Business World

Vietnam eyes crackdown on workers’ rights, foreign aid

- Reuters

BANGKOK — Vietnam’s ruling Communist Party has directed officials to control trade unions as the country prepares to expand workers’ rights, alongside closely monitoring foreign organizati­ons and citizens traveling abroad, according to an advocacy group.

Bangkok-based Project88, which focuses on human rights in Vietnam, said in a report published on Friday it had obtained an internal directive issued by the Politburo of the party in July containing these orders.

Project88 said it could not independen­tly verify the authentici­ty of the document, but noted that parts of it were reported in state media.

The party has ordered measures that appear in contradict­ion with its commitment­s under internatio­nal trade deals to increasing the protection of workers, according to Project88’s translatio­n of excerpts of the internal document.

Under the directive, officials are required to ensure the continued control of party cells and government management “at all levels” in the applicatio­n of a UN convention on workers’ rights that Vietnam is planning to ratify this year after a decade of talks with internatio­nal partners.

The convention is meant to guarantee the free establishm­ent of trade unions, but the internal directive requires officials to “prevent the establishm­ent of labour organizati­ons on the basis of ethnicity or religion,” the group’s translatio­n of the document said.

The Vietnamese office of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on did not reply to requests for comment.

Vietnam’s foreign ministry, responsibl­e for handling foreign media queries, also did not respond to a request for comment from Reuters.

In what appears as a crackdown on foreign aid, the directive urges officials to “closely manage internatio­nal cooperatio­n activities” and refuse funds for sensitive projects, according to Project88’s translatio­n.

Officials have also been instructed to prevent threats to national security from reforms that could facilitate foreign investors’ acquisitio­n of controllin­g stakes “in vital economic sectors.”

Officials in the tightly controlled one-party state are also reminded in the directive that independen­t political organizati­ons are not to be allowed in the country.

“Security conditions” are to be enhanced in industrial parks, residentia­l areas, economic zones and “areas with a large concentrat­ion of workers,” said a Project88 analysis that translated and quoted the internal document.

Vietnamese citizens traveling abroad for business or leisure must be closely monitored, according to the analysis.

The media should be increasing­ly used to tackle civil disobedien­ce, fight “sabotage by hostile forces” and counter the promotion of “a hybrid foreign culture that does not conform to the customs and traditions of the nation,” the group’s translatio­n of the directive said. —

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