Religious Freedom Lost on Vietnam |
FrontPageMagazine.com | Tuesday, August 05, 2008
In direct contravention
of President Bush’s policy of promoting religious freedom abroad, the State
Department has established a foreign policy toward Vietnam promoting that
communist government’s control of churches. This is the same
government that murdered over a million of their own people after the communist
takeover of South Vietnam in 1975.
In the 1980s, the phrase “Coke
Bottle Diplomacy” was coined to describe US policy put forth by our best and
brightest of that time, whereby trade and American investment would bring
communist China into the civilized world and change that country’s long history
of human rights abuses and repression of religion and democracy. The
policy never worked and has only resulted in a huge trade deficit, US dollars
funding a huge military buildup, poisoned products, and untold number – tens of
thousands – of Tibetans and Chinese killed and imprisoned in slave labor
camps.
The Bush administration
has resuscitated this failed policy of Coke Bottle Diplomacy and is
applying it to Vietnam, and in 2007, the US accumulated trade deficit was $10.6
billion.
Recently, dozens of
democracy activists, journalists, cyber-dissidents and Christian and other
religious leaders have been arrested and imprisoned by the Vietnamese
communists. Congressional leaders and human-rights groups have charged Hanoi
with "unbridled human-rights abuses," the "worst wave of
oppression in 20 years." Some
in Congress have accused the Administration of worshiping at the “Alter of
Trade” while turning a blind eye toward religious persecution and human rights
abuses in Vietnam.
Despite Vietnam’s
increased human rights abuses, on June 24th, President Bush, for the third time, met with
communist Vietnamese officials in the Oval Office, this time with Prime
Minister Nguyen Tan Dung. The meeting focused on improving trade,
developing even closer economic ties and increasing US investment in Vietnam in
order to bail out Vietnam’s failing economy. In passing, President Bush
told the prime minister that he “thought the strides the government is making
towards religious freedom is noteworthy.”
Noteworthy indeed. President Bush’s Pollyanna view of religious freedom in Vietnam is
based in part on erroneous reporting fed to him by the Department of
State. In 2006, Vietnam was removed from the
State Department’s designation as a Country of Particular Concern for severe
violations of religious freedom.
The US Commission on International Religious Freedom, joined by Human Rights
Organizations, has urged the Department of State to put Vietnam back on
its CPC religious freedom blacklist.
One of the
justifications that the Department of State gave for removing Vietnam from its
blacklist is that regime’s purported liberalization of restrictions on house
churches. However, evidence disputes this claim. The fact is the
Vietnamese communist regime has imposed even tighter restrictions. Although
Christian families are now allowed to pray in their home, they are not allowed
to pray in groups – including extended families, in public or in churches
unless they are government sanctioned and controlled.
In the Central Highlands
and other contentious areas, US officials are taken to Potempkin villages and
model government churches and fed disinformation by government agents posing as religious leaders. US
officials often take their word as the gospel. One such agent and
informant for the State Department’s Ambassador at Large for International
Religious Freedom John Hanford is Siu
Kim, a Montagnard with a church in Plieku, who works for Vietnam’s
communist government. According to that government’s statistics, the
Montagnards are among Vietnam’s poorest inhabitants; yet, Siu Kim has been on
four tours to the US, paid for by the communist government to propagandize the
Montagnards here.
Upon his appointment, US Ambassador
to Vietnam Michael Michalak stated that he was going to continue the policy of
Ambassador Hanford of promoting the accelerated registration of churches in
Vietnam. However, Ambassador Michalak neglected to explain the
cost to religious freedom that this registration entails. To
register, churches must submit to the Central Bureau of Religious Affairs
(CBA) a list of names and addresses of members, and only those approved by the
CBA can attend services. All church meetings and sermons must be approved
by the CBA, and sermons must be given in Vietnamese – even in ethnic minority
churches. Pastors and priests can neither deviate from the approved
sermon nor proselytize, and CBA police monitor all services. Nor can
churches and pastors provide aid and comfort to local villagers. This is de
facto communist control of churches in Vietnam.
Assistant Secretary of
State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Christopher Hill reconfirmed this misguided
policy in his March 12th testimony before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, and as further justification stated, “Since the CPC
designation was removed, there has been further progress. The government
held over 3,000 training courses and 10,000 workshops for officials throughout
the country on how to implement the new law on religion.” What Hill
forgot to mention is Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung’s certification of “the
Vietnamese communist party’s 2007-8 ‘Religion Campaign Plan’ to train 21,811
communist religious workers in the political management of religion, with a
special focus on ethnic minorities.” (Vietnam News Agency, 6/13/07) These
religious “workers” are to ensure that churches and church members comply with
CBA’s registration requirements and the communist control of religion.
The Vietnamese communist government
repeatedly promises to ease up on religious repression while it simultaneously
steps up its crack down those advocating religious freedom. The communist
government does not discriminate in its repression of
religious faiths, nor who it persecutes – both men and women. Most
noted is Roman Catholic Priest Father Thaddeus Nguyen Van Ly who was depicted
on television gagged and restrained during sentencing to several years in prison
in a Vietnamese kangaroo court.
