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Viewing cable 04HANOI3356, 2004 INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
04HANOI3356 2004-12-20 10:12 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Hanoi
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 32 HANOI 003356 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
STATE FOR INL/AAE, EAP/BCLTV, L/LEI 
JUSTICE FOR OIA, AFMLS, NDDS 
TREASURY FOR FINCEN 
 
E.O. 12958:  N/A 
TAGS: SNAR PREL PGOV ASEC EFIN KCRM SOCI VM CNARC HIV AIDS
SUBJECT:  2004 INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY 
REPORT (INCSR) - VIETNAM 
 
REFS: A. HANOI 663; B. HANOI 1584; C. HANOI 1587; D. HANOI 
2284 
 
I.  SUMMARY 
 
1.  (SBU) The Government of Vietnam (GVN) continued to make 
progress in its counternarcotics efforts during 2004. 
Specific actions included:  sustained efforts of 
counternarcotics law enforcement authorities to pursue drug 
traffickers; increased attention to interagency 
coordination; continued cooperation with the United Nations 
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC); increased attention to 
both drug treatment and harm reduction and new programs to 
support recovered drug addicts and reduce the relapse rate; 
an increased tempo of public awareness activities; and 
additional bilateral cooperation on HIV/AIDS, an issue 
closely related to intravenous drug use in Vietnam. 
Additionally, in March, the counternarcotics Letter of 
Agreement (LOA) between the GVN and the USG entered into 
force, and the two sides initiated and completed the first 
of the planned LOA projects.   However, real operational 
cooperation with DEA's Hanoi Country Office (HCO) was 
minimal.  Bilateral interaction is increasing as more LOA 
projects come online, but the GVN's operational cooperation 
with U.S. law enforcement, the DEA Hanoi Country Office 
(HCO) in particular, remains minimal.  Drug use in Vietnam, 
including both heroin and amphetamine type stimulants (ATS) 
continues to be a problem.  Money-laundering issues will be 
addressed septel. 
 
2.  (U) Vietnam is a party to the 1988 UN Drug Convention, 
the 1961 UN Single Convention as amended by the 1972 
Protocol and the 1971 UN Convention on Psychotropic 
Substances.  End Summary. 
 
II.  STATUS OF COUNTRY 
 
3. (SBU) By USG definition, Vietnam meets the legislative 
criteria as a "major drug-producing" country (at least 1,000 
hectares of poppy cultivation).  However, GVN, UNODC and law 
enforcement officials do not consider cultivation a major 
problem.  The official USG estimate that 2,300 hectares of 
poppy are cultivated in the northern and western provinces 
of Lai Chau, Son La and Nghe An is based on a year 2000 USG 
imagery-based survey.  The USG has not updated the 2000 
survey and we cannot independently verify whether the year 
2000 figure is still accurate.  The GVN claims a much lower 
figure (32.5 hectares).  Due to the small amount of poppy 
cultivation, since year 2000 official UNODC statistical 
tables for illicit cultivation ceased to list Vietnam 
separately; rather, the table considers Vietnam within the 
category of "other Asian countries."  Cultivation in Vietnam 
probably accounts for about one percent of cultivation in 
Southeast Asia, according to a law enforcement estimate; DEA 
has no evidence of any Vietnamese-produced narcotics 
reaching the United States.  There appear to be small 
amounts of cannabis grown in remote regions of southern 
Vietnam.  Anecdotal evidence also suggests that there may be 
larger commercial crops of hemp in remote regions in the 
south. 
 
4.  (SBU) Vietnam has not been considered a source or 
transit country for precursors.  According to DEA, Vietnam 
is exporting relatively large quantities of sassafras oil, a 
substance which has legitimate uses (for insecticides, soap 
and perfume) but which can also be used as a precursor for 
the hallucinogen methylenedioxy-methamphetamine (MDMA).  DEA 
has in the past received reports that Vietnam-sourced 
sassafras oil has been connected to European MDMA 
production.  Overall, the GVN is concerned in general about 
precursors and has begun to take action.  On May 29, 2003, 
the GVN issued Decree 58, which deals with the control of, 
import, export and transit of drug substances, precursors, 
addictive drugs, and psychotropic substances.  According to 
the decree, only businesses authorized by the Ministries of 
Health (MOH), Industry and Public Security (MPS) can 
import/export drug substances, precursors, addictive drugs 
and psychotropic substances for specific legal purposes. 
The GVN has tasked MPS to coordinate with other concerned 
ministries and agencies to manage and control the 
import/export of these narcotic substances.  In an effort to 
support Vietnam's efforts to enhance its precursor control 
capacity, the GVN and UNODC signed on December 1, 2003, a 
project document titled "Interdiction and Seizure Capacity 
Building with Special Emphasis on ATS and Precursors." 
Implementation of that project began in 2004 and is 
continuing successfully. 
 
5.  (SBU) Heroin from the Golden Triangle and China transits 
Vietnam en route to Taiwan, Hong Kong and, increasingly, 
Australia.  While UNODC views China more as a source of 
heroin and, increasingly, of tranquilizers used to cut 
heroin for domestic use in Vietnam, China is probably also a 
destination for some Golden Triangle heroin transiting 
Vietnam.  DEA has not yet tied any drug seizures in the 
United States directly to Vietnam, but reports that some may 
be entering the United States via Canada.  Concerning 
Australia, there were several courier seizures of heroin 
destined for Australia, demonstrating that Australia may be 
the preferred destination for heroin transiting Vietnam. 
(Note: See Drug Flow/Transit section below for more details. 
End note.) 
 
6.  (SBU) During 2004, large amounts of cannabis, heroin and 
synthetic drugs entered Vietnam from Cambodia.  Regarding 
ATS, GVN authorities are particularly concerned about rising 
use among urban youth and, during 2004, increased the tempo 
of enforcement and awareness programs that they hope will 
avoid a youth epidemic situation similar to what has 
occurred in Thailand.  According to the Standing Office of 
Drug Control (SODC), ATS and ecstasy (MDMA) are still 
popular among the youth addict population, in addition to 
the ever-rising demand for heroin.  (Note:  According to 
DEA, these drugs may be methamphetamines rather than MDMA. 
End Note.) 
 
III.  COUNTRY ACTIONS AGAINST DRUGS IN 2004 
 
Policy initiatives 
------------------ 
 
7.  (U) The structure of the GVN's counternarcotics efforts 
is built around the National Committee on AIDS, Drugs and 
Prostitution Control (NCADP).  Deputy Prime Minister Pham 
Gia Khiem chairs NCADP, which includes a broad spectrum of 
GVN ministries and mass organizations.  Key officials 
include four deputy chairpersons:  Minister of Public 
Security Le Hong Anh; Minister of Labor, War Invalids and 
Social Affairs (MOLISA) Nguyen Thi Hang; Minister of Health 
Tran Thi Trung Chien; and Ha Thi Lien, Standing Member of 
the Presidium of the Fatherland Front.  In addition, MPS has 
a specialized unit to combat and suppress drug crimes. 
During the year, MPS established a medico-biology testing 
center in the Institute for Forensics Sciences in Hanoi. 
 
8.  (SBU) According to UNODC, during 2004 the GVN continued 
to focus on the drug issue, which included an increase in 
attention from the state-controlled media.  SODC reported 
that in accordance with GVN strategic plans, GVN officials, 
without foreign donor support, initiated 17 training courses 
for 400 counternarcotics-related personnel.    During the 
year, the GVN organized study missions overseas and sent 26 
drug delegations to international seminars and conferences. 
In addition, Vietnam hosted 32 international delegations. 
 
9.  (U) General Le The Tiem, Vice Minister of Public 
Security, said at a review conference in March that, in 
addition to national programs and projects, provinces and 
cities have implemented their own programs.  Some examples 
are Tuyen Quang with its effective "three stages" treatment 
model, Nghe An with the goal of "demand reduction," Ho Chi 
Minh City with its "three reductions" program, Hanoi with 
its "Enter each lane and knock each door for drug addicts" 
program, Danang with its "five nos" program and Yen Bai, Son 
La, Lao Cai and Ha Giang with their "three nos" programs. 
 
10.  (U) Increasing efforts to support drug awareness and 
prevention, demand reduction, and treatment of drug users 
and addicts are reflected in the following: 
 
-- The GVN views drug awareness and prevention as a 
significant objective in its fight against drugs as well as 
an integral part of its effort to comply fully with the 1988 
UN Drug Convention.  The GVN has continued to rely heavily 
on anti-drug propaganda, culminating in the annual drug 
awareness week in June.  This year, youth and mass 
organizations engaged in various activities to spread the 
anti-drug message.  These included art contests and 
performances, speeches, street parades, displays of 
posters/slogans and the signing of "drug free" commitments 
and meetings/gatherings.  Recently, state-controlled 
television (VTV) and radio (the Voice of Vietnam) have begun 
regular programs called "SOS Drugs" and have been airing a 
series of anti-heroin spots. 
 
-- Authorities also strengthened implementation of the 
community effort called "Search in each lane and knock on 
each door drug addicts" by volunteers in Hanoi.  In a 
December 2003 event, Vietnam Radio Corporation and SODC 
organized a ceremony to award prizes to the winners of the 
"anti-drug soap opera writing competition" for transmission 
on the Voice of Vietnam's radio program.  During the year, 
SODC has also helped with another contest titled "The Entire 
Nation Unites to Prevent and Combat Drug Crimes." In June 
2001, Prime Minister Khai declared June 26 to be Drug 
Awareness Day, and June to be Anti-drug Month. 
 
-- On the occasion of 2004 Drug Awareness Day, various 
activities took place across the country: 
In Hanoi, Deputy Prime Minister Pham Gia Khiem, along with 
the Minister of Health, the Vice Minister of Public 
Security, the Vice Minister of Education and Training and 
representatives from mass organizations, civil associations 
and the UNODC Country Office attended a large rally on June 
26.  Around 5,000 students from 29 universities and colleges 
in Hanoi, with the message "say no to drugs," attended the 
meeting.  Deputy Prime Minister Khiem stressed that the 
Government would "mobilize the entire political system and 
nation to prevent and combat the scourge of drugs." 
Meanwhile, in Thai Nguyen Province, about 1,000 government 
workers took part in a street parade.  Mr. Do Duc Ngo, Vice 
President of the General Labor Confederation, Major General 
Pham Van Duc, Deputy Director General of the General 
Department of Police and Mr. Nguyen Thanh Kinh, Vice 
Chairman of the Thai Nguyen Party Committee and Chairman of 
the Thai Nguyen Provincial People's Council, attended the 
event.  The leaders called on authorities at all levels to 
pay more attention to the drug fight among government 
workers.  On this occasion, the leaders sent the 
participants the message: "Do not discriminate against 
addicts, be with them and educate and help them to stabilize 
their lives, quit drugs and return to normal life." 
Simultaneously, in Ha Tay Province, more than 1,000 youth 
union members gathered at a large awareness meeting in Son 
Tay town.  During the day, all union members signed anti- 
drug commitments and distributed leaflets.  The province now 
has 86 anti-drug clubs, 400 anti-criminal mailboxes (for 
residents to report crimes such as drug use) and 20 "friends 
help friends" clubs.  In Danang, the city youth union held a 
festival with the message: "Danang youth together push back 
drug crimes and social evils."  According to Mr. Nguyen 
Thanh Quang, president of Danang youth union, 800 members 
attended the event.  Similar events are carried out in other 
provinces and cities each year during "Anti-drug Month." 
 
-- Working together, two famous photographers opened an 
exhibition of 500 photos featuring drug addiction and 
treatment. Separately, the Voice of Vietnam launched a 
competition for short stories about drug abuse.  To 
highlight the "humanity" of drug users, VTV transmitted an 
exclusive program of addicts' music and dance festivals, 
sports and games in several drug treatment centers.  To 
facilitate the nation's propaganda campaign, the Youth Union 
dispatched volunteers on a five-day mission to different 
drug treatment centers to disseminate anti-drug information 
and support recovering drug addicts.  Also, directors from 
education and training departments in Hanoi, neighboring 
provinces and five universities signed a resolution on drug 
abuse prevention in all educational institutions. 
Additionally, all of Danang University's youth union members 
and students signed non-drug use commitments. 
 
-- This year, according to Bui Xuan Hieu, Director of the 
International Cooperation and Project Management Division in 
the Standing Office for Drug Control (SODC) of the National 
Committee for HIV/AIDS, Drugs Control and Social Evils 
Prevention, SODC coordinated various counternarcotics 
activities throughout the country.  Hieu claimed that Anti- 
drug Month draws the attention of the public and community 
leaders and "brings about big law enforcement results." 
 
Ho Chi Minh City: 
 
According to the "People's Police" newspaper, on June 3 Ho 
Chi Minh City counternarcotics police arrested twenty 
members of a drug ring.  The police seized 20.3 kilograms of 
heroin, USD 57,770, 14 motorbikes, 16 mobile phones, one car 
and six houses.  The ring trafficked heroin from Nghe An 
Province to Ho Chi Minh City for distribution to "sales 
agents."  According to Colonel Le Thanh Liem, Ho Chi Minh 
City Police Department, this is a "big ring" that has 
trafficked heroin from border provinces to the city for 
consumption.  The bust had such an effect on supply that the 
retail price doubled, noted Colonel Liem. 
 
In another case, on June 16 Ho Chi Minh City Supreme 
People's Court handed down nine death sentences, one life 
sentence and other lengthy sentences to drug organization 
head Ngo Duc Minh and his accomplices.  The defendants were 
convicted of trafficking about 36 kilograms of heroin, 50 
kilograms of cannabis, 6,000 Ecstasy tablets and 15 
kilograms of synthetic drugs between 1993 and 2002. 
According to press reports, this was a transnational case 
connecting Vietnam, Cambodia, Japan and the Netherlands. 
 
