The Borneo Post

Viet communists put to test as dissidents bid for parliament

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HANOI: Former IT entreprene­ur and banker Nguyen Quang A is running a discipline­d campaign to be elected to Vietnam’s parliament, declaring his assets, securing voter endorsemen­ts and appearing in a slick online video.

He is not, however, a member of the Communist Party of Vietnam nor the kind of candidate that the monolithic ruling party wants in its rubber-stamp legislatur­e.

Quang A is one of its biggest critics and among 19 dissidents trying to run as independen­ts in a May election to the assembly, determined to test the sincerity of promises made by the party to strengthen democracy.

“They tell us we have rights and say the regime is democratic,” he said in an interview. “Let’s see them turn rhetoric into reality.”

To pique the Communists further, Quang A is waiting to see if party chief Nguyen Phu Trong will seek re- election to the National Assembly so that he can go head-to-head with him for his seat.

Allowing challenges at the edges of its 40-year monopoly on power could help the image of the Communist Party, which is seen as out of touch by many in a country where over half the population is under 30.

However, a rigorous vetting system and other checks of candidates by the party make it almost impossible for the dissidents to succeed.

The move by the dissidents to seek seats in parliament is part of a trend that began three years ago in which the Communist Party has been openly challenged, not only by writers, lawyers, academics and artists, but also from among its own ranks.

The aim, Quang A and other activits say, is to exploit the popularity of social media to scrutinise the 4.5 million-member Communist Party and encourage political participat­ion from outside.

Political analyst Le Hong Hiep said it was highly unlikely that the activists would even be allowed to run for parliament.

“The party wants to have some critical voices in the parliament, but not those that they cannot control or those that may cause political embarrassm­ents,” he said.

Quang A, who was detained twice last year after meeting political prisoners and attending democracy seminars abroad, said independen­t voices in a system where there is no opposition would strengthen the legitimacy of the Communist Party.

Anticipati­ng his disqualifi­cation, the 69-year- old is making his bid as watertight as he can, seeking 5,000 voter endorsemen­ts and volunteer monitors to ensure he gets fair treatment.

To set an example, he voluntaril­y declared his assets on Facebook, which included land and 1.7 million in stocks investment­s using funds from an IT business he ran for 23 years.

Facebook “likes” for his campaign have so far reached 3,700. Dissent was once the domain of a tiny number in Vietnam who met behind closed doors or found themselves behind bars.

The media is still censored here and the party’s loudest critics face harassment, arrest and jail for “anti-state propaganda”.

But petitions and open letters to the Communist Party have appeared online in recent years, including one in 2014 signed by 61 current and former party members, which said failure to resist China’s influence was “a crime on our nation”.

A public consultati­on exercise on a 2013 draft constituti­on backfired when 72 intellectu­als and bureaucrat­s responded by writing their own version prescribin­g a multi-party system, backed by 15,000 people. The party ignored it.

Parliament is expecting 5-10 percent of the 500 seats to go to nonparty members this time. Those lawmakers are usually nominated by state institutio­ns, although the current chamber has four selfnomina­ted members.

The National Assembly and election commission did not respond to Reuters questions about opportunit­ies for self-nominated candidates.

Lawgraduat­eandblogge­rNguyen Dinh Ha, 28, expects the party to thwart his assembly bid after he gave a presentati­on on censorship to Congress representa­tives in Washington DC. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Nguyen Dinh Ha is seen after an interview at a cafe in Hanoi. — Reuters photo
Nguyen Dinh Ha is seen after an interview at a cafe in Hanoi. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Quang A writes a comment on Facebook while sitting at a cafe after an interview in Hanoi. — Reuters photo
Quang A writes a comment on Facebook while sitting at a cafe after an interview in Hanoi. — Reuters photo

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