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Viewing cable 05HANOI3256, Codel Chris Smith Discusses Human Rights, TIP with

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
05HANOI3256 2005-12-13 03:25 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 06 HANOI 003256 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
STATE FOR EAP/MLS, H/EAP 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PREL PGOV PHUM OVIP VM TIP HUMANR RELFREE APEC ASEAN
SUBJECT:  Codel Chris Smith Discusses Human Rights, TIP with 
Senior Vietnamese Representatives 
 
1. (SBU) Summary:  Visiting Congressman (and vice-Chairman 
of the House International Relations Committee) Christopher 
Smith (R-NJ) met with two of Vietnam's most seasoned America 
experts, Vice Foreign Minister Le Van Bang and National 
Assemblywoman Madame Ton Nhu Thi Ninh in separate meetings. 
Congressman Smith engaged head-on with both on the issues of 
human rights, religious freedom, trafficking in persons, POW- 
MIAs, Vietnam's two-child per couple policy, and Vietnam's 
development.  Bang and Ninh both asked Congressman Smith to 
consider Vietnam's political situation in the context of 
Vietnam's emergence from years of war and relatively recent 
openness to the world.  Congressman Smith asked Bang and 
Ninh for aggressive steps to implement religious freedom 
laws and protect the human rights of Vietnam's citizens.  It 
was in every way a frank exchange of views.  Both 
Congressman Smith and the Ambassador raised specific human 
rights cases, including Nam Liem and an incident December 1 
involving dissident Hoang Minh Chinh and an angry mob 
(reported septel).  End Summary. 
 
Trafficking in Persons 
---------------------- 
 
2. (SBU) Congressman Chris Smith (R-NJ) met Vice Foreign 
Minister Le Van Bang at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs 
December 2.  Noting that this was his third visit to Vietnam 
since 1984, Congressman Smith praised the positive 
developments in bilateral relations and the successful visit 
of Prime Minister Phan Van Khai to Washington, and added 
that his own most important issues are human rights and 
humanitarian efforts.  He advised VFM Bang that he is the 
author of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act that 
created the Trafficking in Persons Report, and urged Vietnam 
to do more to work with the United States to stop 
traffickers.  Bang replied that Vietnam "totally supports" 
the United States position in condemning trafficking in 
persons and wants to address TIP as a "joint venture" with 
the United States.  Vietnam takes TIP seriously and 
recognizes that it is impossible to combat TIP alone.  "We 
need to cooperate with you, with Cambodia, China and 
Singapore, among others," he said.  Congressman Smith noted 
that the United States continues to have concerns about the 
fate of the workers who were abused in the 1999 Kil Soo 
Lee/Daewoosa labor trafficking case.  Bang replied that 
export labor is a fact of life in a country with high 
unemployment and a relatively low level of economic 
development like Vietnam.  Vietnam's challenge is to learn 
to take advantage of the economic opportunities represented 
by labor export while not allowing Vietnamese laborers to be 
exploited, he stressed. 
 
Religious Freedom 
----------------- 
 
3. (SBU) Congressman Smith said he and others in the USG are 
glad that the GVN has faced the issue of forced 
renunciations of faith and religious freedom.  Vietnam must 
now focus on implementation of the law at all levels, 
respecting the right of all Vietnamese to believe or not 
believe as they wish.  Congressman Smith continued that, 
while he understands that religious persecution is not legal 
in Vietnam, there have been no instances of officials being 
punished or held accountable when they have violated 
Vietnamese laws and regulations protecting religious belief. 
Bang encouraged Congressman Smith to meet with as many 
citizens and religious leaders as possible to learn about 
the religious developments in Vietnam.  "In the past, when 
this was a stricter society and a command economy, freedom 
of religion was a problem.  Now, however, we have opened up 
and we recognize that belief is important and a fundamental 
freedom.  This has been expressed in the ordinance on 
religion and in the decree implementing that ordinance." 
Local officials should, of course, follow the ordinance and 
the laws of Vietnam, Bang said.  "On the whole, Vietnam's 
religious freedom environment has changed.  One can go to 
churches, pagodas or religious schools.  New places of 
worship and old ones that have been rehabilitated abound, 
and there are almost 20 million believers in Vietnam."  Bang 
described a ceremony a few days before in which 57 new 
Catholic priests were ordained as an example of religious 
developments. 
 
