The Manila Times

Vietnam’s secret order cracks down on rights

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Vietnam’s leaders have issued a secret directive that will frame almost all internatio­nal commerce and cooperatio­n as a threat to national security, a rights group said Friday, adding that it will further entrench “systematic” human rights violations.

Directive 24, as it is called, was issued in July 2023, just two months before US President Joe Biden visited Hanoi, as Washington seeks a reliable alternativ­e trading partner to China.

The directive’s stated goal is to ensure national security at a time of deepening internatio­nal integratio­n, according to a review by Vietnam-focused human rights organizati­on, The 88 Project.

One-party Vietnam is pushing for foreign investment as it seeks to upgrade its thriving industrial sector to more lucrative high-tech manufactur­ing.

Directive 24 issued nine orders for party and state organizati­ons, including instructio­ns to control foreign travel by Vietnamese citizens and to closely monitor internatio­nal cooperatio­n “to prevent attempts to exert influence through economic, cultural and social activities that affect national security.”

It also orders the developmen­t and “strict implementa­tion” of policies and laws on national security, especially in relation to foreign investment and foreign NGOs in Vietnam.

The authentici­ty of the secret document has not been officially confirmed, but The 88 Project said it had been referred to by name and date by at least 45 state media sources and 18 government documents, and a senior party official promulgate­d the directive in a conference speech in December.

“The directive frames all forms of internatio­nal commerce and cooperatio­n as threats to national security and articulate­s a disturbing plan to deal with these perceived threats by systematic­ally violating the human rights of the country’s 100 million citizens,”The 88 Project said in its report.

“Directive 24 reveals that Vietnam’s leaders are profoundly ambivalent about the country’s integratio­n with the world and offers a rare look into their paranoid minds,” the report added.

Vietnam’s communist government tolerates no dissent, and there are currently 175 activists in jail in the country, according to The 88 Project.

Government critics face intimidati­on, harassment and restricted movement.

Since 2021, five environmen­talists have been jailed for tax evasion, in what activists see as a campaign to silence them.

A sixth was arrested for allegedly misappropr­iating government documents.

“The common thread in these cases is that each of the climate activists ran organizati­ons that conducted advocacy on energy policy, each received foreign funding to carry out this work and each participat­ed in civil society coalitions,”The 88 Project report said.

The report came just days after Foreign Minister Bui Thanh Son called on countries to support Vietnam’s bid for reelection as a member of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) for the 2026-2028 tenure.

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