Updated 12:47 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

Opinion|Mon, Sep. 03 2007 10:42 AM EDT

Vietnam – Persecution Has Not Ended

By Carl Moeller|Christian Post Contributor

Vin Y Het, a young Hroi ethnic minority man who refused to recant his Christian faith, died from injuries received while under official interrogation by Vietnamese police, Compass Direct News reported in June.

The death of Het took place when Vietnamese President Nguyen Minh Triet met with U.S. officials. Triet met with President Bush in Washington, D.C., on June 22 amid protests over Vietnam’s human rights violations.

From Son Hoa district in the costal province of Phu Yen in south-central Vietnam, Het died from internal injuries suffered when officials beat him several months earlier for refusing to deny his Christian faith, Compass reported.

This incident – and others – stoked the heated, on-going debate regarding the intensity of persecution – better or worse – in Vietnam after the United States State Department took Vietnam off the “Countries of Particular Concern (CPC)” list last fall. The list includes counties like North Korea, China and Saudi Arabia which have the poorest religious freedom records. Vietnam was added to the list in 2004 for its repression of religious groups, mainly Protestants.

This May the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom recommended to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice that Vietnam be place back on the 2007 CPC list, which will be released this fall.

In its recommendation, the Commission stated: “Since the CPC designation was lifted and Vietnam joined the World Trade Organization (WTO), positive religious freedom trends have, for the most part, stalled, and Vietnam has initiated a severe crackdown on human rights defenders and advocates for the freedoms of speech, association and assembly, including many religious leaders who previously were the leading advocates for religious freedom in that country.

“Given the recent deterioration of human rights conditions in Vietnam and because of continued abuses of and restrictions on religious freedom, the Commission continues to believe that the lifting of the CPC designation was premature. We recommend that Vietnam be re-designated as a CPC in 2007.”

Church leaders of both unregistered and legally recognized groups in Vietnam, contacted on the eve of their president’s visit to Washington, unanimously called on their government to resume and accelerate the registration of congregations and move toward “regularizing” religion.

This process slowed considerably after Vietnam fulfilled its wish list from the United States – removal from the U.S. religious liberty blacklist, a state visit by President Bush, and U.S. support for membership in the WTO. Hundreds of applications by local congregations for registration, all carefully following government protocol, have gone unanswered in spite of legislative promises to reply within a set time, according to Compass.

Many believe Vietnam – an emerging economic powerhouse – has opened up to the world and that there is now little persecution. They may have not have stopped long enough to look and listen. Vietnam is not just comprised of the cities that are featured in travel and leisure shows. Hidden to the rest of the world are the rural villages in the north and in the Central Highlands, and access to them continues to be denied by the government. This is where most of the persecution is taking place, according to an Open Doors report. Continue »

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