Evidence of meeting #75 for Subcommittee on International Human Rights in the 41st Parliament, 2nd Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was nguyen.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Khue-Tu Nguyen  Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation
Thang Nguyen  President and Chief Executive Officer, Boat People SOS
Dieu Cay  Blogger, As an Individual

1:05 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

I now call the meeting to order.

Welcome to the 75th meeting of the Subcommittee on International Human Rights of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development. Today is June 4, 2015, and our meeting is being televised.

Colleagues, this is another meeting where we are looking at the human rights situation in Vietnam. We have two witnesses with us in the room today, Khue-Tu Nguyen, who's the commissioner for human rights for the Vietnamese Canadian Federation, and Thang Nguyen, the president and chief executive officer of Boat People SOS. Also with us by video conference from Los Angeles is Dieu Cay, a blogger.

If it's okay with the witnesses, we will simply take you in the order given here. I'm sure you've been briefed by our clerk that you should each give a relatively brief submission. I know that you have a lot to say, but once we've gone through all of the submissions, we'll then determine how much time is left and divide up the number of questions among the members of Parliament based on how much time we have.

Let's begin, then, with Ms. Nguyen, s'il vous plaît.

1:05 p.m.

Khue-Tu Nguyen Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation

Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members of the Subcommittee on International Human Rights.

As Mr. Chair has asked, we would like to start with Dr. Nguyen Thang's address first.

1:05 p.m.

Dr. Thang Nguyen President and Chief Executive Officer, Boat People SOS

Mr. Chairman and distinguished members of the subcommittee.

Last year I appeared before the subcommittee to address the trafficking of Vietnamese workers in some 40 countries across the globe, such as Malaysia, Taiwan, Jordan, France, England, Cyprus, and even America, and Algeria, Ghana, and many other countries.

This form of modern day slavery is rooted in the Vietnamese government's official labour export program. Today I would like to address the broader issue of workers' rights in the context of the ongoing negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, TPP, in which Canada is a negotiating partner.

In early 2014, we invited the mother of Do Thi Minh Hanh to testify before the U.S. Congress. Do Thi Minh Hanh is a labour union organizer. She was serving a prison sentence for her efforts to organize labour unions in Vietnam. That hearing and effective advocacy by labour unions galvanized close to 200 U.S. members of Congress to make the right of Vietnamese workers to form free and independent trade unions a major component of the TPP agreement.

Last month, even President Obama publicly stated that that is the precondition for Vietnam joining the TPP. Vietnam is the only TPP negotiating partner that outlaws free and independent labour unions. All organizers of independent labour unions in Vietnam have either been imprisoned or fled to other countries to avoid arrest.

Twelve months ago, we launched a campaign to make religious freedom an objective of TPP negotiations. On May 22, just a few weeks ago, the U.S. Senate passed the trade promotion authority, also known as fast track, with specific language that sets religious freedom as one of the trade negotiation's priorities.

We are urging the U.S. House of Representatives right now to adopt the same amendment. If signed into law, this will be the first time in U.S. history that religious freedom will be an objective of trade negotiations. This is particularly important because TPP will not be just another trade agreement, as its name implies; TPP will also send a message to the world that its members regard each other as trusted partners.

As such, TPP membership should not be extended to governments that brutally repress religion. The repression of religion is ongoing in Vietnam. Forced renunciation of faith is still commonplace in many provinces. Catholicism is practically outlawed in the three northern provinces of Dien Bien, Son La, and Lai Chau. Religious leaders and followers have been physically assaulted, or even tortured—some of them to death.

We estimate that some 150 to 200 people are currently in prison because of their faith. The Vietnamese national assembly is considering the country's first law on religion. Its current draft stipulates that all religious group activities, even in private homes, must be pre-registered with and approved by the government.

It will be hard for the U.S. government or any government in the free world to justify becoming a partner of such a repressive regime. I therefore urge the Canadian House of Commons through this committee to support our efforts to use the ongoing trade negotiations as leverage to promote human rights in Vietnam, particularly workers' rights to form free and independent labour unions and all citizens' rights to religious freedom. After all, trade should contribute to a better world and not strengthen the hands of tyrants.

Thank you.

1:10 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

Thank you very much.

Ms. Nguyen, would you like to give your presentation now?

1:10 p.m.

Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation

Khue-Tu Nguyen

Sure.

Thank you very much for this opportunity. We definitely appreciate the opportunity to testify before you today. Last year we had the opportunity to testify with three former prisoners of conscience. We're very happy that we get to continue this dialogue today. We really appreciate this.

