The Mercury News

New cyber laws in Vietnam draw protests

- By Nguyen Dieu Tu Uyen and John Boudreau

Vietnam’s National Assembly has passed a cybersecur­ity law requiring companies like Alphabet’s Google and Facebook to store all data of Vietnam-based users in the country and open local offices.

The measure has drawn rare dissent from some lawmakers and government leaders as well as local tech groups, who sent a petition to the legislatur­e that warned it would hurt the economy. Demonstrat­ors nationwide protested the bill Sunday, saying it would limit free speech.

“The cyber security law is a big backward step for Vietnam,” Le Dang Doanh, a Hanoi-based economist and former government adviser said of the bill, which was passed by 87 percent of lawmakers on Tuesday. “It will restrict people’s freedom of speech and it will deter foreign investors as it will seriously hurt the business environmen­t in Vietnam.”

Taking effect Jan. 1, the law will give the authoritie­s wide discretion to determine when expression must be censored as “illegal” because some provisions will make it easier for the government to identify and prosecute people for online activities, he said.

Vietnam’s benchmark VN Index dropped for the first time in nine trading days, falling 1.8 percent at the close in Ho Chi Minh City.

The U.S. Embassy in Hanoi last week issued a statement that said

the law “may present serious obstacles to Vietnam’s cyber security and digital innovation future, and may not be consistent with Vietnam’s internatio­nal trade commitment­s. The United States and Canada urge Vietnam to delay the vote on the draft law to ensure it aligns with internatio­nal standards.”

“Vietnam has done a lot to become more opened to businesses and trying to draw more foreign investment, and now with this cyber law, it will seriously hurt that effort,” Doanh said.

Google and Facebook did

not respond to requests for comment on the measure.

The law’s “provisions will result in severe limitation­s on Vietnam’s digital economy,” Jeff Paine, managing director of the Asia Internet Coalition, whose members include Facebook and Google, said in a statement.

Unlike China, Vietnam doesn’t block websites such as Facebook, Google and Twitter. Police, however, have stepped up crackdowns on bloggers and Facebook critics since 2016 with jail sentences. The government has deployed 10,000 members of a military cyber warfare unit to combat what it sees as a growing threat of “wrongful views” proliferat­ing on the Internet. The

government has also pressured Vietnamese companies to suspend advertisin­g on YouTube and other sites showing anti-government videos.

Facebook last year removed 159 accounts at Vietnam’s behest, while YouTube took down 4,500 videos, or 90 percent of what the government requested, according to VietnamNet news. Vietnam’s youthful population -- almost 60 percent are under 35 -- has made the country a leader globally in terms of penetratio­n of social networks, according to EMarketer Inc.

 ?? LINH LUONG THAI — BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Passengers waiting to board their flights at Tan Son Nhat Internatio­nal Airport in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, use smartphone­s.
LINH LUONG THAI — BLOOMBERG NEWS Passengers waiting to board their flights at Tan Son Nhat Internatio­nal Airport in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, use smartphone­s.

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