4. (SBU) Bang acknowledged that, at the local level, "people 
move more slowly."  At the moment, he said, the GVN is 
working on a request to require local governments to report 
to the central government on their progress in implementing 
the ordinance and PM's instruction on religion.  This 
exercise will demonstrate the central government's 
seriousness and will force local authorities to study the 
new legislation, he added.  Congressman Smith commented that 
in Vietnam, leaders often say one thing while localities do 
another. 
 
5. (SBU) Bang confessed that in Vietnam, there remain 
problems between religions that can undermine political 
stability.  "We are working on accommodating the concerns 
you have raised, which is what explains the release of such 
figures as Nguyen Dan Que and Father Ly," he said.  "But we 
have a problem with religions being exploited by politically 
unscrupulous individuals for negative ends, totally at odds 
with religious purposes."  He said that Vietnam looks at the 
volatile situation in southern Thailand as an example of 
what happens when politics and religion mix and merge 
freely.  Congressman Smith said that while the United States 
shares Vietnam's concerns about religions being used as a 
pretext for political violence, those who do that are a 
small minority of believers.  "There is a place for people 
of faith to talk about politics and policy," Congressman 
Smith said, "and this is a way for the people in power to 
learn and for the government to improve."  Differing policy 
opinions are not the problem, Bang responded.  Political 
instability is a problem, which is one reason why the GVN 
has a policy of not using violence against people and 
crowds.  Democracy in Vietnam is a "step-by-step process," 
he said. 
 
Central Highlands 
----------------- 
 
6. (SBU) Congressman Smith asked Bang if Vietnam would 
consider taking "bold steps" to reconcile with those who 
feel that they are at odds with the GVN, such as the ethnic 
minority populations of the Central Highlands.  Bang said 
that the GVN has a policy of reconciliation and 
accommodation, which is what drives the GVN's willingness 
and desire to work with the USG to unify families from that 
region which have been split.  "We don't want them to have 
to go to Cambodia or elsewhere for months and years before 
they can join family members in the United States, if there 
is a way we can help them go directly there," Bang 
explained. 
 
Abortion and Family Planning 
---------------------------- 
 
7. (SBU) Congressman Smith told VFM Bang he is deeply 
concerned about the prevalence of abortion in the world, but 
particularly Asia, where sex-selection abortions have 
resulted in huge imbalances in the numbers of boys and girls 
in India and China, among other places.  Bang said Vietnam 
shares Congressman Smith's concern about this issue, noting 
that China's girl deficit has fueled trafficking of women 
from Vietnam to China for the purposes of marrying Chinese 
men who cannot find wives themselves.  With 1.5 million new 
births a year, Vietnam's population pressures are intense, 
Bang continued, and Vietnam has no choice but to pursue 
serious measures to address population growth.  Preventing 
abortions is a noble goal, Bang said; a far better solution 
than abortion is to provide the social and financial methods 
and resources to prevent unwanted pregnancies in the first 
place.  With that in mind, the GVN has hopes that some of 
the effort and money being expended in Vietnam on HIV/AIDS 
prevention will bring access to contraception to vulnerable 
and poor rural areas that currently lack it.  This will also 
have a beneficial impact on the health of women, Bang 
continued, because of the negative impact of multiple 
abortions on the long-term health of women.  Vietnam wants 
very much to avoid the use of abortion while addressing real 
population growth problems, he concluded. 
 