Additionally, the Ho Chi Minh City People's Court tried an 
ATS case in early May.  Chung Quoc Minh was sentenced to 
death, and 20 other accomplices also stood trial.  According 
to police investigation records, between 1999 and 2001, 
Chung's organization trafficked 14,200 ATS tablets.  The 
Labor newspaper reported that this was Vietnam's largest 
ever ATS case. 
 
Tay Ninh: 
 
During a "first instance" trial (i.e., subject to appeal), 
Tay Ninh's People's Court handed down six death and three 
life sentences on June 18 in a transnational drug case, 
according to press reports.  The offenders were convicted of 
trafficking drugs across the border with Cambodia.  The 
initial seizure on May 28 was 3.3 kilograms of heroin. 
Between June 2001 and May 2004, the syndicate trafficked 
103.5 kilograms of heroin and 606 ecstasy tablets. 
According to press reports, this was the biggest drug case 
in the province.  Tay Ninh is considered one of Vietnam's 
drug "hotspots" due to its location on the border with 
Cambodia and the relative ease with which goods, including 
narcotics, are smuggled there. 
 
Quang Binh 
 
Police said that they arrested eight people for trafficking 
79.6 kilograms of heroin into the country from Laos.  The 
seizure was made on June 26 after the police stopped two 
trucks at Cha Lo international border gate in Quang Binh 
Province, said a local counternarcotics policeman.  Two 
drivers, Hoang Van Tinh and Nguyen Van Duyet,  and six 
passengers were arrested.  The drugs were hidden among 
smuggled automobile spare parts, fabric, toys and scrap 
metal.  Police also seized a large amount of cash in US 
dollars, Vietnamese dong, Lao kip and Thai baht, in addition 
to a loaded handgun.  This was the biggest seizure ever in 
Quang Binh, according to SODC. 
 
Nghe An 
 
Colonel Vo Trong Thanh, Deputy Director of Nghe An Police 
Department, revealed on June 12 that the provincial 
counternarcotics police arrested 11 drug traffickers, 
including four foreigners, and seized seven kilograms of 
heroin in a transnational network headquartered in Laos. 
According to Colonel Thanh, the offenders had trafficked 
approximately 88 kilograms before they were caught.  The 
"People's Police" Newspaper ranks this transnational drug 
case as the most important in Vietnam because of the 
cumulative volume of trafficked narcotics.  In the first six 
months of 2004, Nghe An provincial counternarcotics police 
detected 290 cases with 349 offenders and seized 23.892 
kilograms of heroin, 12.556 kilograms of opium and about 
5,000 ATS tablets. 
 
Son La 
 
According to Vietnam News Agency (VNA), on June 7 the 
provincial police cracked a major drug case in the 
Northwestern province of Son La.  This is the biggest haul 
in the province since early this year.  Police arrested two 
offenders and seized about 3.1 kilograms of heroin in Tan 
Phong commune, Phu Yen district.  The two traffickers are 
Tran Van Kien, 29, and Tran Quang Thang, 35, from Hanoi. 
Provincial police and the Ministry of Public Security are 
further investigating the case.  Earlier, provincial police 
seized two kilograms of heroin in two separate smaller 
cases.  In the first two months of 2004, Son La provincial 
police arrested 215 drug traffickers in 85 cases, seized 3.7 
kilograms of heroin, 6.6 kilograms of opium and 1,677 ATS 
tablets and confiscated other equipment.  According to SODC, 
Son La is another of Vietnam's hotspots.  Drugs come in 
through the border with Laos and travel down Highway 6 (AKA 
"the Heroin Highway") to Hanoi and other destinations for 
consumption. 
 
Haiphong 
 
Between July 12 and 20, the Haiphong People's Court tried 
the city's biggest ever drug case, according to the 
"People's Police" newspaper.  The newspaper reported that 20 
out of 23 suspects standing trial could be sentenced to 
death.  The first member of the gang was arrested on April 
30, 2003, in Le Chan district, Haiphong City.  Before their 
arrest, the suspects had trafficked about 30 kilograms of 
heroin, newspaper reports said. 
 
Phu Tho 
 
Recently, Phu Tho police, in coordination with their 
counterparts in Son La province, uncovered a huge drug case. 
According to press reports, Phu Tho police arrested Kim Van 
Phuong in November 2003 on his way from Son La to Hanoi and 
seized 1.3 kilograms of heroin and 1.3 kilograms of opium. 
Using information from this first suspect, in July 2004 the 
police made 23 more arrests.  The suspects confessed to 
trafficking about 30 kilograms of heroin through seven 
provinces and cities, press reports said.  In addition, the 
police confiscated seven cars, USD 45,000 and nine mobile 
phones.  Currently, Phu Tho police are coordinating with the 
counternarcotics police of the Ministry of Public Security 
to expand the case. 
 
11.  (U) In December 2000, the National Assembly passed a 
national law on drug suppression and prevention.  The law 
came into effect June 1, 2001.  As of March 2004, there were 
11 implementing decrees.  The Ministry of Justice (MOJ) was 
tasked with working with the MPS and other relevant agencies 
to review existing counternarcotics legal documents and make 
appropriate amendments to facilitate implementation of the 
new law.  The UNODC is assisting the GVN to develop these 
implementing regulations for the new law, which will allow 
law enforcement authorities to use techniques such as 
controlled deliveries, informants and undercover officers. 
The 11 implementing decrees: 
 
-- list the narcotic substances and precursors; 
-- guide the control of lawful drug-related activities in 
Vietnam; 
-- stipulate the rehabilitation order, procedures and 
regimes for drug addicts consigned to compulsory 
rehabilitation centers; 
-- designate family organization and community-based 
rehabilitation; and, 
-- prescribe the regime of compensation and allowances for 
individuals, families, agencies and organizations suffering 
life, health and property damage while participating in drug 
prevention activities. 
-- stipulate the rewards and commendations for individuals, 
families, agencies and organizations recording achievements 
in drug prevention; 
-- assign responsibility on international cooperation in the 
field of drug prevention; 
-- add a number of substances to the list of narcotics and 
precursors; and, 
-- regulate the control of import, export and transit 
transportation of illicit drugs, precursors, narcotic drugs 
and psychotropic substances. 
 
Another   key   decree,  concerning  law  enforcement,   has 
apparently been issued, but according to an MPS official, it 
has  not  been made public due to its "sensitivity."  During 
2004,  the  GVN  also issued one more decree to  extend  the 
duration for treatment stay (Note: This decree serves  as  a 
legal   instrument  for  implementing  the   pilot   program 
initiated by Ho Chi Minh City.  End Note.) 
 
12.  (SBU) However, a preliminary analysis by a UNODC legal 
official concluded that the decrees are "insufficient in 
terms of establishing a proper drug control legal system," 
however.  The decrees tend to focus on drug control areas, 
which are "generally less complex and controversial," the 
official added.  There is still a need for "new and proper" 
legal instruments in areas such as procedures, conditions, 
systems for investigations, international cooperation, 
extradition, controlled delivery and maritime cooperation, 
according to the analysis.  According to a senior drug 
treatment policy maker, on December 2 the Prime Minister 
issued a decree on the conditions for the private sector to 
run treatment centers, and by June 10, 2004, the GVN issued 
decree 135 to replace Decree 34, in line with the Ordinance 
on Administration. 
 
13. (U) NCADP organized a conference to review the three- 
year implementation of the national drug control action plan 
for the years 2001 - 2005 in Hanoi March 22 - 23. 
Participants at the conference stated that drug crimes are 
on the rise.  39,866 drug cases were discovered (an increase 
of 9,500 cases compared to 1998 - 2000) and 64,743 suspects 
were arrested.  Drug seizure data showed a large increase in 
both case-number and quantity.  The drug addiction relapse 
rate is still high, at about 70 percent.  According to 
official numbers released at the conference, there are 
160,670 drug users nationwide with 80 treatment centers 
providing treatment to over 40,000 drug addicts.  Over the 
past three years, almost 2,000 "complicated hotspots" were 
destroyed such Thanh Nhan, Cong Vi in Hanoi, Cau Kho, Nguyen 
Cu Trinh in HCMC, Thom Mon in Son La, Hung Long in Nghe An 
and Na U in Dien Bien.  Deputy Prime Minister Khiem 
reaffirmed at the conference that it is the Politburo's 
policy that Vietnam "mobilize the strength of the entire 
political system in the drug fight." 
14. (U) The GVN continued to move forward in developing its 
long-term counternarcotics master plan, with the assistance 
of several foreign donors, including the U.S. and UNODC. 
The current 2001 - 2005 plan of action includes the 
following 13 projects: 
 
-- building the national master plan for drug control 
through 2010; 
-- strengthening the capacity of the national coordinating 
counternarcotics agency; 
-- implementing crop substitution programs in Ky Son 
District, Nghe An Province; 
-- strengthening the capacity to collect and use drug 
information; 
-- strengthening the capacity to prevent and arrest drug 
criminals; 
-- building and completing a counternarcotics legal system; 
-- educating students on drug awareness and prevention; 
-- strengthening drug prevention activities in Vietnam; 
-- preventing drug abuse among workers; 
-- strengthening the capacity to treat and rehabilitate 
addicts; 
-- preventing drug use among street children; 
-- reducing the demand among ethnic people; and, 
-- preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS among addicts through 
demand reduction intervention. 
 
15. (U) According to SODC, almost all of the projects are 
ongoing with either foreign or domestic funding.  SODC 
officials claimed that the master plan until 2010 is 
awaiting the Prime Minister's approval.  However, while they 
had expected the plan to be finalized by late 2003 or early 
2004, it did not happen.  SODC has also received support in 
the form of computers and a network from the British 
Government.  SODC also expressed satisfaction with the 
effective implementation of the (partially USG funded) Ky 
Son project (Phase II) and the initial implementation of the 
U.S.-funded "G-55" project titled "Interdiction and Seizure 
Capacity Building with Special Emphasis and ATS and 
Precursors" between MPS and UNODC.  One of the main outcomes 
of the project is the establishment of six interagency 
counter-drug enforcement task force units in six border 
"hotspot" areas.  The establishment of these task forces 
represented a high mark in the (normally weak) interagency 
cooperation process among Vietnamese security forces. 
 
16. (U) During the G55 launching ceremony, Colonel Vuong, 
Director of MPS unit C-17 (the main counternarcotics unit) 
said that the implementing agencies include: the MPS' C-17; 
the Anti-smuggling Department of the General Department of 
Customs; and the Surveillance Department of the Vietnam 
Border Army.  Each task force unit has ten officers, who 
started work on June 1, the Colonel said.  Out of that 
number, six are expected to come from the police, two from 
Customs and two from the Border Army.  The police, however, 
will take the lead in running the program and will keep 
these units working after the project ends, Colonel Vuong 
promised.  Colonel Vuong said separately that Vietnam and 
UNODC chose these six provinces because they are areas where 
drug trafficking has escalated and where there is a high 
flow of ATS trafficked across the border. 
 
17. (U) On this occasion, Colonel Vuong provided a 15-item 
checklist for the joint task force units' first year, 
including: 
 
--  Employment of a national technical officer and an 
administrative assistant for the national project office; 
--  Establishment of the project office and the steering 
board; 
--  Equipment needs assessment; 
--  Seminar on the establishment of six task force units, 
including procedures and policy for the implementing 
agencies; 
--  Building of a mechanism to give instructions by C-17, 
Anti-smuggling Department and the Surveillance Department; 
--  Setting up a reporting system for the units; 
--  Seminar on procedures/cooperation mechanism between the 
units and the drug testing laboratories; 
--  Building up contact and coordination between the units 
and the drug testing laboratories; 
--  Procurement of equipment for the units; 
--  Training on the use of equipment; 
--  Training and equipment needs assessment for the testing 
laboratories; 
--  Procurement of equipment for the laboratories; 
--  Training on the use of equipment; 
--  Setting up an information gathering system for the 
units; and, 
--  Preparation of training materials 
 
UNODC officials confirmed that all of the goals and 
objectives on the list, with the exception of the 
preparation of training materials, have been completed. 
Mission officers visited G55 task force units in An Giang 
and Lang Son Provinces, and confirmed that they are 
operational.  Some of the units elsewhere have had major 
successes: 
 
According to press reports, The G55 task force unit in Son 
La province discovered five major drug cases, arrested nine 
traffickers and seized eight kilograms of heroin on July 16, 
17 and 18, 2004. 
 
 
18. (U) According to reports during the March NCADP 
conference, over the past three years, the state budget for 
drug control reached around USD 16 million.  In addition, 
USD 50 million was taken from local budgets, out of which Ho 
Chi Minh City allocated USD 37 million for its drug 
treatment program.  As in past years, observers agreed that 
overall lack of resources continued to be a major constraint 
in counternarcotics activities. 
 
19. (U) In 2004, Vietnam continued its efforts in regional 
and multilateral law enforcement coordination, a key element 
towards full compliance with the 1988 UN Drug Convention. 
Vietnam has existing agreements and MOUs with China, Burma, 
Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Hungary and Russia.  On November 
16 - 19, Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia met in Phnom Penh to 
review their cooperation in 2004 and work out cooperative 
measures for the coming year.  Police General Le The Tiem, 
Vietnamese Vice Minister of Public Security, said during the 
meeting that drug trafficking across the border has come 
"complicated."  General Tiem urged the participating 
countries to consider signing "many more" counternarcotics 
agreements at the sub-regional and global levels.  Tiem also 
wished for closer working ties and support among the three 
nations. 
 
20. (U) Vietnam continued to cooperate with INTERPOL during 
2004.  Much of this cooperation involved assisting 
authorities from Canada, Germany and Australia to 
investigate drug trafficking cases between overseas 
Vietnamese and criminal organizations located in Vietnam. 
All international law enforcement representatives in 
Vietnam, however, acknowledged that real operational 
cooperation on counternarcotics cases is minimal or 
nonexistent due to legal prohibitions against foreign 
security personnel operating on Vietnamese soil.  Without 
changes in Vietnamese law to permit foreign law enforcement 
officers to work on drug cases in Vietnam, "cooperation" 
will remain a function of information exchange and 
Vietnamese police carrying out law enforcement activities on 
behalf of foreign agencies on a case by case basis. 
 