And thank you, Mr. Chair, for the introduction. I can now skip that.

To start, I would like to say that the mechanisms of suppression employed by the Government of Vietnam are very sophisticated, vast, and varied. It's truly disappointing, in that if they were to use their creativity and ingenuity for social progress instead of suppressing dissent, Vietnam wouldn't be the dystopian society it is for many today.

I have time to address only two points. As we said, we would like to keep this short in order to have more questions and ideas at the end.

On the two points, I would like to start by giving you the most recent examples. The first is the government's continued and increasing use of thugs to suppress and subdue dissidents. Lately, because there have been many, many photographs, with videographic evidence, of policemen and policewomen attacking dissidents, they have now resorted to the increased use of hired thugs to carry out these acts of violence in order for the government to distance itself from these acts of violence. If they're not actual thugs, then they're actually state policemen who are not in uniform but wearing civilian clothing.

I actually have one photograph here that is quite graphic. I would request that it be shown for only a few seconds, if that's okay.

Briefly, the man on the left is Nguyen Chi Tuyen, and the man on the right—there are two pictures of him—is Dinh Quang Tuyen. They were savagely beaten for their peaceful activism. The man on the right actually had his cranium smashed in.

As I was just walking into this very room today, I heard news of Pastor Nguyen Hong Quang in Saigon from just a few hours ago, or maybe last night. His face now looks no different from that of the man on the left you see right there. This goes to show you the escalating use of violence. It's no longer about hitting people in the back; it's hitting them in the head.

Thank you: we don't need to see this picture for too long.

Although what you see is gruesome, I think we can argue that the treatment of dissidents doesn't quite compare with the cruel treatment of citizens who are not dissidents, who are not under the watchful public eye, the protective eye, of the international community. If I may be very frank, every time I learn about what happens to people in Vietnam, I see more and more how the police there regard human life as having less value than an ant's—easily crushable, easily killable. I think one reason for this is that the performance evaluation of police officers in Vietnam is based on how many people they can find guilty, which leads to intense interrogation and torture, which in turn results in civilian deaths.

In fact, two days ago I learned that two uncles were sentenced to prison for 15 months because they decried the brutal killing of their 14-year-old nephew at the hands of police. I think this speaks volumes about the conscience, or I should I say the lack thereof, of a regime when two people who were very sad, who decried the brutal killing of a young loved one, were sentenced to prison for that, just that.

The important thing that I would like to remind all diplomats of is that as per the Vietnamese government's style of deceiving the international community to maintain its image of a government that is trying to improve, the government also creates fake civil societies, also known as government-operated non-governmental organizations, which is humorous, in a way. I call them “GONGOs”. These fake civil societies meet with diplomats when they travel to the country, all meanwhile attacking real, genuine civil societies in the country. I must say that if they didn't need money from international trade or development, etc., they certainly would not bother with maintaining their international image.

I can go on with many examples, but I think I'll stop here.

The point I would like to emphasize is this. This totalitarian government does not hesitate to blatantly lie to the international community. Also, while it carries on its facade of improving its human rights record by, for example, releasing a small number of high-profile dissidents, which they do....

By the way, I should mention that they release many of the dissidents because they know the dissidents are on the verge of death, having been denied medical care in prison. So despite all that, they continue to arrest, imprison, and cause the “accidental” deaths of many more to prove they are a regime that is not to be questioned.

I think I'll end my remarks there.

We can move on, as you mentioned, Mr. Chair, to Mr. Nguyen Van Hai via video conference. He's a former prisoner of conscience who had been sentenced to 12 years in prison for his peaceful activism. Thank you very much.

1:15 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

Thank you.

I gather there will be a translation at this point. Is that correct?

All right. Everybody should get their earpieces in place.

Thank you for your patience. We invite you to begin your testimony.

1:15 p.m.

Dieu Cay Blogger, As an Individual

Thank you for giving me the honour of addressing the Subcommittee on International Human Rights about the human rights situation in Vietnam today.

On the day I left Vietnam on October 21, 2014, as the plane took off I looked back at my own country, where I had spent so many days of hardship in communist prison and where many of my friends still continued their constant search for the freedom of my country, and I knew that I still had to continue the fight for many years so that I could one day return to my free and democratic native land.

I realized from that day that what I do will no longer be for me but for my fellow prisoners. I have to help them tell the world how the rights of Vietnamese citizens, especially in prison, are violated. I have to work so that everybody in my native land will enjoy the human rights specified in so many international conventions and agreements to which Vietnam itself has been a signatory.