Other Issues 
------------ 
 
8. (SBU) Bang provided a rosy review of Vietnam's recent 
economic achievements, capped with the analysis that 
"people, and countries, are freer when they are economically 
and financially independent."  Economic well-being for 
countries and individuals is "empowering," Bang said, and 
with that in mind, he hopes that Congressman Smith, with his 
well-documented concern for Vietnam's human rights 
situation, will be a strong supporter of Vietnam's bid for 
WTO entry and of Permanent Normal Trading Relations (PNTR) 
between Vietnam and the United States.  Congressman Smith 
replied that religious freedom is also a concern when 
evaluating Vietnam's human rights record. 
 
9. (SBU) Bang told Congressman Smith that Vietnam remains 
"very worried" about developments in Asia and Southeast 
Asia.  Sino-Japanese relations, he said, have deteriorated 
seriously, to the point where the countries are beginning to 
look like enemies.  Vietnam, a much smaller and weaker 
country than Japan, could not possibly resist China more 
effectively than Japan can, he said.  Southeast Asia as a 
whole is both changing and under pressure from "new sources 
and countries."  This is driving ASEAN's and Vietnam's 
effort to develop and improve relations with "all other 
countries."  With this in mind, Vietnam appreciates very 
highly President Bush's statement to ASEAN leaders made 
during the recent APEC Summit in South Korea.  "Working 
closely with the United States is important for Vietnam, and 
ASEAN, to avoid the development of an imbalance in our 
international relations," Bang said.  (Note:  This is 
standard Le Van Bang code for encouraging us to match 
China's diplomatic and other overtures in the region.  End 
Note.) 
10. (SBU) "We hope to keep APEC growing," Bang said, "even 
though some countries want to shrink APEC in order to expand 
other organizations that are not as inclusive."  He said 
Vietnam is watching the ASEAN+1 process closely, as is 
Indonesia, Singapore and the Philippines, to avoid any 
developments that could weaken ASEAN. 
 
11. (SBU) Congressman Smith raised the issue of POW-MIA 
fullest possible accounting operations.  He said Vietnam's 
cooperation on this issue has been "tremendous," but that 
more remains to be done, particularly in the areas of 
archival research and underwater recovery.  Bang noted that 
Vietnam's commitment to working with the United States on 
this issue has never faltered, no matter what the state of 
bilateral relations, but that the United States should 
endeavor to "create the environment for continuing 
productive results." 
 
Dissident Cases 
--------------- 
 
12.  (SBU) Congressman Smith expressed his concern that 
Vietnamese dissidents who spoke with the International 
Relations Committee or who were mentioned by the 
International Relations Committee have been sentenced to 
long prison terms.  He mentioned in particular Father Ly 
(subsequently amnestied) and more recently, Hoa Hao activist 
Nam Liem, and requested Bang deliver a letter to PM Khai 
which included a list of prisoners of concern which should 
be freed. 
 
13. (SBU) The Ambassador contributed his own concern about 
an incident involving mob intimidation of (and possible 
violence against) dissident Hoang Minh Chinh the day before 
(septel).  That a mob was able to threaten, damage the 
property of, and commit violence against Chinh without the 
intervention of the police until much later sends a very 
strong negative signal, the Ambassador said, and would 
result in negative international attention to Vietnam's 
human rights record.  He asked Bang to keep that in mind and 
encourage the GVN to ensure that those who committed violent 
acts were punished under the law.  Bang said he did not know 
about the incident involving Chinh, but said that a similar 
incident where a vice minister accompanying Prime Minister 
Khai on his trip to the United States was assaulted and 
punched in the face on a Washington street was of GVN 
concern.  Bang said he heard that the perpetrator in that 
incident would not face criminal charges, a result that 
would not be taken well in Vietnam.  (Note:  Bang's 
information is incorrect.  This case is unresolved.  End 
Note.) 
 