21. (U) Multilaterally, Vietnam continued to work closely 
with UNODC.  In 2002, the GVN assumed management 
responsibility for the second phase of the crop substitution 
project in Ky Son, Nghe An Province, which will be due by 
December 21, 2004.  In addition, Vietnam continued to 
participate in a UNODC sub-regional project for 
strengthening cross border coordination with its neighbors, 
as part of the action plan mentioned in Paragraph 14. 
 
22. (SBU) During 2004, DEA's Hanoi Country office and 
Embassy Hanoi reported that, despite repeated statements 
affirming that law enforcement cooperation is a key 
component of the drug war, GVN law enforcement authorities, 
especially the counternarcotics police, did not provide 
meaningful cooperation to DEA's Hanoi country office.  In 
addition, DEA reported that, due to existing MPS policies, 
DEA agents have not been permitted officially to work with 
GVN counternarcotics investigators.  Generally, cooperation 
was limited to receiving information from DEA and holding 
occasional meetings.  Thus far, the counternarcotics police 
have declined to share information with DEA or cooperate 
operationally.  GVN officials generally classify drug 
information as "sec-ret," subject to national security 
regulations, and explain this as the main reason for their 
inability to cooperate more fully with DEA.  Even with new 
"implementing regulations" to buttress the 2001 law, 
Counternarcotics Department (CND) and other drug enforcement 
agencies remain limited in what they can achieve in their 
investigations and the impact they can make on the drug 
trade in Vietnam.  CND officers target mostly low-level drug 
distributors who remain within the narrow grasp of their 
authority and investigative capability.  Unfortunately, even 
well-intentioned CND officers may not act independently when 
conducting investigations and utilizing their authority. 
According to the DEA, the GVN needs to update and relax its 
restrictive polices regarding the exchange of drug related 
information with foreign agencies, so that real law 
enforcement cooperation can occur in Vietnam.  To date, 
there has been nothing concrete to indicate that the GVN has 
any intention of taking the necessary administrative or 
legislative steps to permit DEA to expand beyond its current 
liaison role. 
 
23. (SBU) More positively, in March the GVN made some final 
changes that allowed the entry into force of the letter of 
agreement on counternarcotics activities between the United 
States and Vietnam.  The first project under the LOA, a 
training course for counternarcotics police and customs 
officers from all over Vietnam, occurred in Hanoi in August. 
U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents who taught the course 
reported that it had an effect immediately; one of the 
inspectors who received the training discovered an Australia- 
bound heroin courier using the new search techniques he had 
learned in the training the week before.  In 2004, the 
Embassy and SODC cooperated on advance work for DEA and U.S. 
Department of Justice training courses under the LOA. 
 
Accomplishments 
--------------- 
 
 
24. (U) At an event during the June Drug Awareness Month, 
Deputy Prime Minister Khiem stressed that the Government 
would "mobilize the entire political system and nation to 
prevent and combat the scourge of drugs." 
 
25. (U) SODC and other international interlocutors highly 
assessed the importance in 2004 of the establishment of the 
Department of Crime Statistics in the Supreme People's 
Procuracy in the fight against drugs (as well as towards 
Vietnam's full compliance with the 1988 UN Drug Convention). 
The Department, while still finding its appropriate role, 
has improved the collection and sharing of crime statistics. 
 
Law enforcement efforts 
----------------------- 
 
26. (U) The GVN continued a policy of strict punishment for 
drug offenses.  Seizures of opium, heroin, and amphetamine- 
type stimulants (ATS) increased during the reporting period. 
The GVN has continued to arrest and prosecute drug 
traffickers in 2004.  According to GVN statistics, during 
the first six months of calendar year 2004, there were 5,376 
drug cases involving 8,484 traffickers with larger amounts 
of heroin and synthetic drugs seized.  Total seizures 
include 100.3 kilograms of heroin, 53.3 kilograms of opium, 
622.7 kilograms of cannabis, 23,902 methamphetamine tablets 
and 4,128 ampoules of addictive pharmaceuticals and other 
substances.  30 percent of the suspects and 34 percent of 
the cases were reported in border provinces.  Ho Chi Minh 
City and Hanoi remain the country's major hotspots for drug 
trafficking and consumption.  According to one press report, 
between January and April, Vietnam executed 14 prisoners, 
handed down 25 death sentences and upheld 22 death penalties 
in appeals courts, mostly for narcotics crimes and murders. 
 
27. (U) Drug laws remain very tough in Vietnam.  Possession 
of 100 grams of heroin or five kilograms of opium gum or 
cannabis resin or 75 kilograms of cannabis or opium plants 
may result in the death penalty.  For possession or 
trafficking of 600 grams or more of heroin, death by a seven- 
man firing squad is "mandatory," according to another press 
report.  Despite the tough laws, SODC reported again in 
2004, "drug trafficking continues to rise." 
 
28. (SBU) During the year, Embassy Hanoi reported several 
large drug cases. 
 
-- One major case occurred in the northwest "drug hotspot" 
of Lai Chau Province.  According to the "People's Police" 
newspaper, Lai Chau counternarcotics police first detected 
the case in September 2001.  Several suspects, in an attempt 
to escape arrest, murdered an undercover police lieutenant. 
Three suspects were eventually arrested; two received death 
sentences in June 2002 for the police officer's murder. 
Subsequently, 27 accomplices were arrested; 24 stood trial 
in Lai Chau in March 2003.  On March 14, Lai Chau People's 
Court handed down four additional death sentences, eleven 
life sentences and seven other long prison sentences.  These 
defendants were convicted of trafficking about 90 kilograms 
of heroin over the past seven years from Laos via the Tay 
Trang border area, through Lai Chau Province, and on to 
Hanoi and Thanh Hoa Province (about 100 miles south of 
Hanoi). 
 
-- In another case, police in Tien Giang Province in 
coordination with the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) 
arrested Ngo Xuan Phuong, Ngo Duc Minh and 9 other members 
of a drug trafficking ring in May 2002.  On February 23, 11 
stood trial in Ho Chi Minh City.  The Ho Chi Minh City 
People's Court handed down four death sentences, four life 
sentences, and three other long prison sentences.  These 
eleven defendants were convicted of trafficking about 39 
kilograms of heroin, 50 kilograms of cannabis, 15 kilograms 
of synthetic drugs and 6,000 ATS tablets over the past ten 
years between Laos and Cambodia and on to Vietnam and Japan 
for consumption.  They also bought ecstasy tablets in the 
Netherlands to sell in Ho Chi Minh City, according to press 
reporting. 
 
-- According to SODC, because of the trans-national 
activities of the syndicate, the case was "very serious." 
They noted that while the trial was underway in Ho Chi Minh 
City, police in the provinces of Nghe An and Danang had made 
additional large seizures and arrests.  In Nghe An, a 
province that sits astride a trade route to Laos, the police 
arrested ten suspects and seized approximately seven 
kilograms of heroin.  According to the traffickers' initial 
confessions, the offenders had already trafficked about 87.5 
kilograms of heroin.  This was described as the largest 
cross-border case ever.  Simultaneously, Danang witnessed an 
arrest in the "biggest case ever recorded in Danang", 
according to police.  Searching the home of offender Nguyen 
Quoc Viet, the police seized six kilograms of heroin.  These 
two cases are still under investigation, according to press 
reports. 
 
-- Also, in the first two months of 2004, Son La provincial 
police arrested 215 suspects in 85 separate narcotics cases, 
and seized 3.7 kilograms of heroin, 6.6 kilograms of opium 
and a large quantity of ATS.  (Note: The large number of 
cases and the relatively small amounts of heroin and opium 
indicates that many of these arrests were of users and low- 
level dealers rather than large traffickers.  UNODC has 
identified Son La as a province with a severe drug use 
problem, especially in the ethnic Hmong community.  End 
note.) 
 
Despite these high-profile cases, lack of training, 
resources and experience both among law enforcement and 
judicial officials continues to plague Vietnamese counter 
drug efforts, according to law enforcement sources and 
UNODC. 
 
29. (SBU) Foreign law enforcement sources do not believe 
that major trafficking groups have moved into Vietnam. 
Relatively small groups -- perhaps five to 15 individuals, 
who are often related to each other -- usually do most 
narcotics trafficking.  As Vietnam becomes a more 
"attractive" transit country, larger trafficking groups 
could become more prominent, according to DEA. 
 
30. (U) Resource constraints among GVN counternarcotics 
police continued to be a major problem during 2004, 
especially among provincial counternarcotics police.  Even 
SODC -- the national office for coordinating all 
counternarcotics activities -- lacked a database computer 
system until December 2002, when the British Government 
provided this assistance.  Embassy visits to Dien Bien, Lai 
Chau, Long An and An Giang Provinces revealed that 
counternarcotics police (and all local police) work with a 
significant lack of resources, especially specialized 
equipment.  Officials in the Cambodian border province of An 
Giang told emboffs that, in the rainy season, when the 
border area floods enough to permit boat traffic over a 
large body of water that forms over rice paddies along the 
border, policing the border is nearly impossible because the 
customs and border police have only a single boat. 
Officials in these and other provinces have consistently 
told emboffs that they would welcome additional equipment 
and training. 
 
31. (U) Vietnam also recorded some achievements in anti-drug 
awareness campaigns in 2004.  At a meeting to review the two 
year implementation of Coordination Plan No. 969 between 
Vietnam General Confederation of Labor (VGCL) and MPS, Vice 
Minister of Public Security Le The Tiem said that 90 percent 
of the provinces and cities had signed coordination plans to 
assist the drug fight among government employees and 
workers.  As a result, 75 percent of the government 
employees and workers had signed commitments to stay away 
from drug and social evils.  According to Vice Minister 
Tiem, during the two-year period, hundreds of key personnel 
from VGCL at central and local levels had received training 
on awareness methods.  The number of addicts who are 
government employees and workers had reduced significantly 
such as Hanoi from 634 to 55, Son La from 274 to 191, Cao 
Bang from 106 to 45, Quang Ninh from 270 to 180, Tuyen Quang 
from 109 to 29 and Yen Bai from 104 to 83.  According to Mr. 
Do Duc Ngo, VGCL's Vice Chairman and a member of NCADP, for 
the 2004 - 2005 period, areas of concentration include: 
 
--  Working on surveys and assessing the addiction 
situation; 
--  Establishing the inter-agency coordination plan; 
--  Organizing seminars on treatment for employees and 
workers; 
--  Strengthening awareness activities; 
--  Setting up counternarcotics units in business 
establishments; and, 
--  Investigating drug crimes and addiction among government 
employees and workers. 
 
Corruption 
---------- 
32. (SBU) The GVN continued to focus on narcotics-related 
corruption, making policy statements that made it clear that 
corruption would not be tolerated and would be severely 
punished, including the removal and prosecution of corrupt 
officials.  However, the UN, law enforcement agencies, and 
even the GVN continue to view corruption in Vietnam as an 
endemic problem that exists at all levels and in all 
sectors.  According to the World Economic Forum's growth 
competitive index, Vietnam's corruption index ranks 97 out 
of 104 countries in the world.  Corruption is considered one 
of the biggest problems impeding business in the country, 
besides the inefficient administration system.  The Vietnam 
News Agency reported on February 26 that government 
inspectors estimate that approximately USD 80 million, or 
19.1 percent of the investment in 14 major infrastructure 
projects, has been lost due to poor management and 
corruption.  About 515 government employees have been 
disciplined by the GVN in various ways, and the police 
continue to investigate seven others.  According to the 
"Phap Luat" (Legal) newspaper, the State Inspection Board 
conducted 3,165 inspections in the first six months of 2004 
leading to the discovery of economic offenses causing around 
USD 25 million in losses to the State budget.  257 
government cadres and public officials were subject to 
administrative punishment and 29 were prosecuted.  General 
Cao Ngoc Oanh, Deputy General Director of the General Police 
Department also reported in an interview by the Lao Dong 
(Labor newspaper) that over the past ten years, 176,534 
cases of economic crimes have been discovered, including 
9,454 cases of embezzlement and corruption causing losses to 
the State of approximately USD 800 million. 
 
33. (U) In public statements, the GVN and CPV take a strong 
stand against corruption in general, but have not singled 
out narcotics-related corruption for specific attention. 
Colonel Bui Xuan Bien, the director of SODC, has confirmed 
that "any GVN official who violates laws about corruption" 
would be prosecuted.  In addition to the Nam Cam case in 
2003 (ref A), there have recently been a number of other 
corruption cases that brought down senior officials, 
including the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development. 
 
-- In a March 2004 case, 26 Lang Son provincial customs 
officials were sentenced to between two and 18 years in 
prison for taking bribes at Tan Thanh international border 
gate in Lang Son Province.  The offenders were charged with 
extorting more than USD 280,000 between June 2000 and June 
2001 by falsifying customs documents claiming VAT refunds on 
non-existent exported goods. 
 
-- In a separate case, Tay Ninh police concluded the 
investigation of a drug trafficking case at the Moc Bai 
border checkpoint.  29 people will be prosecuted, including 
six drug-runners for trafficking ATS concealed in a fruit- 
box imported from Thailand and 23 customs officials for 
"dereliction of duty causing serious consequences." 
 
-- In another example, Nguyen Quang Thuong, Deputy Director 
General of the state-owned oil and gas corporation 
(PetroVietnam) was arrested on June 1 his for involvement in 
falsifying documents for the purchase of equipment and 
supplies that resulted in millions of dollars in losses to 
the State budget.  Police also arrested Duong Quoc Ha, 
deputy director of Vietnam-Soviet Oil and Gas Joint Stock 
Company (Vietsovpetro) on June 9.  Ha was charged with 
embezzlement of the company property and use of fake 
contracts to build apartments worth USD 17 million. 
 