Over the last six months I have met with many American personalities, from the Department of State to Senator Durbin, members of the House of Representatives, the Committee to Protect Journalists, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and members of the media to ask them for help to gain the freedom of my friends and to let the world know about the extent of human rights violations in Vietnam.

Recently, on World Press Freedom Day I had the honour of meeting with President Obama, and I presented him with my wishes for press freedom in Vietnam. I also urged him to ask Vietnam to release all prisoners of conscience and to abrogate the ambiguous legislation that Vietnam has used to take away the rights to freedom of the Vietnamese people.

Ladies and gentlemen, today I would like to present three issues related to the human rights situation in Vietnam: one, freedom of the press and freedom of speech; two, prisoners of conscience; and three, labour unions in Vietnam and freedom of association.

In a totalitarian dictatorship like Vietnam, all municipal communications are under the control of the Communist authority. People would not dare express their political opinions for fear of arrest without trial, such as in the case of the Nhan Van Giai Pham affair, the anti-party revisionists, and many others resulting in an ever-increasing number of victims of illegal convictions.

Specifically in the case of the Free Journalists Club of Vietnam, to which I am a witness, we only expressed our opinions in a moderate manner on the Internet, yet we were arrested and condemned to prison sentences exceeding 10 years.

The Vietnam authority is a signatory to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, but they never implement it. They promulgate laws with ambiguous articles, such as article 258, article 88, article 79, and implement decree 72 for the purpose of convicting the dissenters and the people who fight for human rights. This is a blatant violation of article 19 of the ICCPR.

A state dictatorship governed by interest groups for individual gains, with rampant corruption, weakens the economy and causes discontent among the people, yet when the people voice their dissatisfaction, the state uses all its various means and brutal tricks to silence them.

It is these ambiguous articles that the authority has used to arrest whoever expresses dissenting views and to protect the existence of the dictatorial regime. Only when the people can freely express their righteous views, without fear of suppression and imprisonment, can we have a society in which a life of freedom and happiness for all is guaranteed.

Vietnam has been integrating into the world. The first thing it must do is to abolish those ambiguous articles and return to the people the rights of freedom of expression and free press. Only then can Vietnam have true democracy.

Now I would like to address the second issue, which is the issue of the prisoners of conscience. Wherever there is power, there is a need for a mechanism to supervise power, but that mechanism is absent in Vietnam. In other words, Vietnam is truly a police state.

The police make arrests, manage detention centres, do investigations, assess evidence, and manage prisons. It is this absence of supervision that gives the police a free hand to make wrongful convictions, to force confessions, to use inhumane, barbaric, brutal torture in their investigations, causing death to hundreds of people. They usually say to the victims, “Your death only cost us one piece of paper.” This shows the life and death power they have over the victims, because it is also the police who do the investigation, and the conclusion is always death by suicide. Indeed, it only cost them a piece of paper.

After six years, six months, and 11 days in communist prison, I realized that the communist brutality is even more horrible than I thought. To punish the prisoners of conscience, they will stop at nothing: public slander, prison cells with a slit only 30 cm. long for ventilation, and isolation cells with iron bars and corrugated iron roofs exposed to the scorching sun. This cell is an area of only 1.8 metres by 2 metres, including the toilet. On hot days we had to cover our faces with wet towels to survive the heat.

I learned that the more we comply with their orders, the more they make life harder for us. All rights of prisoners specified in the criminal law are ignored, specifically the right to counsel and the right to appeal. When we appeal to the procurator's office, it has to be done through the prison wardens, who naturally never forward the appeal. The prisoners are completely at the mercy of the wardens.

These rights are denied simply by the issuance of circulation 37 of the Ministry of Public Security, whose contents nobody knows. With this circulation, Vietnam security openly set up prisons within prisons for the prisoners of conscience, imposing isolation with no outside contacts.

This has prompted many prisoners to protest by hunger strikes. I went on a hunger strike twice, once for 28 days in camp B34 and the other for 33 days in camp number six of the Ministry of Public Security. This is the most barbaric prison system in Vietnam.

The latest news, which I just received a few moments ago, is about a friend of mine who was imprisoned in camp number five in Thanh Hoa. She has been on a hunger strike for 31 days and her health is deteriorating very quickly.

The Vietnam authority must immediately abolish circulation 37 of the Ministry of Public Security and amend the implementation legislation in accordance with the international covenant to which Vietnam is a signatory.