Meeting with Madam Ninh 
----------------------- 
 
14. (SBU) Congressman Smith, accompanied by the Ambassador, 
subsequently met with Madam Ton Nu Thi Ninh, Vice Chairwoman 
of the National Assembly's Foreign Relations Committee.  She 
was joined by Luong Phan Cu, Vice Chairman of the Social 
Affairs Committee.  Congressman Smith opened by noting that, 
among his Republican and Democratic colleagues in Congress, 
the issue of religious freedom is an important one, and 
Congressman Smith recently chaired hearings on the situation 
in Vietnam.  Although there has been progress, continued 
forced renunciations are an outrage.  Changes in Vietnam's 
legal framework on religion, including the Prime Minister's 
February 2005 Instruction on Protestantism, give hope that 
forced renunciations will cease, but implementation of the 
Instruction and other laws is key.  Law enforcement and 
other officials who violate Vietnam's laws need to be held 
accountable. 
 
TIP: Round Two 
-------------- 
 
15. (SBU) Another issue of concern is trafficking in persons 
(TIP), which is an area in which the United States and 
Vietnam need to work together more closely, Congressman 
Smith continued.  This is a worldwide crime in which 
organized criminal groups move quickly and succeed by buying 
off officials.  The United States is committed to ending 
this modern-day slavery, and we try to provide shelter and 
give asylum to victims.  The Congressman described the new 
trafficking legislation in which military activities such as 
peacekeeping operations are more closely scrutinized to 
ensure that trafficking and other crimes against women are 
prevented.  The United States is prepared to work with the 
GVN and the National Assembly to end this international 
scourge, but one issue of concern is that the victims of the 
American Samoa Daewoosa case were never compensated as 
promised, the Congressman said. 
 
16. (SBU) Madam Ninh described in familiar terms Vietnam's 
commitment to human rights for its people, adding that the 
term "human rights" is a new one for Vietnam.  Fighting for 
independence from the French and granting universal suffrage 
were matters of fact, although no one at the time considered 
these to be human rights issues.  At one point, developed 
societies like the United States and those in Western Europe 
concerned themselves with the rights of the majority, but 
now they are able to focus on the rights of minorities, both 
at home and in other countries.  Vietnam's priorities are 
different, however, and that is a fact that the United 
States and others should respect, she said. 
 
17. (SBU) For Vietnam, trafficking in persons is one price 
to pay for integrating into the world community, Madam Ninh 
continued.  Although Vietnam will never backtrack on the 
course it has set for itself, it nonetheless needs to work 
harder to address the negative aspects of opening up.  The 
GVN realizes that TIP is an important issue and has 
established an interagency mechanism, led by the Ministry of 
Public Security, to deal with it and cooperate with 
international organizations and non-governmental 
organizations, including American ones such as the Asia 
Foundation.  Vietnam has taken note of its status as a Tier 
2 country and has made efforts to increase public awareness 
of the issue and raise the awareness of lawmakers as well. 
Vietnam has also sought to cooperate with its neighbors and 
within ASEAN to address the problem of trafficked women and 
also to better educate women who would go to Taiwan as 
brides. 
 
18. (SBU) "I recognize that more needs to be done, but the 
language in your bill (HR 3190, the Vietnam Human Rights Act 
of 2005) that implies that our Government officials are 
complicit in trafficking activities offends me," Madam Ninh 
said.  There may be cases of corrupt policemen turning a 
blind eye to trafficking, but to imply that there is active 
cooperation is wrong.  "More care needs to be taken in what 
language you use to describe the situation here," she urged. 
 
19. (SBU) The United States would like to see more 
transparency on Vietnam's part, Congressman Smith said, in 
not only addressing trafficking but other issues, such as 
religious freedom.  It is true that in western societies the 
majority does rule, but the United States has learned much 
from its experience with slavery and the period in which 
people were separate but unequal; focusing on the majority 
at the expense of the minority will not do.  The problem of 
trafficking in persons is in indeed part of opening up to 
the world, and it has particularly become a problem since 
the breakup of the Soviet Union.  Now, Russian gangs have 
been released on to the world and traffickers are looking to 
traffic Vietnamese women, Congressman Smith said. 
 
