A/HRC/16/45/Add.2
United States Commission on International Religious Freedoms was allowed to visit Viet
Nam in May 2009.
VI.
Political participation of minorities
69.
A total of 33 of the country’s ethnic minority groups are represented in the National
Assembly, whose leadership sets targets for the representation of minorities and women. In
its statement made at the second session of the Forum on Minority Issues, which focused on
the political participation of ethnic minority people, the Government of Viet Nam pointed
out that, in 2009, 87 of 493 Assembly representatives were from ethnic minorities, 39 of
whom were women. Some 17.6 per cent of the total number of deputies are minorities,
higher than the 13.8 per cent of ethnic minorities in the population. In the composition of
people’s councils at all levels in the period 1999-2003, the proportion of people’s deputies
from ethnic minorities was 14 per cent at the provincial level, 17 per cent at the district
level and 19 per cent at the commune level. In the period 2004-2009, these figures had
reportedly risen to 20.53, 20.18 and 24.4 per cent respectively.
70.
The Viet Nam Fatherland Front and the Communist Party compile candidate lists for
elections to the National Assembly and seek to ensure representativeness by establishing
numerical targets for ethnic minorities. Subsequently, the Fatherland Front and ethnic
minority associations seek suitable candidates from ethnic minorities who they nominate as
ethnic minority candidates. The Government pointed out that people belonging to ethnic
minorities held key positions in State organs, from central to local levels, including the
Vice Chairman of the National Assembly, the Chairman of the Council on Ethnic
Minorities of the Assembly, and the Minister-Chairman of the Committee for Ethnic
Minority Affairs.
71.
The 39-member Council on Ethnic Minorities is the key body of the National
Assembly through which ethnic minority issues are channelled. Leadership positions are
held by deputies from ethnic minorities, and all 33 minorities represented in the National
Assembly are represented in the Council, which also includes two Kinh deputies. The
Council plays an oversight role with regard to legislation relating to matters affecting
minorities and the State’s long-term strategies for ethnic minorities, including programme
135 and poverty reduction policies. It also produces annual implementation reports.
72.
A study by the Inter-Parliamentary Union concluded that the capacity of the Council
to review legislation and to make proposals to the National Assembly required
strengthening, including through improvements to the capacity of its members. While the
Council provides important electoral training for ethnic minority candidates, there is no
consistent training offered for the more challenging duties of legislating and oversight of
Government policies.21 Analysts also describe a lack of consultation by the Council with
local levels of government concerning minority issues. Such improvements, together with
effective processes of consultation with minority communities, could strengthen the
Council’s oversight of ethnic minority policies and its overall effectiveness.
73.
The Government acknowledged that challenges remain with regard to ensuring the
effective political participation of minorities and highlighted the inadequate number of local
officials from ethnic minorities. Government efforts to encourage greater minority political
participation include training programmes for future civil servants and civic awareness
programmes in minority communities. In May 2010, the first nationwide representative
21
Sonia Palmieri, “Representation from the top: ethnic minorities in the National Assembly of Viet
Nam”, Inter-Parliamentary Union and United Nations Development Programme, 2010.
17