Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2001-07-05-Speech-4-160"

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"en.20010705.8.4-160"2
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"Mr President, it was worth waiting a moment for the contribution of Commissioner Patten. There is no freedom of religion in Vietnam. The resolution before us emphasises this serious state of affairs, supporting freedom of religion for religious societies of Buddhists, Roman Catholics and Protestants not recognised by the Vietnamese government. Societies of these three denominations that recognised by the state are reminiscent of the traditional Communist pattern: they are monitored by the Vietnamese authorities. A second proof that Vietnamese citizens have no freedom of religion. This unconstitutional situation issues directly from the nature of the country’s political constellation. Obviously the Communist rulers of Vietnam are as terrified as ever of any free association and opinion. That applies even more if this takes place on the basis of definite religious views. Even today the Vietnamese government indoctrinates its citizens with pure antireligious ideas. Within this general, restrictive social context the Protestants of the Central Highlands in the south of Vietnam occupy a special place. They are exposed to double social discrimination, or worse still, persecution. As members of various ethnic minorities they are literally the doormats of the ‘kinh’, the so-called true Vietnamese, who consider themselves superior. In addition for the past 15 years a Vietnamese government-encouraged mass exodus of ‘kinh’ into the fertile lands of the Central Highlands migration has simply amounted and amounts to common or garden theft of land. Those ‘Non-kinh’ and ‘backward’ Christians must simply accept this violation of their rights. Vietnam wants to be a player in the international field. See its participation in the ASEM process. It is therefore perfectly reasonable for the Council and the Commission should take Hanoi seriously to task about the desperate lack of freedom of religion in its own country. I therefore emphatically call on them to do so. It is not good enough to embed freedom of religion in the constitution and to practise the opposite. Surely the era of Stalin and his like must at last be over."@en1
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