat surmises that countries aligned with the United States’ rivalry with China usually get off scot-free when it comes to their authoritarianism and human rights abuses.


    Excerpt:

    On Tuesday, the Vietnamese activist Pham Doan Trang was jailed by a Hanoi court to nine years in prison. It was “a searing indictment of everything that is wrong with authoritarian Vietnam today,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of Human Rights Watch.

    Trang, a prominent independent journalist, book publisher, and human rights defender, has been harassed by the communist authorities for years, briefly going into hiding in 2018. She was arrested by the police in October last year and charged with disseminating anti-state propaganda. State prosecutors had asked for Trang to be jailed for between seven and eight years, but the Hanoi People’s Court increased the sentence to nine years.

    Trang has been called the “most famous activist” in Vietnam. Her easy-to-read textbooks on political history, as well as her music and wider activism, especially on environmental issues, made her a key voice on social media. In 2019, Reporters Without Borders awarded her its Press Freedom Prize. She was also something of a key node between the disparate progressive camps, the link between pro-democracy urbanites, environmental campaigners, and rural land-rights activists.

    “This prison sentence is a giant middle finger from Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security to those in the United States and elsewhere who criticize Vietnam’s human rights record,” Bill Hayton, a former correspondent in Vietnam and now of Chatham House, told me. “The Vietnamese leadership knows that it can get away with jailing activists like Trang because Vietnam has become an important component of outside powers’ strategies in East and Southeast Asia.”

    Trang was detained in October last year on the same day officials from the United States and Vietnam met to discuss human rights and freedom of expression. That hasn’t been lost on many commentators, who accuse Western governments of doing next-to-nothing to confront Vietnam (now a close friend of the West because of its stance against Beijing’s aggression in the South China Sea, as well as its  economic importance and key position in global supply chains) about its dire human rights record.


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