-- Vietnam's state-controlled media also gave prominent 
coverage to the La Thi Kim Oanh Case Oanh, a former official 
of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, was 
sentenced to death for misappropriating USD 4.9 million and 
causing a loss of USD 2.2 million to the state budget; two 
vice Ministers were found guilty of related charges, 
although their sentences were suspended upon appeal. 
Minister Le Huy Ngo, found partially responsible for the 
Oanh case, was also dismissed. 
 
-- In a drug-related corruption case, during a court trial 
in Ho Chi Minh City in January, former police major Nguyen 
Cong Trieu of the Ho Chi Minh City Police's Investigation 
Division was given an eight year sentence for taking bribes 
and fined USD 2,500, while former lawyer Phan Van Hai was 
sentenced to three years in prison for acting as a middleman 
for bribes and fined USD 2,000. 
 
-- Most recently, former Vice Minister of Trade Mai Van Dau 
was arrested for further investigation into claims over his 
related corruption acts in connection with a scandal of 
quota allocation for garment exports.  Dau was relieved of 
his post by a decision from the Prime Minister. 
 
34. (U) Senior GVN officials continue to speak out against 
corruption. 
 
-- In January, Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) General 
Secretary Nong Duc Manh said during the opening of the Party 
 
SIPDIS 
Central Committee's ninth Plenum that the CPV would "clarify 
the causes of success and failure through specific reviews 
while seeking ways to intensify the combat against 
corruption, wasteful spending and bureaucracy." 
 
-- After the May 2004 National Assembly Session, CPV General 
Secretary Nong Duc Manh and NA Chairman Nguyen Van An 
 
SIPDIS 
reaffirmed the determination of the Communist Party and GVN 
to tackle graft and corruption from the grass-roots level. 
 
-- At a meeting in Hanoi on April 14, 2004 to review the 
execution of the Politburo's resolution on key judicial 
tasks, President Tran Duc Luong called for further judicial 
reform to bolster the fight against criminal corruption. 
 
-- In December 2003, Prime Minister Phan Van Khai confirmed 
during the closing session of a ministerial meeting in Ho 
Chi Minh City that administrative reform and the fight 
against corruption were crucial issues that must be 
addressed in 2004. 
 
-- During a meeting in Hanoi in March, Phan Dien, Member of 
the CPV's Politburo and Standing member of its Secretariat, 
claimed that Vietnam had "deterred corruption although not 
completely stopped it."  Phan Dien admitted that combating 
corruption is key to economic renovation. 
 
-- Before the People's Council elections took place in 
April, Pham The Duyet, President of the Vietnam Fatherland 
Front, said that Vietnam planned to use the election to find 
"new blood" to combat corruption and that the election 
"should help develop a better state management system to 
fight corruption." 
 
-- At a seminar titled "Vietnam and the UN Convention on 
Corruption" held November 11 in Hanoi, Chief State Inspector 
Quach Quang Thanh stressed that Vietnam needs a national 
anti-corruption strategy.  According to Mr. Thanh, 
corruption has negative impact on the country's political 
system and trust from the people. 
 
35. (U) At the international level, in December 2003 Vietnam 
joined 94 other countries in signing the UN Convention 
against Corruption at the international conference in 
Merida, Mexico.  Also, Vietnam became the 23rd country in 
the region to endorse a regional anti-corruption action plan 
at a meeting in Manila on July 5.  The action plan, 
initiated by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the 
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) 
in December 2000, is the region's forum for policy dialogue 
and cooperation in the fight against corruption.  Most 
recently, voters throughout the nation have asked the 
National Assembly to set up an anti-corruption agency to 
help combat crime.  The petitions came after the discovery 
of numerous corruption cases that aroused public concern. 
Citizens also asked the NA to pass and issue an anti- 
corruption law as soon as possible, given the rising number 
of corruption cases throughout the country.  Arguments and 
debates concerning corruption ignited among members of the 
National Assembly during the most recent session. 
 
36. (U) On May 21, Ho Chi Minh City's Municipal Court handed 
down a 14 year prison sentence to Khuc Van Du, former staff 
of Nhi Xuan drug treatment and rehabilitation center on 
charges of trading illicit drugs and drug implements.  Eight 
drug addicts received jail terms between nine and 18 months 
for illicit drug use. 
 
37. (U) Vietnam does not encourage or facilitate illicit 
production or distribution of narcotic or psychotropic drugs 
or other controlled substances, or the laundering of 
proceeds from illegal drug transactions.  Recognizing the 
need for more anti-corruption assistance, the GVN signed an 
agreement with Sweden in September 2002 for research on 
socio-economic policy and anti-corruption measures.  Under 
the USD 2.7 million project, scheduled to run from the end 
of 2002 through 2005, Sweden will provide resources to 
assist Vietnam in developing appropriate anti-corruption 
policies.  While the official agreement is with the Ministry 
of Planning and Investment, the actual partner is the CPV 
and, according to an official of the Swedish Development 
Corporation, the program is "quite sensitive."  A diagnostic 
study on how to implement the program "should be started by 
the end of the year." 
 
38. (SBU) Embassy has no information linking any senior 
official of the GVN with engaging in, encouraging or 
facilitating the illicit production or distribution of such 
drugs or substances, or the laundering of proceeds from 
illegal drug transactions.  Concerning narcotics-related 
corruption, the GVN did demonstrate a willingness in 2004 to 
prosecute officials, though the targets were relatively low- 
level. 
 
39. (U) According to UNODC, "narcotics-related corruption is 
only a very small part of overall corruption."  However, 
significant levels of official corruption exist in Vietnam. 
Both the GVN and the Communist Party have made combating 
corruption one of their top priorities, and senior officials 
have made unambiguous statements that not only must 
officials not engage in corruption but also that they will 
be held personally responsible for such wrongdoing by their 
relatives and subordinates as well. 
 
Agreements and treaties 
----------------------- 
 
40. (U) With the exception of the recently-signed 
Counternarcotics LOA, the USG has no extradition, mutual 
legal assistance or precursor chemical agreements with 
Vietnam.  The LOA includes three specific counternarcotics 
training projects. 
 
41. (U) Vietnam is a party to three UN Drug Control 
Conventions, including the 1961 Single Convention on 
Narcotic Drugs, the 1971 Convention on Psychotropic 
Substances and the 1988 Convention Against Illicit 
Trafficking in Narcotics Drugs and Psychotropic Substances. 
 
42. (U) To further its compliance with the 1988 UN Drug 
Convention, Vietnam moved ahead in 2004 to increase both 
operational and formal cooperation with neighboring 
countries, countries in the region and the world. 
 
43. (U) Police General Le The Tiem, Vice Minister of Public 
Security, led Vietnam's delegation to the first ASEAN 
Ministerial Meeting on Transnational Crime with three 
dialogue partners including China, Japan and Korea in 
Bangkok on January 10.  Vice Minister Tiem called for China, 
Japan and Korea to support ASEAN member countries in the 
fight against transnational crime.  ASEAN and China also 
signed an MOU on cooperation against non-conventional crimes 
including drugs.  Medium- and long-term objectives were set 
forth for the cooperation action plan.   Bilaterally, 
according to Lao Cai Province's C17, between 1999 and 2004, 
Lao Cai customs have entered into two anti-crime MOUs with 
their Chinese counterparts. 
 
44. (U) According to a December "People's Police" press 
report, during a December 22 - 23 trilateral Meeting on Drug 
Control Cooperation among Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam in 
Hanoi under the chairmanship of General Le Hong Anh, 
Vietnamese Minister of Public Security and Vice Chair of 
NCADP, Vietnam said that it was willing to "share 
experiences and exchange visits and training programs with 
the two neighbors."  At Vietnam's initiative, a project 
proposal (for UNODC funding) that is to be endorsed at the 
next meeting in Phnom Penh will be designed to strengthen 
cross-border cooperation on drug control between the three 
countries.  Delegates also agreed that the borders still 
remain hotspots for drug trafficking, drug abuse, and drug- 
related crimes.  They called for stepping up information 
exchange to aid the fight. 
 
45. (U) In February, during a joint cabinet meeting held in 
Danang city between Vietnam and Thailand, Deputy Prime 
Minister Vu Khoan and his Thai counterpart Chavalit 
Yongchaiyudh discussed, among other security issues, drug 
cooperation.  They agreed to set up a joint working 
committee to monitor security cooperation, including drug 
crimes.  And on 29 April, Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Tan 
Dung signed the decision to ratify the agreement on crime 
prevention cooperation between Vietnam and Thailand, which 
was signed in Nakhon Phanom (Thailand) on February 21, 2004. 
 
46. (U) In April, for the first time, Vietnam and China held 
a conference on bilateral cooperation for security and 
fighting crime at the border.  In addition to the border and 
security issues, the participants discussed measures to 
combat drugs.  Vietnam has also taken steps in the fight 
against the use of drugs in sports; Vietnamese Minister and 
Chairman of the Sports Committee Nguyen Danh Thai and Danish 
Ambassador to Vietnam Bjarne Sorensen signed the Copenhagen 
Declaration on Anti-Doping on April 22 in Hanoi. 
 
47. (U) At the May 6-9 meeting of the ASEAN Inter-Parliament 
Organization (AIPO) Drugs Investigation Board, Ms. Nguyen 
Thi Hong Xinh, member of the National Assembly's Commission 
on Social Affairs, presented Vietnam's achievements in its 
fight against drugs.  Representatives of eight member- 
states, including Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, 
Thailand, Vietnam and Singapore participated in the meeting, 
which was organized in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The delegates 
from Brunei and Myanmar attended the meeting as special 
observers. 
 
48. (U) The Republic of Korea has pledged USD 534,000 to 
help Vietnam's anti-drug effort.  A two-year project was 
signed on July 27 by representatives of SODC and the Korean 
International Cooperation Agency (KOICA).  The project will 
develop an intranet system linking the three major cities of 
Hanoi, Danang and Ho Chi Minh City to modernize their 
administrative network and provide training to Vietnamese 
officials.  This is the first international cooperation 
program between the two countries in the field of drug 
control. 
 
49. (U) During the official visit by Burmese Prime Minister 
Khin Nyunt to Vietnam on August 9, Vietnamese Public 
Security Minister Le Hong Anh and Burmese Interior Minister 
Tin Lang signed an agreement on cooperation in crime 
prevention. 
 
50. (U) Police Colonel Pham Ho, Chief of Interpol Vietnam, 
led the Vietnamese delegation to the 24th meeting of the 
ASEAN Police Chiefs on August 16 in Chiang Mai, Thailand. 
Representatives of ten ASEAN member countries, the 
International Police General Secretary and observers of 
police services from Australia, New Zealand and East Timor 
discussed the establishment of an ASEAN police information 
center, fighting economic, cyber and hi-tech crimes and drug 
trafficking. 
 
51. (U) Vietnamese and Thai security forces plan to set up a 
hotline to exchange information about regional drug 
trafficking.  An agreement on the hotline was reached on 
September 13 during the first Vietnam - Thailand Bilateral 
Meeting on Drug Control Cooperation in Ho Chi Minh City. 
 
52. (U) During the September 27 - October 2 visit to Vietnam 
by Mr. Kideng Thamavong, Vice Chairman of the Lao Commission 
of Drug Control, Police General Le The Tiem, Vice Minister 
of Public Security, had a meeting with the commission to 
discuss the implementation of the bilateral agreement on 
drug control cooperation signed in July 1998. 
 
53. (SBU) In January, police in Taiwan informed their 
Vietnamese counterparts of a seizure of 44 kilograms of 
heroin in Kaohsiung port.  The illegal shipment was reported 
as coming from Nha Trang in Vietnam.  Despite the urging of 
and assistance offered by both the Taiwan authorities and 
DEA, the Vietnamese did not conduct any follow-up 
investigation into the activities of the trafficking 
organization in Vietnam. 
 
54. (U) In addition to the U.S. agreement, Vietnam has 
counternarcotics agreements and MOUs with seven other 
countries: Burma (March 1995), Thailand (November 1998), 
Russia (October 1998), Hungary (June 1998), Cambodia (June 
1998), Laos (July 1998) and China (July 2001).  In 1993, 
with UNODC support, Vietnam signed regional counternarcotics 
MOUs with China, Laos, Burma, Thailand and Cambodia.  The 
six "MOU states" agreed to cooperate on counternarcotics 
activities and, with UNODC's help, better coordinate their 
law-enforcement efforts, especially in border areas. 
Vietnam is currently precluded by statute from extraditing 
Vietnamese nationals, but the GVN is contemplating 
legislative changes, according to an MFA official.  However, 
at the request of the USG (and in accordance with the 1988 
UN Drug Convention), in 2003 Vietnam agreed to two rendition 
requests (one each from the FBI and U.S. Customs) and 
returned two non-citizens to the U.S., where they were 
wanted for various white collar and money laundering. 
 
Cultivation/production 
---------------------- 
 
55. (SBU) The GVN and UNODC confirm that opium is grown in 
hard-to-reach upland and mountainous regions of some 
northwestern provinces, especially Son La, Lai Chau and Nghe 
An Provinces.  According to USG sources, the total number of 
hectares under opium poppy cultivation has been reduced 
sharply from an estimated 12,900 hectares in 1993, when the 
GVN began opium poppy eradication, to 2,300 hectares in 
2000.  (Note: The 2004 USG estimate is the same as 2000 
because, to the best of Embassy Hanoi's knowledge, no 
satellite survey has been performed since 2000.  End Note.) 
UNODC and law enforcement sources do not view production as 
a significant problem in Vietnam.  While the GVN does not 
admit that drugs are produced in the country, Nguyen Ngoc 
Tam was sentenced to death in Ho Chi Minh City on April 18 
for involvement with a Taiwan-led drug ring that produced 
hundreds of kilograms of methamphetamines in a clandestine 
laboratory in Tan Thoi Hiep, Hoc Mon (Ho Chi Minh City). 
There have been unconfirmed reports in past years concerning 
probable indications of limited ATS production, as well as 
some seizures of equipment (i.e., pill presses).  DEA also 
turned up information pointing to an extremely large 
methamphetamine lab in Ho Chi Minh City in 2004. 
 