"Abortion Only A Last Resort" 
----------------------------- 
 
20. (SBU) The Congressman highlighted his commitment to 
defending the rights of unborn children, noting that this is 
the issue that initiated his commitment to human rights 
issues.  In China and India, there is a huge problem of sex- 
selection abortions, and with 60 million girls in India and 
100 million girls in China missing because of this, there 
will be a magnet effect for brides from Vietnam and 
elsewhere.  Sex-selection abortion is a gender crime and a 
serious human rights problem, Congressman Smith underlined. 
 
21. (SBU) Vietnam's Ministry of Health has issued an 
instruction whereby doctors cannot inform the parents of the 
sex of their unborn child, Madam Ninh observed.  Although 
Vietnam's problem is not as severe as that of other 
countries, the Government is aware that there might be a 
tendency to abort girls and has taken steps to address this. 
In Vietnam, the right to abortion exists, but, from the 
point of view of women's health, the GVN does not look 
favorably upon careless abortion.  Family planning is 
considered to be the preferred approach, with abortion as a 
"last resort," Madam Ninh explained. 
 
The Broader Relationship 
------------------------ 
 
22. (SBU) Turning to the issue of religious freedom, Madam 
Ninh noted that she is aware of Congressman Smith's recent 
press statement on conditions in Vietnam, but disagrees with 
his observation that the situation is deteriorating. 
Clearly, both of them would have to agree to disagree on 
this matter, but hopefully the Congressman shared the view 
that, for the sake of the bilateral relationship, both sides 
should make efforts to narrow their differences.  If the 
Congressman does not value the precious ties that the United 
States and Vietnam now enjoy, then meeting like this is a 
waste of time.  The same would be true if Vietnam insisted 
on seeking information from the United States on certain 
aspects of Guantanamo Bay.  In fact, Vietnam allows U.S. 
officials and representatives to visit certain "undesirable" 
individuals living in Vietnam.  Explaining that she is 
agnostic, Madam Ninh said that she nonetheless respects the 
Congressman's views and beliefs and stressed that she can 
help to advance the bilateral relationship by being 
respectful, but candid. 
 
23. (SBU) The bilateral relationship is very important to 
Vietnam and is important, at least symbolically, to the 
United States as well, Madam Ninh continued.  There are many 
areas in which the two sides can cooperation, such as TIP, 
trade, security, HIV/AIDS and adoptions, to name a few.  In 
the case of adoptions, the GVN's decision to reach an 
adoptions agreement with the United States was based on the 
recognition that certain Vietnamese children would be better 
off in the United States.  Hopefully someday Vietnamese 
parents will be able to adopt these children, but, for now, 
Vietnam's policy sought to do what is best for the children, 
she stressed. 
 
24. (SBU) The fact that, 30 years after the end of the war, 
the United States and Vietnam have been able to reach the 
point they are at today is remarkable, Madam Ninh 
underlined.  This is a relationship worth nurturing, and 
there is room for cooperating and narrowing the two sides' 
differences, which is a sentiment Madam Ninh said she hopes 
Congressman Smith shares.  The extent of the two sides' 
differences are not such that that they cannot move forward 
together, and both have to accept a certain amount of 
accommodation for each other's differences and realities. 
For example, the United States has sought Vietnam's 
cooperation in the fullest possible accounting of those lost 
in the war, and of course Vietnam has reacted positively. 
In response, however, whenever the issue of Agent Orange is 
raised, why is it that the United States insists on falling 
back on the argument that the science is inadequate, Madam 
Ninh asked.  Some sort of U.S. gesture to show its concern 
about Vietnam's losses would be welcome, Madam Ninh 
stressed. 
 