On the issues of labour union and freedom of association in Vietnam, my friend Dr. Thang Nguyen has just made a very good presentation, so there is no need for me to go into more detail. All I would like to know and to say right now is that we request that members of Parliaments and labour unions all over the world voice their concern so that workers in Vietnam can form unions to protect their interests.

We request that all of you condemn and demand the Vietnamese authority to abolish ambiguous articles 258, 88 and 79, decree 72, as well as circulation 37, according to the international covenant, and to release all prisoners of conscience in Vietnam.

I want to present to you a list of the prisoners of conscience requiring urgent assistance. At the head of the list is Ms. Ta Phong Tan, the lady I mentioned just a few minutes ago who is on a hunger strike and in poor health. Also on the list is Tran Huynh Duy Thuc, Nguyen Huu Vinh, Bui Thi Minh Hang, Tran Vu Anh Binh, Vo Minh Tri, Nguyen Dang Minh Man, Ho Thi Bich Khuong, Doan Van Vuon, Doan Dinh Nam, Doan Huy Chuong, and Nguyen Hoang Quoc Hung.

I thank you very much for your attention and your concern about the human rights situation in Vietnam, with my very best wishes for your health.

Thank you.

1:35 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

Thank you very much.

Colleagues, given the amount of time left—there's a clock on the wall, as you can see—we have time for a four-minute question and answer round per questioner.

My suggestion is that you pick a witness and direct your questions to that person. You stand the best chance of getting an answer, and possibly a supplementary question, if you do it that way.

Mr. Sweet, you may begin.

1:35 p.m.

Conservative

David Sweet Conservative Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, ON

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I also wanted to ask the researchers if we could get a copy of the articles and resolutions that Mr. Dieu Cay was just referring to before we make any kind of statement, so that we understand the context of those he was speaking about.

1:35 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

To follow up.

1:35 p.m.

Conservative

David Sweet Conservative Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, ON

Thank you very much.

My first question will be to the commissioner of human rights for Canada from the Vietnamese Canadian Federation.

One of the mandates you have is making sure there's harmony among the associations in Canada. How many are there, and how many are specifically human-rights-centric?

1:35 p.m.

Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation

Khue-Tu Nguyen

Do you mean our organizations under the umbrella of the Vietnamese Canadian Federation?

1:35 p.m.

Conservative

David Sweet Conservative Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, ON

Yes.

1:35 p.m.

Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation

Khue-Tu Nguyen

We have 11 member organizations.

1:40 p.m.

Conservative

David Sweet Conservative Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, ON

How many of those are human-rights-centric?

1:40 p.m.

Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation

Khue-Tu Nguyen

All of them are very pro human rights, and I believe all of them advocate for the promotion of human rights.

1:40 p.m.

Conservative

David Sweet Conservative Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, ON

And it's your job to make sure they operate effectively and to keep harmony among them all.

1:40 p.m.

Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation

Khue-Tu Nguyen

It's my job, mainly for human rights in Vietnam. What they do at their local chapters is what they do. I can certainly provide assistance.

1:40 p.m.

Conservative

David Sweet Conservative Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, ON

Okay.

1:40 p.m.

Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation

Khue-Tu Nguyen

Actually, if you don't mind, I would like to state that we do have four recommendations. If there is no time, I understand, but if you would like to hear our recommendations, I would be happy to tell you. It's up to you.

1:40 p.m.

Conservative

David Sweet Conservative Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, ON

I'll just ask Mr. Dieu Cay a question first before that, considering my limited amount of time.

1:40 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

Yes. Let's do that.

We'll make sure you don't leave the room without having given your four recommendations. It might be at the end, but it will be done.

1:40 p.m.

Commissioner for Human Rights, Vietnamese Canadian Federation

Khue-Tu Nguyen

Thank you very much.

1:40 p.m.

Conservative

David Sweet Conservative Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, ON

Thank you, Chair.

Mr. Dieu Cay, I found it fascinating that you would wish us good health. I can't imagine the struggle you've been through in incarceration.

I wanted to ask you, as someone who has publicly confronted the government, why you think they would have released you and then allowed you to travel as well.

1:40 p.m.

Blogger, As an Individual

Dieu Cay

I think this is due mainly to the victory of the campaign, the world campaigns, the members of Parliament, and the international organizations that fight for the freedom of the prisoners. I think that if we continue, even when we may not have an immediate result, your voice and your concern do lend more strength to the people who are still in prison. We hope we can continue to step up this campaign so that you can bring a better result in the future.