Eradication/crop substitution 
----------------------------- 
56. (U) As part of its efforts to comply fully with the 1988 
UN Drug Convention, the GVN continued to eradicate poppy 
when found, and to implement crop substitution, introducing 
other crops such as mandarin oranges, tea, cinnamon, plums, 
herbs, hybrid corn, potatoes and soybeans to replace opium 
poppy cultivation.  Concerning eradication, based on Embassy 
provincial visits and the UNODC, the GVN appears sincere in 
its poppy eradication efforts.  However, GVN officials have 
admitted that complete eradication is probably unrealistic, 
given the remoteness of mountainous areas in the northwest 
and extreme poverty among ethnic minority populations who 
sometimes still use opium for medicinal purposes. 
 
57. (U) There is a major UNODC crop substitution project 
(with significant USG support) ongoing in the Ky Son 
district of Nghe An Province, one of the drug "hotspots" in 
northern Vietnam.  This project, currently nearing the end 
of its second phase, includes a crop 
substitution/alternative development component, in which 
various types of fruit trees and other enterprises, such as 
beekeeping, have been implemented in areas formerly 
dedicated to poppy.  Former UNODC representative Doris 
Buddenberg viewed the first phase as "successful," with an 
increase in agricultural production and corresponding drop 
in drug activity. 
 
58. (U) In addition to Ky Son, the GVN's Ministry of 
Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) has continued to 
support projects in various provinces.  The GVN, through 
MARD, independently supports crop substitution projects in 
other provinces, including Hoa Binh, Yen Bai, Ha Giang, Cao 
Bang and Lang Son.  The GVN has tasked MARD with developing 
a national crop substitution proposal to include in the 
GVN's 2006-2010 Master Plan.  To avoid indirectly 
encouraging poppy cultivation through subsidies for 
eradication, the GVN has placed all crop substitution 
subsidies under national programs to alleviate poverty in 
poor, mountainous regions. 
 
59. (U) At a national conference to review the 2003 poppy 
crop elimination program and discuss the 2004 action plan 
held on June 4 by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural 
Development (MARD), Vice Minister Bui Ba Bong said that the 
GVN had pumped over approximately USD 6.4 million in to the 
alternative development and crop substitution program in the 
former opium cultivating areas.  160 tons of high-yield 
upland rice was supplied to local farmers under Program 135 
supporting households in extremely difficult circumstances 
in Vietnam's remote communes.  A total of 32.47 hectares was 
discovered under poppy cultivation and completely destroyed 
in 2003.  Son La is the largest area of poppy cultivation, 
with 25.3 hectares in Bac Yen and Song Ma districts.  Re- 
cultivation of opium crops remains possible due to 
inefficient control of opium seeds, according to Mr. Bong. 
During another conference held in Son La on September 8, 
representatives from the 14 mountainous northwestern 
provinces, border stations and customs offices in the region 
said that Son La accounts for 95 percent of the country's 
entire opium cultivation area.  Vice Minister of Public 
Security Le The Tiem said separately that there were 428 
hectares of poppy cultivation in 2001 in 153 communes in 30 
districts of 10 provinces, but, in 2003, the area was only 
102.061 hectares, reduced by 74 percent, in remote terrain 
in Bac Kan, Cao Bang, Ha Giang, Lao Cai, Lang Son, Lai Chau, 
Son La, Nghe An and Thanh Hoa. 
 
60. (SBU) When well executed, crop substitution appears to 
be a viable program that also assists ethnic minority people 
in Vietnam's poorer, mountainous regions. 
 
Drug flow/transit 
----------------- 
 
61. (SBU) While law enforcement sources and UNODC believe 
that significant amounts of drugs are transiting Vietnam, 
DEA has not yet identified a firm case of heroin entering 
the United States directly from Vietnam, although it appears 
some may be entering via Australia.  More commonly, drugs, 
especially heroin and opium, enter Vietnam from Laos and 
Cambodia, making their way to Hanoi or especially to Ho Chi 
Minh City, where they are transshipped by air or sea to 
other countries.  The GVN attributes significant and 
frequent seizures in 2004 to increased law enforcement along 
Vietnam's borders with its neighbors.  The number of drug 
cases discovered by the Border Army in 2003 was six times 
higher as compared to the year 2002.  According to a 
February press report, Tay Ninh police discovered a drug 
ring led by Phan Nguyen Anh Thu who had trafficked a total 
of 114.75 kilograms of heroin and 606 ecstasy pills from 
Cambodia into Ho Chi Minh City. Separately, Tay Ninh police 
concluded an investigation of a drug trafficking ring led by 
Mout Sang Nang, a Cambodian, and proposed prosecution of 10 
other suspects on February 9.  Between June 2000 and May 
2003, the ring had smuggled 103 kilograms of heroin and 606 
tablets of ATS from Cambodia into Vietnam.  In another case, 
ten suspects, five of whom are Lao citizens, were arrested 
by police in the city of Vinh for heroin trafficking.  They 
are allegedly members of a huge heroin trafficking gang, who 
have admitted to transporting 93.75 kilograms of heroin from 
Laos into Vietnam. 
 
62. (U) Some other examples that show Vietnam as either a 
transit country or a country of heavy consumption include: 
 
-- Song A Gia and Gu A Song, Lao citizens, were captured in 
Ban Ta Re, Long Luong Commune, Moc Chau District, Son La 
Province on 14 January.  Police seized 11.2 kilograms of 
heroin, 800 methamphetamine pills and a Colt-brand handgun 
with 13 bullets; 
 
-- Hsu Minh Chuan, a 40 year-old man from Taiwan who was 
once extradited on weapons trafficking charges, was 
sentenced to two years in prison on February 23 after he was 
found guilty of possessing 0.297 grams of heroin.  Chuan, 
who is a heroin user and was arrested by police in Hai Ba 
Trung District last August, told the police that he bought 
the drugs for his own use in Thanh Nhan ward, a notorious 
drug area in Hanoi; 
 
-- Two leaders of a major drug ring, Ngo Xuan Phuong and Ngo 
Duc Minh, and 11 co-conspirators faced Ho Chi Minh City 
People's Court in February.  They were charged with 
possession of 36kg of heroin, 50kg of marijuana, 15kg of 
methamphetamine and 6,000 ecstasy tablets.  Ngo Xuan Phuong, 
who had settled in Japan, and Ngo Duc Minh, who was a 
smuggler in Haiphong, began smuggling drugs from Vietnam 
into Japan.  In late 2000, Phuong worked with a Vietnamese- 
American, John Nguyen, and a Vietnamese expatriate in 
England, Vu Van Quang, to smuggle ecstasy tablets from the 
Netherlands into Vietnam and then sold the drugs in Ho Chi 
Minh City; 
 
-- On April 22, Trang Thi Kim Chi, an overseas Vietnamese, 
was arrested for illegally transporting 5,000 tablets of 
narcotic drugs, including 3500 tranquilizers and 1500 
ecstasy pills, from France into Vietnam; 
 
-- Ho Chi Minh City Customs reported 27 cases of illegal 
import of 596.5 kilograms of pharmaceutical drugs have been 
cracked between January and May 2004.  Many of these 
shipments contained narcotic drugs and psychotropic 
substances.  Most traffickers arrested have been overseas 
Vietnamese and foreigners arriving from France; 
 
-- David Dang (Dang Van Tam), a Vietnamese citizen resident 
in France, was arrested for transporting 383 tablets of ATS 
via the Lao Bao border checkpoint in Quang Tri Province on 
12 May 2004. 
 
-- Tony Tran, an overseas Vietnamese, was arrested in Ho Chi 
Minh City on May 29 on charges of trafficking illicit drugs 
into Australia.  Tran admitted to sending heroin by post 17 
times before he was caught; 
 
-- Tay Ninh Counternarcotics Police discovered a 
transnational drug ring that smuggled cannabis from Cambodia 
into Ho Chi Minh City.  Ring leader Nguyen Quoc Phien was 
arrested on May 30 in Bien Hoa, Dong Nai, while transporting 
130 kilograms of cannabis; 
 
-- Tran Van Hoi and Nguyen Van Tho from Nghe An, in 
conjunction with traffickers in Laos, successfully smuggled 
87.5kilograms of heroin into Vietnam.  Police arrested 12 
suspects, including five foreigners in that case; 
 
-- HCM City Police have cracked down on two drug rings led 
by Tran Xuan Ha, Hoang Trong Hung and Tran Huy Cong from 
Nghe An Province.  Heroin was smuggled from Laos to the 
central provinces and further transported to Ho Chi Minh 
City.  The police arrested 20 suspects and seized 20 
kilograms of heroin and other evidence.  The rings had 
allegedly shipped over 350 kilograms of heroin into HCMC and 
earned about USD 3,000/kilo; 
 
-- Border guards in the central province of Quang Binh 
stopped two trucks carrying 79.6 kilograms of heroin at Cha 
Lo international border checkpoint and arrested the drivers; 
 
-- Hanoi People's Court on July 21 handed down prison 
sentences between from 12 to 18 months to a seven-member 
drug ring operating between Vietnam and Laos.  The police 
reported that the ring had successfully transported 3,700 
boxes (each box containing 30 Lexomil (Bromazepam) pills) or 
a total of 111,000 pills through Cau Treo border gate in Ha 
Tinh Province; 
 
-- On August 21, Hanoi Police proposed prosecution of Song A 
Gia, Gu A Song and 16 other suspects for trafficking heroin 
from Sam Nua, Laos, to Hanoi and Son La, Yen Bai and Ha Tay 
Provinces since 2002; 
 
-- Customs officials at HCMC's Tan Son Nhat Airport on 
August 17 arrested a Vietnamese-Australian for carrying 440 
grams of heroin.  Tran Thi Hong Loan, 32, had reportedly 
concealed the heroin in a hair spray bottle in her luggage. 
This seizure was directly related to the previous week's USG- 
funded Customs Enforcement Training program; 
 
-- ABC Radio Australia reported that Vietnam's police have 
arrested 48 suspects and broke up the country's biggest ever 
drug trafficking network.  The armed gang trafficked almost 
900 kilograms of heroin from Cambodia for sale throughout 
Vietnam between 1998 and 2003.  Police are continuing the 
hunt for 20 other gang members; 
 
63. (U) According to "Phap Luat" (Law) newspaper, ketamine 
has emerged this year in Hanoi and other major cities.  Law 
enforcement agencies gave warnings of the spreading use of 
ketamine in nightclubs and discos and called for stricter 
control of diversion from legal sources.  According to a 
press report, the owner of a restaurant in Haiphong was 
arrested on August 1 on charges of using ketamine in 
preparing bear-bile elixir (an expensive concoction made 
from bile extracted from live bears, and is very popular 
among Chinese and Vietnamese drinkers.)  According to Decree 
133/2003/ND-CP dated November 16, 2003, ketamine is a 
controlled substance in Table III, which can be only used 
for research and medical purposes.  In addition, Tai Ma is 
an herbal drug recently available in Hanoi in the form of 
twigs of leaves with tiny seeds.  It is smoked in a tobacco- 
pipe and has cannabis-like effects. Another type that was 
recently reported in Vietnam is a yellow-color, odorless 
extract of opium called "hong bi."  This new drug was 
trafficked across the border between Vietnam and China. 
 
64. (U) According to SODC, in 2004 many large-scale 
trafficking cases were discovered.  The ATS flow into the 
country during 2004 continued to be serious and not limited 
to border areas.  According to Vice Minister of Public 
Security Le The Tiem, in addition to opium or heroin, ATS 
can now be found throughout the country.  Recent ATS cases 
include: 
 
-- Nguyen To Loan and seven of her accomplices were captured 
in a police raid while distributing 260 pills of ecstasy. 
The alleged traffickers said they had successfully 
transported three shipments of 300 - 500 pills from Ho Chi 
Minh City to Hanoi. 
 
-- In another case, Ho Chi Minh City police seized two 
traffickers and 260 pills of ecstasy known as thuoc lac on 
July 9 after arresting drug distributors and searching their 
homes. 
 
-- In Hanoi, the counternarcotics police caught seven 
suspects in a drug trafficking ring from Ho Chi Minh City. 
540 ecstasy pills and small amounts of methamphetamine were 
seized.  The police said the seven, including three bar 
girls, admitted that they have trafficked drugs by air and 
railway, usually carrying from 500 to 1,000 pills per 
journey. 
 
-- In a separate case, during a house search following the 
arrest of ten drug runners on May 8, 700 grams of heroin and 
135 tablets of methamphetamines were seized. 
 
-- In Ho Chi Minh City alone, Customs reported 27 cases of 
the illegal import of 596.5 kilograms of addictive 
pharmaceuticals between January and May 2004.  Many of these 
shipments contained narcotic drugs and psychotropic 
substances.  Most of the traffickers arrested are overseas 
Vietnamese and foreigners arriving from France. 
-- Again, in Ho Chi Minh City, Police caught 20 year-old 
Nguyen Thi My Huong selling over 500 ecstasy tablets at a 
cafe in District 3 on March 17.  The search of Huong's home 
the next day resulted in seizure of 120 pills of ecstasy. 
Huong confessed that she could sell about 1,000 ecstasy 
tablets a day. 
 
65. (U) 2004 also witnessed various trials for ATS 
traffickers. 
 
-- In Hanoi, the People's Court on July 21 handed down 
sentences ranging from one to 18 years in prison to a seven- 
member drug trafficking ring operating between Viet Nam and 
Laos.  The police reported that the ring had successfully 
transported 3,700 boxes [each box containing 30 Lexomil 
(Bromazepam) pills] or a total of 111,000 pills through Cau 
Treo border-gate in Ha Tinh Province. 
 
