By Michael Benge -
For many
It seemed that Vietnam's wave of human rights violations and religious persecution might have peaked with the arrest and detention of over 1,500 activists for democracy, human rights, and religious freedom prior to the nation's 11th Congress of the Communist Party, but the brutal communist regime may have outdone itself with last month's reported slaughter of over 75 ethnic Hmong Christians. Hundreds more were wounded and/or arrested and taken to undisclosed locations.
An estimated 9,000 Hmong, mainly
Catholics and Protestant Christians, gathered in the Muong
Nhe district in
The religious services honoring the pope evolved into
peaceful protests by Hmong seeking religious freedom
and the cessation of human rights abuses, institutional corruption, social
injustice, and land-grabbing. Dien Bien is one of
As was the case during similar protests by Montagnard Christians in 2001 in the Central Highlands, and in true fascist form, communist officials overreacted by deploying thousands of troops, special police, and MI-24 "Hind" helicopter gunships. All outside communication was shut down, the electricity was cut off, the province was cordoned off to prevent anyone from entering or leaving, and all news media and foreigners were banned from the area. Some Hmong demonstrators were able to escape into the nearby mountains, where they were hunted by heliborne "Dac Cong" Special Forces units. Some of the fleeing Hmong are reported to have been summarily executed when caught. At least two Hmong mountain villages and several enclaves suspected of harboring fleeing protesters were attacked by the gunships armed with rockets, cannons, and Gatling guns. It is not known how many were killed or wounded.
Ethnic cleansing "is a purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and terror-inspiring means the civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas" (Commission of Experts Established Pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolution 780). With the Montagnards in 2001, and currently with the Hmong, the Vietnamese communist regime is guilty as sin of ethnic cleansing.
Article 70 of the 1992 Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam provides that "the citizen shall enjoy freedom of belief and religion; he can follow any religion or follow none. All religions are equal before the law. The places of worship of all faiths and religions are protected by the law. No one can violate freedom of belief and of religion."
However, Article 70 contains this caveat: "nor can anyone misuse beliefs and religions to contravene the law, and State policies." This caveat is further defined in the Ordinance on Beliefs and Religions, not to mention the Constitution (Government Decree 22/2005) and Government Decree 26/1999 that is based on a directive of the Communist Party (No.37 CT/TW).
The laws cited above are full of ambiguities and contradictions and provide no criteria as to what is considered "misuse," but they fundamentally state that all religions, religious denominations, churches, clergy, and religious activities must be approved by the central government in order to be legal. Ethnic minority Christians are regularly harassed, beaten, and tortured in attempts by communist officials to force them to renounce their beliefs in God. The Vietnamese government is now proposing amendments to the already harsh existing laws that will further restrict freedom of worship and all church-related activities.
Anyone who participates in unauthorized religious
activities, including outdoor prayer services, protests, or demonstrations, is
guilty of "undermining
During the Hmong protests, the
Vietnamese communist propaganda machine had agitprop specialists, communist
church clerics, and secret police out in force mingling with the protesters. Some propagandists declared that they were
"awaiting God to take them to the Promised Land," while others
claimed to advocate the establishment of an autonomous Hmong
kingdom. These disinformation themes gave
Vietnamese authorities an excuse to label the protestors as "cult
members," "irredentists," "extremists," and
"anti-revolutionary activists," thereby justifying the use of armed
force against Hmong Christian believers.
These themes have been repeated over and over again by
Human rights groups have called for investigations into the
atrocities, and the U.S. Embassy in
The State Department will no doubt mention the persecuted Hmong Christians in its Annual Report on Human Rights. Yet State has continually refused to do anything
that might be deemed punitive, such as designating
In other words, the band plays on.
Michael Benge spent eleven years in
Courtesy:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/06/what_religious_freedom_means_in_vietnam.html