US legislators introduce bill to pressure Vietnam over human rights record

 

AFP - 05/01/2015

United States politicians have marked the 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon by introducing legislation that would require Vietnam to improve its human rights record before it receives assistance.

Washington and Hanoi were bitter foes in a war that led to the death of millions of Vietnamese and 58,000 Americans, but ties have improved substantially since the 1990s.

With a major US-Pacific trade accord under negotiation, a bipartisan group of four House members introduced the Vietnam Human Rights Act to ensure that sensitive issues such as rights do not get "bargained away" in the trade talks.

"It is important to pass the bill quickly because this year the administration has promised Vietnam lucrative trade benefits as part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and new security cooperation, benefits not deserved because of the government's atrocious human rights record," said Republican Christopher Smith, who chairs the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on human rights.

"The Communist Party is not Vietnam's future," he said, adding that improving human rights is fundamental to better bilateral ties.

"The American people should not have to subsidise torture or underwrite the jailing of journalists, religious leaders, labour activists, or advocates of democracy or internet freedom."

Since mid-February Vietnam has been holding at least 34 bloggers in prison, according to Reporters Without Borders.

Thursday's bill was co-sponsored by Republican Dana Rohrabacher and Democrats Zoe Lofgren and Gerald Connolly.

Similar measures passed the House easily in recent years, but stalled in the Senate.

The bill would not block funding for humanitarian assistance including food aid, Agent Orange clean-up efforts, or HIV/AIDS prevention programs.

 

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