-- In Ho Chi Minh City, the Appeals Court confirmed death 
sentences for six men involved in illegal drug trafficking. 
Between 2001 and 2003, the ring had conducted 32 smuggling 
trips, trafficking more than 103 kg of heroin and 606 
ecstasy pills from Cambodia to Vietnam through border gates 
in Tay Ninh. 
 
-- On May 10, the Ho Chi Minh City People's Court sentenced, 
during the biggest ever ecstasy trial, Chung Quoc Minh and 
Nguyen Kim Oanh to life in prison for trafficking 14,200 
tablets of ecstasy.  Other defendants received a total of 
237 years in prison and additional fines of USD 115,625. 
 
-- Separately, Son La People's Court handed down a 20-year 
sentence to Le Van Bay and Pham Van Son from Thuy Nguyen, 
Haiphong for trafficking half a cake (175 grams) of heroin 
and 196 tablets of methamphetamine from Moc Chau. 
 
During the year, authorities discovered significant cases on 
the border between Vietnam and neighboring countries. 
 
66. (U) Vietnam - Laos: Song A Gia and Gu A Song, Laotian 
citizens, were captured in Ban Ta Re, Long Luong Commune, 
Moc Chau district, Son La Province on January 14.  The 
police seized 11.2 kilograms of heroin, 800 methamphetamine 
pills and a Colt-brand handgun with 13 bullets.  Separately, 
Lao Bao border gate authorities arrested on May 12 Dang Van 
Tam, a Vietnamese-French, for transporting 383 tablets of 
ATS.  In another case, Cau Treo border gate Customs in Ha 
Tinh Province discovered 499 bottles of ketamine concealed 
in a tool-kit in a truck driven by Cao Xuan Phuc.  Another 
man, Nguyen Ba Ngoc was caught while transporting 220 kg of 
Terpin-Codine and 1,680 cigarette packs. 
 
67. (U) Vietnam - Cambodia: Since 2003, drug trafficking has 
increased along the Vietnam - Cambodia border, and the 
number of drug cases discovered by the Border Army in 2003 
was six times higher as compared to 2002.  Tay Ninh police 
discovered a drug ring led by Phan Nguyen Anh Thu, who had 
trafficked a total of 114.75 kilograms of heroin and 606 
ecstasy pills from Cambodia to Ho Chi Minh City.  On 
February 9, Tay Ninh police concluded investigation of 
another drug ring led by Mout Sang Nang, a Cambodian 
citizen.   Between June 2000 and May 2003, the ring had 
smuggled 103 kilograms of heroin and 606 tablets of ATS from 
Cambodia into Vietnam. 
 
Domestic programs/demand reduction 
----------------------------------- 
 
68. (U) The GVN views demand reduction as a key component of 
the fight against drugs as well as an integral part of its 
efforts fully to comply with the 1988 UN Drug Convention. 
Within the GVN, the Ministry of Culture and Information 
(MCI) is responsible for public drug control information and 
education among the general population.  The Ministry of 
Education and Training (MOET) carries out awareness 
activities in schools.  Anti-drug material is available in 
all schools and MOET sponsors various workshops and 
campaigns at all school levels.  MOET reported that drug 
abuse remains a problem among the students in 51 
universities, colleges and vocational schools in 50 
provinces and cities.  Vice Minister of Education and 
Training Dang Huynh Mai observed the reduction of drug abuse 
among students was not sustainable.   In its 2004 drug 
activity report, SODC reported that the border forces 
continued to play an "active role" in disseminating anti- 
drug information to border villages and communes. 
Activities included sponsoring contests, such as art 
projects, to demonstrate local commitment against drugs.  On 
several provincial trips, emboffs heard from local citizens 
(not in the presence of GVN officials) that they are aware 
of drug issues through media campaigns directed at the 
general public as well as students, and also of the 
connection between intravenous drugs and HIV/AIDS.  Emboffs 
have observed anti-drug billboards in virtually every town 
visited. 
 
69. (SBU) UNODC views GVN drug awareness efforts in 2004 
"more or less the same" as in 2003, while assessing that 
Vietnam has already done a "good job" in this endeavor. 
According to UNODC, awareness efforts have mostly been on 
the "formality" level, however, so these efforts have had 
minimal impact on the addict and HIV/AIDS population. 
Behavior modification is still a problematic issue for the 
GVN.  UNODC believes that the challenge for Vietnam is how 
to implement awareness campaigns more regularly at the 
grassroots level and better encourage the participation of 
the youth population.  According to UNAIDS and the GVN, just 
under 70 percent of cumulative HIV/AIDS cases in Vietnam are 
related to injection drug use.  Furthermore, HIV 
surveillance indicates that nationwide, more than 30 percent 
of IDUs are HIV-infected; this percentage is much higher (60- 
80 percent) in Ho Chi Minh City, (65-85 percent) in Quang 
Ninh Province and other northeastern provinces.  Recognizing 
the close link between drug use and HIV/AIDS, the GVN in 
2004 continued a public information campaign regarding 
HIV/AIDS awareness and the connection between drugs and 
HIV/AIDS.  In March 2004, the Prime Minister approved the 
"National Strategy on HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control in 
Vietnam up to 2010 with a Vision to 2020."  The GVN 
continued a long-standing campaign of anti-drug posters all 
around Vietnam, and Vietnamese television and radio have 
increased the pace and volume of anti-drug and HIV/AIDS 
warnings through a continuing series of advertisements 
featuring popular singers and actors.  However, the good 
news, according to the National Committee on AIDS Control, 
is that there has been a reduction of 33.2 percent in the 
number of people living with HIV, 17.4 percent in full-blown 
AIDS patients and 23 percent in AIDS-related deaths as 
compared with the same period in 2003.  By October 2004, 
there were 84,925 people living with HIV countrywide, of 
which 13,409 have developed AIDS. 
 
70. (U) Vietnam has a network of drug treatment centers. 
According to MOLISA, with three new facilities in Binh Phuoc 
(2) and Hanoi (1), there are now 74 centers at the 
provincial level and 7,100 treatment facilities at lower 
levels.  The provincial centers have a capacity of between 
100 to 3,000 addicts each.  According to Vice Minister of 
Public Security Le The Tiem, the addiction growth rate has 
been reduced but the absolute number of addicts keeps 
increasing.  The number increased by 26.2 percent in 2001 
against 2000, 24.6 percent in 2002 against 2001 and 13.1 
percent in 2003 against 2002.  According to SODC, the 
treatment goals for the 2004 - 2005 period include: 
 
--  Providing treatment to 50,000 registered addicts; 
--  Reducing the recidivism rate by ten percent on a yearly 
basis; 
--  Providing treatment to 100 percent of officially 
recognized addicts by 2005; 
--  Upgrading treatment centers to increase capacity. 
 
71. (U) Thai Nguyen: Phap luat Newspaper reported that the 
number of drug users in the city has decreased from 2,277 in 
2001 to 2,166 in 2004. The city provided non-interest loans 
to set up production units in the centers, such as block and 
tunnel bricks manufacture, sand and gravel mining, livestock 
development, wood processing and carpentry.  The city also 
ensured outlets for and consumption of the products, for 
example, wooden furniture for schools and bricks and tiles 
for construction and streets and sidewalks.  Turnover in 
2004 is expected to be USD 125,000.  The recovering drug 
users worked in these production units on a contractual 
basis with an average income of USD 37 per month, slightly 
below the per capita income in Vietnam. 
 
72. (U) Hoa Binh: The center was set up in 1994 and has 35 
officials and medical workers providing treatment to 300 
drug users.  Ten percent of them were prostitutes and 40 
percent had contracted HIV.  Provincial authorities provide 
funds for the patients' food at the center, but it only 
lasts for six months, while the duration of internment is a 
minimum of 12 months.  Most patients' families are incapable 
of providing support to their relatives, according to press 
reports and DSEP officials. 
 
73. (U) Thai Binh: A 5.3 hectare center was built in Ha Loi, 
Ky Ba at a cost of VND 25 billion.  With a capacity of 300 - 
350 people, the center is expected to provide treatment to 
80 percent of the addict population in the province in the 
2005 - 2006 period. 
 
74. (U) Hanoi: "An Ninh Thu Do" (Capital Security) newspaper 
reported there were 13,808 drug users in the capital city by 
June 18, 2004.  Of that number, 4,727 addicts are in 
treatment centers; 2,006 in prisons; and 6,809 in the 
community.  266 have moved to other provinces/cities.  The 
newspaper also quoted Mr. Le Van Nha, Director of the Social 
Evils Prevention Department in MOLISA, as saying that the 
existing drug centers could provide treatment to only 30 
percent of total drug population nationwide. 
75. (U) Ho Chi Minh City: The city suffers from 
overpopulation in its treatment centers.  Ho Chi Minh City 
City Department of Labor, Invalids and Social Affairs 
(DOLISA) reported that over 28,000 drug users are receiving 
treatment in the city's centers.  10,000 have completed a 
two-year treatment program and 6,000 have been transferred 
to post-treatment management.  The municipality continued to 
implement 43 projects in collaboration with production 
units, with a total investment of USD 2.5 million to create 
sufficient jobs for 10,000 ex-addicts.  The city planned to 
provide treatment to 30,000 drug users and 3,000 female sex 
workers in the second half of 2004.  However, the target 
number was overly ambitious: the current capacity of the 
existing centers is only 23,000 beds. 
 
76. (U) On August 10, Le Thanh Hai, Chairman of Ho Chi Minh 
City's People's Committee, met with the City's Youth 
Volunteers and the Management Board of Drug Center No. 4 to 
discuss solutions to the staff shortage problem. 
 
77. (U) According to reports during a national conference to 
review the three-year implementation of the national drug 
control action plan 2001-2005 organized by NCADP in Hanoi 
March 22 - 23, there are 160,670 drug users nationwide with 
80 drug treatment centers providing treatment to over 40,000 
drug addicts.  In 2004, Vietnam embarked on an aggressive 
program to try to place recovered drug addicts in factories 
and other employment as an incentive to stay clean. 
 
78. (U) On March 16, the Youth Brigade held a ground 
breaking ceremony at Nhi Xuan industrial park in Hoc Mon 
District, Ho Chi Minh City.  The park is 51.75 hectares with 
total investment of VND 193 billion.  The park is expected 
to provide jobs for 10,000 workers, of whom between 5,000 
and 6,000 are former drug addicts. 
 
79. (U) Some 200 more former drug users who have completed 
drug rehabilitation and vocational training started work at 
a plastics production factory, which opened on April 20 in 
Ho Chi Minh City's Cu Chi District.  On May 9, Ms. Ha Ngoc, 
Director of Thinh Phat Company, held a ceremony for the 
admission of 350 recovering drug users to her garment 
workshop in Ho Chi Minh City. 
 
80. (U) Two workshops for garment manufacture, embroidery 
and bamboo weaving were recently opened in Treatment Center 
No. 4 for Education and Vocational Training of the Ho Chi 
Minh City Youth Volunteers in Tan Uyen District of Binh 
Duong province, providing jobs to 250 former drug addicts. 
 
81. (U) About 500 recovered drug addicts would have the 
opportunity to work in a sewing workshop, which was opened 
in Ho Chi Minh City on June 11.  The USD 95,500 workshop is 
part of a project to help rehabilitated addicts to 
reintegrate into society.  More than 200 others have already 
received training courses.  They would be employed to work 
in Kim An Company's other workshops around the city. 
 
82. (U) Two other workshops were also set up at the center 
for cashew nut and coffee processing, with a total of 600 
laborers working regularly after the completion of their 
treatment.  Recently, the center has announced recognition 
of successful treatment for 1,174 drug users. 
 
83. (U) A dressmaking workshop comprising three production 
lines with 150 industrial sewing machines was recently 
commissioned in Drug Treatment Center No. 5 in Ho Chi Minh 
City.  This is an investment of USD 116,000 by Ben Thanh 
Company. 
 
84. (U) In a separate effort, Cardinal Pham Minh Man in Ho 
Chi Minh City decided to send two priests and eight nuns to 
Binh Phuoc drug treatment center to provide support to 100 
drug addicts on a long-term basis. 
 
85. (U) There are six drug treatment centers in Hanoi 
providing treatment to a total of 5,000 drug addicts. 
Nguyen Vi Hung, Director of Hanoi DOLISA's Department of 
Social Evils Prevention (DSEP), said 70 percent of the drug 
addicts in the centers are ex-convicts, and 30 percent are 
infected with HIV.  Duration for mandatory treatment is 24 
months and annual treatment fees include USD 380 in the 
first year and USD 366 in the second year.  The GVN provides 
one-third of the cost of compulsory treatment, about USD 
6/person/month, while the family contributes two-thirds. 
Treatment would be provided free of charge to drug addicts 
from families entitled to social service benefits and/or 
from poor households.  Ms. Cao Minh Chau, Director of Hanoi 
DOLISA, said Hanoi would build two new centers in 2004 to 
provide treatment for more drug users.  The city planned to 
provide treatment to 6,000 drug addicts in 2004, 8,000 in 
2005 and 10,000 in 2006. 
 
86. (U) Hanoi authorities decided to put all drug users in 
treatment centers (as opposed to permitting "community 
treatment," a kind of outpatient drug treatment program) and 
to launch a pilot compulsory treatment program in Gia Lam 
and Dong Anh Districts.  According to Mr. Nguyen Vi Hung, by 
March 2003 there were 13,736 drug users.  It is estimated 
around 2,000 drug users in the capital city have yet to be 
identified and registered. 
 
87. (U) Drug treatment centers in Hanoi were temporarily 
closed due to overcrowding in early 2004.  While the centers 
can provide treatment to 5,000 addicts, there are around 
10,000 drug users requiring it.  The Municipal People's 
Committee approved a plan to develop treatment centers in 
the city by 2010, which set targets to provide treatment to 
8,000 drug addicts in 2005 and 13,000 by 2010.  The average 
capacity of each center ranges from 1,000 - 1,500 drug 
addicts at the city level and 300 - 500 at the district 
level.  Each center needs around 10 - 20 hectares of land 
for office and residence buildings, classrooms, workshops, 
sports grounds and farms. 
 
