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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 25, 2008
Contact: Judith Ingram,
Communications
Director,
(202) 523-3240, ext. 127
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WASHINGTON
- The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom issued its Vietnam Policy Focus today. The report, which includes findings from the
Commission's 2007 trip to Vietnam,
highlights government-sponsored harassment, detention, and imprisonment faced
by individuals and leaders of diverse religious
communities. In light of these severe
and widespread violations of religious freedom, the Commission calls on the
U.S. State Department to re-designate Vietnam a "country of particular concern"
(CPC), under the terms of the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act. The CPC designation is reserved, under law,
for nations that engage in severe violations of religious freedom.
"The U.S. government still needs to press Vietnam's leaders
to make immediate improvements to end religious freedom abuses, ease restrictions,
and release prisoners," said Commission Chair Felice D. Gaer.
The Commission has found that religious freedom conditions
in Vietnam continue to be mixed, with improvements for some religious
communities but not for others; progress in some provinces but not in others;
reforms of laws at the national level that are not fully implemented or are
ignored at the local level; and still too many abuses of and restrictions on
religious freedom affecting most of Vietnam's diverse religious
communities. Some important changes were
implemented and prisoners were released after the U.S. government designated Vietnam
a CPC. However, in view of the uneven
pace of reforms and the continued detention of religious prisoners of concern,
The Commission again recommends that Vietnam be designated a CPC.
The Commission has identified numerous prisoners of concern
and restrictive, abusive practices of the Vietnamese government. During its 2007 trip to Vietnam, the Commission met with religious
freedom activists Nguyen Van Dai and Li Thi Cong Nhan at Cau Dien Prison in Hanoi. In March 2007, Dai and Nhan were among the first
arrested and sentenced to long-term detention as part of a larger crackdown on
democracy, free speech, and human rights advocates. Their cases are among those highlighted in
the Vietnam Policy Focus.
Activities of ethnic minority religious groups, such as the
Montagnard and Hmong Protestants, are often vigorously restricted by the
Vietnamese government. Long-term
administrative detainees from the Catholic Church and the United Buddhist
Church of Vietnam, including Thich Quang Do and Fr. Phan Van Loi, and numerous
religious "prisoners of concern" from the Hoa Hao, Cao Dai, and Khmer Buddhist
communities remain in custody in retaliation for their advocacy of religious
freedom. The Commission has consistently
called for the release of all prisoners of conscience in Vietnam.
"Improved conditions for some only emphasize the
inexcusability of ongoing abuses endured by others," notes Gaer. "The State Department should not diminish its
categorization of Vietnam as a severe violator until the Vietnamese government
demonstrates a countrywide, non-discriminatory commitment to religious freedom
and human rights for all."
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