The recently deceased
Thich Huyen Quang, 87, patriarch of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam
(UBCV), one of Vietnam's most beloved and esteemed spiritual leaders, who along
with the UBCV deputy leader Thich Quang Do, was sent into internal exile in
1982 and detained in remote provinces for the past 26 years for refusing to
submit Vietnamese Buddhism to Communist Party control. Although over 80% of the Buddhists in Vietnam adhere to the UBCV, the government refuses to recognize the UBCV
and continues to try to force the members to join the communist state-controlled Vietnam Buddhist Sangha church. Monks,
nuns and members of the UBCV, the Hoa Hao Buddhist
Church, and the Khmer Krom Buddhist Church (Cambodian ethnic minorities) are
continually harassed, beaten and imprisoned.
On February 8, two hundred Khmer
Krom Buddhist monks peacefully demonstrated in Soc Treang, Vietnam, asking for
religious freedom. The Vietnamese government responded by brutally
beating, arresting, imprisoned nineteen Monks -- five were given prison
sentences of 2 to 4 years. Vietnam went so far
as to arrange the kidnapping of the Venerable Tim Sakhorn, a Cambodian citizen who was the Abbot of the Phnom
Den North Pagoda temple in Takeo province, Cambodia,
who was aiding the Khmer Krom refugees who fled the religious repression in
Vietnam and sought refuge in Cambodia. The Venerable Tim Sakhorn was
imprisoned in Vietnam and ironically charged with crossing the border without
proper documentation. Most recently, Vietnamese authorities claim that he
has been released from prison, but to no one’s surprise, he has since
“disappeared.”
While Vietnamese communist officials
can travel freely throughout the United States, US officials cannot travel freely
in Vietnam without advance notice to national and local officials and
accompaniment by Vietnamese government minders and security personnel. UN and
independent human rights organizations are not allowed an established presence
in Vietnam; therefore, incidences such as the “disappearance” of the Cambodian
Monk, nor the plethora of other human rights abuses, cannot be investigated
Routinely, house church
Christians are rounded up and beaten, given electric shocks, and jailed when
they refuse to join communist controlled churches. Reports continue to
emanate from Vietnam that Montagnard and Hmong men and women are still being
subjected to forced renunciation of their Christian faith, often resulting in
torture and sometimes death. As communist Vietnam's "President"
Nguyen Minh Triet's 2007 met with President Bush in the White House, Y-Het Vin, a young Hroi ethnic minority man from Phu Yen
province was being tortured by Vietnam’s religious
police (CBA). He died from injuries after several days of sustained
beatings in an attempt to force him to recant his Christian faith. This
is not an isolated case. Over 350 Montagnard
political prisoners, many of whom are Protestant pastors, languish in jail, and
the number that died or was tortured while imprisoned is unknown.
Because of continual
religious persecution and other human rights abuses, large numbers of
Montagnards continue to flee to Cambodia seeking asylum with the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Unfortunately, UNHCR’s policy toward
the Montagnards is heavily influenced by communist Vietnam, and the Montagnards
are continually forced back to communist Vietnam in violation of UNHCR’s
charter. Equally as sad for the persecuted Montagnards is that the US’
refugee policy is also heavily influenced by the communist Vietnamese.
During a trip Cambodia in February 2007, Ellen Sauerbrey, assistant secretary
of state for population, refugees and migration, told a press conference that
Montagnards should stay in Vietnam and not seek asylum in Cambodia for
Vietnamese officials assured her that Montagnards were not being abused.
Tell that to H’Suin
Rmah, a Montagnard, who recently fled to Cambodia seeking refuge with UNHCR
after being raped by Vietnamese officials. She lives in fear, not knowing
if UNHCR will send her back to Vietnam, even though by nature of the crime, she
is qualified for resettlement in the US. Several cases of Montagnard
women being repeatedly raped by provincial police/authorities as the price to
obtain their papers and passports have been reported.
Evidence shows that
Sauerbrey’s advice is very bad policy. In April of this year, police
arrested Y Ben Hdok in Dak Lak after he and other Montagnards in his district
tried to flee the persecution and seek refuge in Cambodia. Vietnamese
police refused to allow his family or a lawyer to visit him during three days
in detention. On May 1, police told Mr. Y Ben's wife to pick up his battered
body. His rib and limbs were broken and his teeth had been knocked out. Police
labeled the death a suicide." This is not an isolated incident, and
happens all too often.
President Bush has called religious freedom "the first freedom of the
human soul." However, he wouldn’t attend services
at St. Johns across the street from the White House if it were controlled by the
communist party, so why then would his foreign policy makers think the people
of Vietnam want to worship in churches controlled by a repressive regime whose
only religion is atheist communism?
The State Department’s mistaken policy
on religion in Vietnam sends the message that if the US supports communist
control of churches, we will also turn a blind eye to their continued crack
down and imprisonment of advocates for human rights, democracy, free speech and
internet access. This is Coke Bottle Diplomacy at its worst, and
is playing right into the hands of the same brutal communist regime that
murdered more than 1 million of its own people.
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