88. (U) Over the past two years, Ho Chi Minh City has 
allocated VND 500 billion (USD 32.3 million) for its "Three 
Reductions" campaign against drug abuse and trafficking, 
prostitution and crime.  The city revealed the figure at a 
conference reviewing the program's first two years.  Much of 
the fund was used to build, repair and/or upgrade 18 centers 
for 28,000 drug addicts and sex workers.  Another 23,000 
drug addicts received treatment at home under the 
supervision of local authorities.  According to Tuoi Tre 
(Youth) newspaper, Ho Chi Minh City now has 37,423 addicts, 
an increase of 7,423 over 2002.  Out of that number, 33,577 
are in treatment facilities. 
 
89. (SBU) SODC officials have admitted that the centers are 
often inadequate, and that the high recidivism rate is 
"unacceptable."  Based on a number of visits throughout the 
year, Embassy agrees that drug center conditions range from 
resort-like (in Ho Chi Minh City) to under construction 
(Lang Son Province, Can Tho City).  Community-based drug 
treatment outside of centers is spotty; counselors are 
expected to make visits to addicts being treated at home and 
provide advice and some medicines, if needed, but services 
are inconsistent. 
 
90. (U) No escapes from drug treatment centers have been 
officially reported in 2004, unlike in 2002.  However, 
according to a senior MOLISA official, the escape rate for 
2004 in some provinces such as Ho Chi Minh City, Lao Cai, 
Yen Bai and Thai Nguyen was very low, at about 0.2 percent. 
 
91. (U) During its June 2003 session, the National Assembly 
approved a five-year pilot project on post-treatment 
vocational training developed by the Ho Chi Minh City 
People's Committee.  It was estimated in early 2004 that 
about 14,000 recovered drug addicts in Ho Chi Minh City 
would be employed by factories and enterprises under this 
new scheme by the end of the year.  City authorities have 
invested USD 36 million to build new rehabilitation centers 
and to upgrade existing centers for the city's program.  Ho 
Chi Minh City authorities have also approved a plan to 
invest USD 12.5 million to develop the Nhi Xuan urban area. 
More than 50 enterprises in Ho Chi Minh City have invested 
about USD three million to provide vocational training and 
jobs to over 10,000 drug addicts who have been undergoing 
treatment at the city's detox centers.  The job creation 
program was launched by city authorities to help newly 
rehabilitated addicts get stable jobs and reintegrate into 
community life. 
 
92. (U) On July 19, 2004, the Government issued Decree 
No.146/ND-CP on stipulating procedures and authority to make 
decisions on the admission of recovering drug addicts to 
drug treatment centers for further rehabilitation and 
vocational training. 
 
-- Vice President Truong My Hoa asked the MOLISA to combine 
their rehabilitation programs with vocational training and 
employment generation for the effective rehabilitation of 
drug addicts at a working session held with the Ministry in 
Hanoi on September 14.  The Vice President also agreed with 
MOLISA's proposal to give preferential treatment to 
businesses and enterprises which have employed former drug 
addicts.  According to MOLISA, Vietnam now has 161,000 drug 
addicts.  Out of that number, 67 percent are under 30 and 
more than 66 percent are unemployed.  The country now has 80 
treatment centers, which can accommodate more than 40,000 
addicts.  About 70 - 80 percent of these centers provide 
vocational training.  However, only 10 - 18 percent of 
addicts find employment. 
 
-- The Ministry of Health approved new anti-drug medication, 
CEDEMEX, after a nine-year study.  On July 27, the MOH 
issued a decision to allow its use in drug treatment 
centers. Five million doses are scheduled to be produced by 
mid-2005. 
 
-- A research on the use of Naltrexone in drug treatment has 
been carried out in the Mental Health Institute in Bach Mai 
Hospital since 2002.  The number of patients receiving 
treatment on voluntary basis has increased from 46 to 200. 
 
-- The National Assembly's Committee on Social Affairs had a 
meeting on August 17 with the Ho Chi Minh City People's 
Committee and 70 businessmen who have made investments to 
support former drug addicts.  Ms. Hoai Thu, Chairwoman of 
the Commission, said the project would not wait for the 
National Assembly session, but would immediately prepare 
project reports and make proposals to facilitate the 
implementation of Ho Chi Minh City's drug treatment program. 
 
-- A workshop was organized on October 22 to review the 
results of a pilot drug rehabilitation program launched in 
Ho Chi Minh City last year.  Ms. Nguyen Thi Hang, Minister 
of Labor, Invalids and Social Affairs, said at the workshop 
that the three-year program has achieved satisfactory 
results after only one year of implementation.  The most 
remarkable result was the creation of jobs for recovering 
drug addicts after their two-year treatment, she added.  Ho 
Chi Minh City has spent more than USD 47 million to upgrade 
and build 18 drug centers capable of receiving around 30,000 
addicts. It has also developed 30 production workshops and 
farms at rehabilitation centers to provide employment for 
recovering addicts.  By August 2004, the city had provided 
medical treatment to 29,138 drug users at the treatment 
centers, jobs to 11,543 people who had received treatment 
and job training to 8,700 recovering drug users. 
 
-- The GVN asked other cities to replicate Ho Chi Minh 
City's drug treatment model following the positive results 
of the city's ongoing pilot drug program.  The Government 
asked leaders in Haiphong, Tay Ninh, Ba Ria-Vung Tau, Kien 
Giang, Quang Ninh and Nghe An to develop a similar drug 
rehabilitation and job creation scheme to help victims of 
drug addiction. 
 93. (SBU) According to a senior MOLISA official, Nguyen 
Minh Triet, Secretary of the Ho Chi Minh Municipal Party 
Committee, said publicly that he "would bet his political 
career on the success of the program," but the project has 
not been completely successful.  The MOLISA official pointed 
out that keeping the recovering addicts in "employment 
parks" is a way of applying administrative punishments 
through "detention" in a way that fails to ensure the 
detainees' human rights. 
 
94. (SBU) Vocational training in the centers remains uneven, 
ranging from fairly good to nonexistent.  In Yen Bai 
province, there is widespread participation in carpentry, 
tailoring, tree planting and construction training.  In 
Quang Nam Province (central Vietnam), on the other hand, 
there is no training available.  Staff training at the 
centers is generally limited to that which is on-the-job, 
due to lack of resources.  Neither of these problems is 
likely to be resolved in the foreseeable future.  Inadequate 
funding plagues drug treatment centers, similar to many 
other public institutions in Vietnam.  This does not appear 
to have changed during 2004.  On a more positive note, Ho 
Chi Minh City announced in September 2003 it would be adding 
nearly USD 800,000 to its anti-drug campaign, much of it 
aimed at drug awareness and treatment. 
 
95. (U) HIV/AIDS is a serious and growing problem in Vietnam 
and one that is closely related to intravenous drug use.  At 
least 60-70 percent of known HIV cases are related to 
injection drug use, and in some intravenous drug user (IDU) 
populations the HIV prevalence rate exceeds 80 percent, 
according to GVN statistics.  According to an October press 
report, Son La's spiraling HIV/AIDS rate is linked to the 
rise in drug use.  Officials from the province's Department 
of Health and Department of Social Evils Prevention said 
that the number of people living with HIV/AIDS has gone up 
rapidly in the province, with 101 of the total 201 communes 
reporting HIV cases.  According to the officials, the 
province ranks at the top in both the number of people 
living with HIV and drug addicts among northern mountainous 
provinces, which have reported a total of 1,433 HIV cases. 
By January 2004, there were 76,180 people living with HIV 
and 11,659 AIDS patients in the entire country.  Of the AIDS 
cases, 6,550 have died.  The cities and provinces which were 
hardest hit by the epidemic include Haiphong, Ho Chi Minh 
City, Quang Ninh, An Giang, Hanoi and Can Tho, accounting 
for 62 percent of newly identified cases in 2003.  (Note: 
these are also among the wealthiest and most urban areas of 
Vietnam.  End Note.) 
 
96. (U) During 2004, Vietnam continued its efforts to combat 
the HIV/AIDS epidemic through the following activities: 
 
-- On March 17, 2004, Prime Minister Phan Van Khai approved 
the National Strategy on HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control in 
Vietnam up to 2010 with a Vision to 2020.  The strategy 
gives a green light to harm reduction and supports expansion 
of clean needle and syringe programs and condom promotion; 
 
-- While Vietnam is calling for an increase in HIV/AIDS 
prevention funds from international donors, as it is only 
able now to meet 40 percent of its needs.  A recent inter- 
ministerial circular among the Ministries of Public 
Security, Finance, Interior and Labor, War Invalids and 
Social Affairs commits to a GVN allowance of USD 7.60 per 
month per person for HIV caregivers, including public health 
and education workers, prison wardens, policemen and guards. 
The country's HIV/AIDS funding will only be able to meet 
between 20 and 30 percent of its needs by 2010.  According 
to statistics released in March, Vietnam has a total of 
79,154 HIV carriers.  In addition, a recent decree by Prime 
Minister Khai decided to give a special allowance to army 
soldiers and national defense officials, who manage, 
educate, care for or give medical check-ups to people with 
HIV/AIDS.  Soldiers and national defense officials infected 
with HIV/AIDS on the job will get check-ups and treatment 
and enjoy preferential policies as "sick soldiers."  Part of 
the decree specifies that they will be recognized as martyrs 
when they die, which will entitle their families to extra 
benefits; 
 
-- On October 12 - 13 in Hanoi, the Ministry of Health (MOH) 
organized a workshop on management and implementation of a 
recent World Bank funded project to combat the HIV/AIDS 
epidemic in the country.  It was reported at the workshop 
that all funding sources now only meet 30 percent of the 
actual funding requirement; 
 
-- The United State Pacific Command (USPACOM) and the 
Vietnam People's Army co-organized a workshop on HIV 
prevention in the military between September 30 and October 
2, 2004, at Military Hospital 175 in Ho Chi Minh City.  U.S. 
Consul General Seth D. Winnick and more than 80 Vietnamese 
military medical officers attended the workshop, which aimed 
to increase education and awareness of the disease in the 
military.  Funding for the program came from the U.S. 
Department of Defense HIV/AIDS Prevention Program.  Earlier, 
USPACOM and the Vietnamese Ministry of Defense also held on 
April 12 a four-day training course on HIV/AIDS prevention 
in Hanoi for army health workers.  This was the first course 
of its kind for Vietnamese soldiers.  About 100 senior 
Vietnamese officers participated in the workshop; 
 
-- During "Innovation Day" on May 20, 51 ideas to fight 
HIV/AIDS from all corners of the country were presented. 
They were competing for start-up funds totaling USD 300,000. 
The two day event was organized by the World Bank in 
collaboration with the Ministry of Health and the United 
Nations Program on HIV/AIDS; 
 
-- There are currently over 50 peer groups participating in 
drug and HIV prevention activities in Hanoi, including 21 
`Friends Help Friends' groups, 19 `Brothers' groups and four 
`Sisters' groups.  The groups have encouraged and educated 
drug users to practice safe injection and receive treatment. 
Since 1998, over 684,000 disposable syringes and 500,000 
condoms have been distributed to the drug users, sex 
workers, bar girls and those who have multiple sex partners. 
 
-- In addition, the USG announced on June 23 that Vietnam 
had been selected as the 15th focus nation under the 
President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. (PEPFAR). 
 
97.  (U) Owing to efforts the GVN has made on the HIV/AIDS 
prevention front in 2004, the country has made progress in 
reducing the number of HIV/AIDS cases.  Examples: 
 
-- Dr. Le Truong Giang, Deputy Chairman of Ho Chi Minh 
City's AIDS Committee, said during a meeting on April 10 to 
set goals for HIV/AIDS prevention in 2004 that the initial 
successes of the city's pilot drug rehabilitation program, 
which aims to provide rehabilitation and vocational skills 
for 30,000 drug victims at detoxification centers, has had 
positive impact on HIV/AIDS control activities.  The city's 
AIDS Committee's statistics show the that proportion of drug 
users and sex workers who contracted HIV dropped by 16 
percent and nine percent, respectively, in 2003. 
 
-- Simultaneously, according to NCADP, for 2004, it is 
estimated that there are decreases of 33.2 percent in the 
number of people living with HIV, 17.4 percent in full-blown 
AIDS patients and 23 percent in AIDS-related deaths, as 
compared to the same period in 2003.  By October 2004, there 
were 84,925 people living with HIV throughout the country, 
of which 13,409 had developed full-blown AIDS and 7,677 have 
died. 
 
-- UNAIDS Deputy Executive Director Kathleen Cravero told 
Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Pham Gia Khiem in Hanoi on 
October 18 that Vietnam's national HIV prevention strategy, 
which targets prostitutes and addicts, should be replicated 
in other countries.  The GVN has divided up the work of AIDS 
prevention and treatment among several ministries, giving 
specific duties to each, but naming one to lead their 
collaboration in particular areas.  The new strategy also 
focuses on reaching sex workers and injecting drug users. 
 
-- In an interview with a "Tin Tuc" (Information) newspaper 
reporter at a seminar on HIV/AIDS situation in Vietnam to 
mark World AIDS Day, Mr. Mitchell Wolfe, Country Director of 
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 
Vietnam, emphasized that the Government of Vietnam, donors 
and NGOs need to focus on efforts to fight HIV/AIDS because 
lessons in other countries show that the epidemic may become 
worse in Vietnam in coming years.  Mr. Wolfe said the U.S. 
Government in FY 2005, from April 2005 to March 2006, will 
provide USD 25 million under the President's Emergency Plan 
For AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) to assist the fight against 
HIV/AIDS in Vietnam.  The assistance has risen significantly 
from USD 18 million in FY04.  He added that the assistance 
may rise further if HIV/AIDS prevention activities in 
Vietnam are implemented efficiently. 
 
