E/CN.4/1993/62
page 109
Viet Nam
68.
In a communication sent on 10 August 1992 addressed to the Government of
Viet Nam, the following was transmitted by the Special Rapporteur:
"According to the information received, the practice of religion in
Viet Nam is subjected to severe restrictions. It has been reported that no
one can openly practise religion as a priest or minister without the
Government’s approval of candidates for ordination and enrolment in
seminaries. Restrictions in the exercise of religious freedoms are said to
have affected the holding of religious services, gatherings and retreats,
religious education and the publication of religious materials. It has also
been reported that sermons are subjected to Government approval and that any
type of proselytizing is prohibited. The Government has allegedly made
attempts to unify religious groups by establishing state-sponsored religious
associations such as the Committee for the Solidarity of Patriotic Vietnamese
Catholics, the Union of Patriotic Priests, the Protestant Association and the
Viet Nam Buddhist Church, the only officially recognized Buddhist
organization.
It has been alleged that growing numbers of clergy as well as religious
activists have been imprisoned since 1989 because of their religious beliefs.
It has also been reported that the Government had launched a particularly
intensive campaign against religious leaders between April and September 1990.
A new decree on the regulation of religious activities passed in May 1991
reportedly stipulates that any nominations to religious office, travel abroad
by members of the Vietnamese clergy and visits to Viet Nam by representatives
of foreign religious organizations must be approved by the Government. The
same decree is said to apply to the holding of religious meetings such as
regional and national conferences and the opening of religious schools and
seminaries. Catholic priests, nuns and lay persons reportedly may be assigned
by the authorities to religious functions and duties at the local level
without prior consultation with the Roman Catholic church hierarchy.
In addition, the Special Rapporteur has been informed that numerous
members of the clergy belonging to various religious denominations have been
imprisoned since 1975. This is said to particularly be the case with Roman
Catholic priests and Buddhist monks as well as Protestant pastors, who are
said to have been persecuted systematically and placed in arbitrary detention
for prolonged periods as political prisoners in re-education and labour camps.
Military chaplains allegedly were also sent to such camps after 1975, at a
time when all foreign missionaries were expelled from the country, numerous
places of worship and religious presses closed and religious property
confiscated. Large numbers of religious schools, seminaries, hospitals and
orphanages were reportedly also closed or nationalized, as was the case with
the Evangelical Nha Trang Seminary.
It is believed that at least 40 re-education and labour camps were in
existence at the beginning of 1990 and that at least 60 prisoners of
conscience are detained in Viet Nam on account of their religious beliefs.
The conditions prevailing in such camps have been described as extremely
harsh, including hard labour, torture and inhuman treatment, lack of food