25. (SBU) American veterans received compensation for Agent 
Orange, a cause that Congressman Smith himself championed, 
Madam Ninh observed.  The United States should thus be in a 
position to acknowledge that those who have lived with 
dioxin for decades also have been harmed and deserve 
compensation.  Congressman Smith responded that the first 
bill he worked on was on Agent Orange, and that the U.S. had 
stopped using the substance because of "presumptive 
disability".  It will be important for the United States and 
Vietnam to cooperate with each other to understand the 
damage Agent Orange has caused from an environmental point 
of view.  It is clear that dioxin does cause problems, but 
to research further into this requires bilateral 
cooperation.  Explaining that his religious beliefs have led 
him to defend those who cannot defend themselves, 
Congressman Smith said that he simlarly criticized the 
incidents involving Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay.  Human 
rights organizations such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty 
International are very critical of the United States and 
what happened in these places, and those who were involved 
in these cases have been punished.  Significantly, once the 
USG recognized that there was a problem, it took steps to 
fix it and ensure that it never happens again, Congressman 
Smith stressed. 
 
Freedom of Religion Vs. National Unity 
-------------------------------------- 
 
26. (SBU) Vietnam should take steps to allow faith-based 
groups to participate more actively in social and charitable 
activities, Congressman Smith urged.  Madam Ninh responded 
that, in Hue, the Congressman's next stop, Catholics and 
Buddhists work together to care for people living with 
HIV/AIDS.  Vietnam's Ordinance on Religion and Belief, which 
allows for a greater role for religious groups, went through 
"dozens of revisions" in the National Assembly, Madam Ninh 
said.  Some have criticized that this law still seeks too 
much Government control of religion.  However, in a society 
that is in flux, guidelines are necessary, otherwise it is 
too easy for officials and others to take arbitrary actions. 
U.S. laws have evolved over time, and there is no reason to 
doubt that this religion law will be revised as conditions 
in Vietnam change.  The greatest challenge will be in how 
the law is implemented and enforced, because some local 
officials are unaware of the law or reluctant to enforce it, 
Madam Ninh said. 
 
27. (SBU) It seems that, within Vietnam's legal framework on 
religion, there is a line that, if crossed, will get someone 
arrested, Congressman Smith responded.  If someone speaks 
out or speaks his or her mind, then there will be trouble. 
For example, Hoa Hao Buddhist Nam Liem submitted written 
testimony to a Congressman Smith-chaired Congressional 
hearing on Vietnam in June 2005, and Liem was arrested in 
September and sentenced to six years in prison.  Vietnam's 
law also makes reference to "national unity."  Diversity and 
a diversity of opinions should lead to unity.  Why not let 
people have beliefs as they see fit, Congressman Smith 
asked. 
 
28. (SBU) Noting that she will never be able to convince 
Congressman Smith, Madam Ninh responded that, for Vietnam, 
it is not an issue of faith but an issue of national 
security.  National unity is not a slogan or an expedient. 
Vietnam has paid a high price to unify, and anything that 
will undermine its unity is not welcome.  Vietnam wants to 
reconcile with overseas Vietnamese, particularly those in 
the United States.  However, some of these groups and 
individuals have discovered their human rights and democracy 
vocations very recently.  "I was in Saigon from 1973 to 
1975.  Where were many of these people?  What were they 
doing then?  They are only active now because they lost 
their country," Madam Ninh said.  She concluded by urging 
Congressman Smith to seek to hear both sides of the story: 
"It offends us that you only listen to Human Rights Watch or 
other groups without hearing our side of the story, too," 
she said. 
 
29. (SBU) Asked to comment, Vice Chairman Cu noted that, in 
drafting the new ordinance on religion, the National 
Assembly sought the opinions of all religious groups and 
stakeholders.  Since its promulgation, these same groups 
have praised its implementation, but there are also areas 
for improvement.  The National Assembly is working with 
relevant GVN agencies and counterparts in neighboring 
countries to combat TIP, with the goal of eventually 
eliminating it.  The Social Affairs Committee is also 
committed to strengthening the reproductive health of women 
and encouraging family planning on a voluntary basis. 
Finally, the Committee is working to alleviate the suffering 
of victims of Agent Orange, Cu noted. 
 
30. (U) Congressman Smith has cleared this message. 
 
MARINE