98. (U) The World Bank has funded a USD 35 million project 
which aims to reduce HIV infection rate to less than 0.3 
percent in 20 provinces and cities.  According to an MOH 
report, Vietnam's HIV/AIDS control program also received 
another USD 5 million from the international community. 
 
99. (U) Vietnam has received USD 12 million in assistance 
from the United Nations Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS and 
provide training to health workers in the field.  The 
assistance will go toward increasing access to free 
specialized medical treatment and health care and 
information services. The number of patients receiving free 
medicine for HIV/AIDS treatment is expected to increase ten 
percent each year during the four-year program, said Dr. 
Nguyen Tran Chinh, a member of the Global Fund Project 
Managing Board.  The 20 target areas include Ho Chi Minh 
City, Hanoi, Haiphong and the provinces of Quang Ninh and An 
Giang.  Thanks to the funding, about 3,000 HIV patients from 
20 provinces and cities may enjoy free medical treatment, 
said an official for the Ministry of Public Health at a 
seminar on August 28 in Can Tho City.  The Chairman of the 
National Assembly's Committee on Social Affairs reported 
that there are some 81,000 people living with HIV across the 
country.  The Government has spent between VND 50 billion 
and 70 billion to control the illness, meeting only one 
percent of the demand for medical care.  5,000 HIV patients 
are reportedly in need of medical treatment, the Health 
Ministry reported; 
 
100. (U) An important agreement on a USG-funded project to 
help Ho Chi Minh City fight HIV/AIDS was signed on October 
22 by HCMC Consul General Seth Winnick and Ho Chi Minh City 
People's Committee Vice Chairman Nguyen Thanh Tai.  This new 
cooperative agreement between the USG and the Ho Chi Minh 
City People's AIDS Committee will provide approximately USD 
400,000 for increasing programs related to improving 
HIV/AIDS prevention, care, treatment and support services 
for vulnerable populations in Ho Chi Minh City from October 
2004 to September 2009.  This is the first cooperative 
agreement on HIV/AIDS undertaken directly by the United 
States and Ho Chi Minh City; 
 
-- Vietnamese people living with HIV may have a chance to 
buy retro-viral drugs at one tenth of the regular price, Dr. 
Trinh Quan Huan from the Ministry of Health said.  Under the 
William J. Clinton Presidential Foundation's program, a 
patient would pay USD 142 for one year of treatment 
involving three drugs.  Normally, the drug would cost USD 
580 for a year's worth, or USD 2000 for a three-drug 
cocktail.  Health Ministry officials said they would comply 
with the Foundation's restrictions. 
 
101. (U) USAID has a USD 4.5 million HIV/AIDS program 
(FY03), administered through several non-governmental 
organizations.  USAID's funding level will rise to USD nine 
million in 2004.  However, USAID has also recommended that 
the GVN "dramatically increase its commitment to fighting 
HIV/AIDS," including adopting additional national public 
health policies and a multi-sectoral approach. 
 
102. (U) CDC has a five-year USD ten million program with an 
ongoing HIV/AIDS technical assistance bilateral program 
through CDC/GAP.  There will be 40 provinces, over five 
years, receiving support to implement HIV interventions. 
According to CDC, during 2004, the GVN continued stronger 
support for HIV prevention programs, including voluntary 
counseling and testing (VCT) and community outreach in 
speeches and media.  Thus far, CDC has funded 37 anonymous 
MOH VCT programs in 32 provinces over the past two years, 
with plans to expand to 40 provinces with a total of 53 
sites by September 2005.  With these programs, more than 
26,500 persons have already been HIV-tested, of whom 22 
percent are HIV-infected.  CDC/GAP has also supported the 
MOH in implementing community outreach programs for IDUs and 
commercial sex workers (CSW) in provinces.  As of November 
2004, the program has been introduced and implemented in 28 
provinces. Trained peer educators have made over 40,000 
contacts with IDUs and CSWs, providing HIV prevention 
education and referral to VCT or other services.   The 
demonstration PMTCT (prevention of mother-to-child 
transmission) project has also been implemented in three 
provinces (Quang Ninh, Haiphong and Ho Chi Minh City).  In 
addition, CDC has provided technical assistance to the GVN 
to set up HIV outpatient clinics.  33 of 40 provinces have a 
clinic located in the Infectious Diseases Departments of 
provincial hospitals.  This model will be the foundation for 
anti-retroviral therapy once AIDS drugs are available for 
persons living with AIDS in Vietnam. On the GVN's part, some 
major cities (i.e., Ho Chi Minh City) have established 
additional VCT sites at local levels, and one VCT center 
supported by Family Health International (FHI) recently 
opened in Hanoi at the national Bach Mai hospital. 
 
103. (U) Since 1998, USAID funding totaling USD 17 million 
has supported a large-scale prevention, mitigation and care 
and support-focused HIV/AIDS program, predominantly through 
its Global IMPACT Project, implemented by Family Health 
International.  This program focuses its comprehensive 
interventions in three high-prevalence provinces, targeting 
high-risk groups.  Key partners include the MOH the 
provincial AIDS Committees, as well as CDC.  Additionally, 
USAID is supporting national policy development through the 
POLICY Project, including assistance to the GVN on its 
National HIV/AIDS strategy and its ordinance review.  USAID 
programs also support advocacy for people living with 
HIV/AIDS, a study on the impact of stigma and discrimination 
and the development of Leadership Advisory Groups to raise 
awareness and to reduce stigma and discrimination. 
 
104. (U) Planned or ongoing GVN actions include: 
 
-- Opening 20 VCT sites, with 15 more anticipated by the end 
of 2004; 
-- Three new peer education programs have been initiated, 13 
more were opened during 2003 and five more are anticipated 
by the end of 2004; 
-- Two new outpatient clinics for HIV care and treatment 
have been opened for diagnosis and management of 
opportunistic infections; 
-- 31 provinces currently support surveillance sites that 
monitor the spread of HIV/AIDS among a cross-section of the 
population; and, 
-- The GVN is working with the USG and other foreign donors 
in the areas of HIV management and care, diagnosis and 
management of opportunistic infections, and assessing the 
evidence for HIV prevention for injecting drug users.  Also 
included among this action are behavioral surveillance, 
stigma reduction and policy development and enforcement at 
the central level, as well as capacity building at the 
central and provincial government levels. 
U.S. POLICY INITIATIVES AND PROGRAMS 
------------------------------------- 
 
105. (U) In 2003, Vietnam and the U.S. completed and signed 
a bilateral counternarcotics agreement, which came into 
force in 2004.  The agreement included counternarcotics and 
law enforcement projects totaling USD 333,390.  It 
represents the first direct bilateral counternarcotics 
program assistance to Vietnam.  The USG currently funds 
training annually for some GVN law enforcement officers and 
other officials involved in the legal arena for courses at 
the International Law Enforcement Academy (ILEA) in Bangkok. 
During calendar year 2004, U.S. Embassy Hanoi sent 65 law 
enforcement officers for training at the Academy.  Between 
August 5 - 12, a one-week training course for Vietnamese 
counternarcotics officers by American officials, the first 
ever under the U.S.- Vietnam Letter of Agreement, was held 
in Hanoi.  The trainers are officials from the Customs and 
Border Protection, U.S. Department of Homeland Security. 
The thirty Vietnamese participants were from the Department 
of Customs; General Department of Police; anti-narcotics 
units of Danang, Haiphong, Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi under 
the Ministry of Public Security; Immigration Department; 
Airport Security Department; and Standing Office on Drug 
Control.  During the training course, experiences in anti- 
narcotic activities on the sea and on airplanes were shared 
with Vietnamese officers. 
 
106. (U) The USG also contributes to counternarcotics 
efforts through the UNODC.  During 2003, the USG made 
contributions to two projects: "Measures to Prevent and 
Combat Trafficking in Persons in Vietnam," and "Interdiction 
and Seizure Capacity Building with Special Emphasis on ATS 
and Precursors."  The ATS project achieved its main goals in 
2004 with the signing of an interagency MOU and the 
establishment of six interagency task forces at key border 
"hotspots" around the country. 
 
Other ongoing UNODC projects: 
 
-- National Drug Control Masterplan (USG contribution of USD 
100,000; Sweden and Italy are also donors).  This ongoing 
project is intended to assist the NCADP to develop a 2001- 
2010 masterplan for controlling drugs.  According to SODC, 
the Plan is now ready for the Prime Minister's approval; 
 
-- Ky Son Phase Two, a socio-economic development project to 
replace opium poppy cultivation. (USG contribution of USD 
635,000; Germany, Luxemburg, Sweden and Japan are also 
donors.)  This project began in 2002 and is intended to 
build on the success of Phase One in establishing drug 
demand reduction programs among ethnic minority people in a 
remote area of Nghe An Province, adjacent to the Lao border. 
The three project components include community development, 
alternative development and infrastructure development. 
 
--  Project Vie/B85 on the prevention of drug abuse among 
ethnic minorities in northern Vietnam (Son La, Lai Chau and 
Lao Cai); 
 
--  Vie/03/G61 on strengthening the existing working models 
and establishing a new innovative partnership with local 
NGOs for community-based prevention of high-risk behavior 
related to IDU (coordinated by UNAIDS); 
 
-- Project R21 on Trafficking in Persons (the United States 
is one of the donors). 
 
The Road Ahead 
-------------- 
 
107. (SBU) The GVN is acutely aware of the threat of drugs 
and Vietnam's increasing domestic drug problem.  However, 
there is continued suspicion of foreign law enforcement 
assistance and/or intervention, especially from the United 
States, in the counternarcotics arena.  This is one of the 
factors impeding progress in counternarcotics law 
enforcement.  During 2004, as in previous years, the GVN 
made progress with ongoing and new initiatives aimed at the 
law enforcement and social problems that stem from the 
illegal drug trade.  Notwithstanding a lack of meaningful 
operational cooperation with DEA, the GVN continued to show 
a willingness to take unilateral action against drugs and 
drug trafficking.  Vietnam still faces many internal 
problems that make fighting drugs a challenge.  With the 
conclusion of the counternarcotics LOA, the USG can look 
forward to enhanced counternarcotics cooperation in the area 
of assistance to Vietnamese law enforcement agencies. 
Operational cooperation, however, remains on hold pending 
the development of a legal framework in Vietnam to allow 
foreign law enforcement officers to carry out operations on 
Vietnamese soil, or the signing of a bilateral agreement 
between the United States and Vietnam that would create a 
mechanism for joint investigation and development of drug 
cases.  Neither the legal overhaul nor the bilateral 
agreement seem likely to occur in the short term. 
 
STATISTICS 
---------- 
 
108.  (U) BELOW ARE OFFICIAL 2004 VIETNAM DRUG STATISTICS 
PROVIDED BY SODC.  THE FIGURES REPRESENT THE PERIOD BETWEEN 
NOVEMBER 2003 AND NOVEMBER 2004. 
 
109.  (U)  BEGIN TEXT, INCSR SUMMARY TABLES. 
 
SUMMARY TABLES FOR THREE YEARS 
 
-- 1. COCA.  VIETNAM PRODUCED NO COCA IN 2003 OR PREVIOUS 
YEARS. 
 
-- 2. POTENTIAL COCA LEAF.  NOT APPLICABLE TO VIETNAM. 
 
-- 3. OPIUM. 
 
STATISTICAL TABLE 
 
DRUG CULTIVATION (HECTARES)   2004      2003      2002 
 
HARVESTABLE CULTIVATION       32.5      94        315 
ERADICATION                   32.5      94        315 
POPPY HARVESTED (SEEDS)       0         0         0 
 
-- 4.  POTENTIAL OPIUM GUM.  NOT AVAILABLE. 
 
-- 5.  CANNABIS.  SODC ADMITS CANNABIS CULTIVATION IN 
VIETNAM'S SOUTHERN PROVINCES OF DONG NAI, AN GIANG AND DONG 
THAP. HOWEVER, THE AREA IS RELATIVELY SMALL.  SODC HAS NO 
FIGURE AVAILABLE ON HOW MANY HECTARES OF CANNABIS PLANTS 
WERE UPROOTED IN THESE PROVINCES.  CANNABIS ALSO ENTERS 
VIETNAM FROM CAMBODIA. 
 
-- 6.  POTENTIAL CANNABIS YIELD.  NOT APPLICABLE. 
 
-- 7.  DRUG SEIZURES IN KILOGRAMS: 
 
STATISTICAL TABLE 
 
SEIZURES           2004            2003           2002 
 
A. COCA LEAF       N/A        N/A            N/A 
B. COCAINE PASTE   N/A        N/A            N/A 
C. COCAINE BASE    N/A        N/A            N/A 
D. COCAINE HCL     N/A        N/A            N/A 
E/F.OPIUM          58.6            254.3          462.62 
G. HEROIN          240        239.8          53.87 
H. CANNABIS        1,021      329.3          234.6 
I. OTHERS, BY UNITS 
(TUBES OF ADDICTIVE DRUGS)         5,520 
(DOSES OF HEROIN)             21,540 
(ATS)                         39,400 
 
-- 8.  ILLICIT LABS.  DURING 2004, SODC REPORTED NO LABS 
BEING DESTROYED. 
 
-- 9.  DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION OF ILLICIT DRUGS.  NO AVAILABLE 
STATISTICS. 
 
-- 10.  ARRESTS. 
 
STATISTICAL TABLE 
 
NUMBER OF ARRESTS BY NUMBER OF CASES/NUMBER OF PERSONS 
ARRESTED. 
 
2004            2003               2002 
 
12,000/18,260       10,000/16,000       11,057/17,873 
 
-- 11.  USERS. 
 
STATISTICAL TABLE 
 
NUMBER OF REGISTERED DRUG ADDICTS 
 
2004                2003                     2002 
 
161,000             152,900                  131,000 
 
 
BOARDMAN