A/HRC/16/45/Add.2
poverty rates had remained high, while for ethnic Kinh in the same region poverty has
declined by 4.6 per cent per year.11
29.
Ethnic minority women face unique challenges and are among the most vulnerable
of the poor in Viet Nam. Patriarchal traditions persist, limiting women’s decision-making
power in most minority communities. Minority social customs commonly dictate that males
control financial assets, livestock and land-use rights certificates, potentially creating
difficulties for realizing the property and land rights of minority women. A World Bank
study highlighted the fact that 87 per cent of ethnic minority women in rural areas worked
in agriculture and yet had limited security in land tenure. In the event of the death of the
husband or divorce, women may be left particularly vulnerable.
30.
The slower pace of poverty reduction for minority populations inevitably leads to
growth in the poverty gap between the majority and minority populations over time. In its
Social Analysis Report for 2009, the World Bank identified six key factors contributing to
the persistent and disproportionate levels of poverty experienced by minorities: (a)
inequalities in education; (b) less mobility and the impact on them of majority migration to
minority regions; (c) poor access to formal financial services; (d) less productive land and
greater dependence on swidden agriculture; (e) poorer market access and lower returns
from markets; and (f) the impact of negative stereotyping and misconceptions about
minorities as backward and conservative. The importance of each of these factors became
evident to the expert during her visit.
A.
Land rights and the impact of economic development
31.
Land is a vital asset for ethnic minority livelihoods and a key component of rural
poverty reduction. Landlessness has, however, increased in minority areas. The land
reforms implemented following the unification of Viet Nam in 1975 placed all land under
the ownership of the State, which assigns rights to use land to individuals. While minority
regions are frequently dominated by forestry land, these lands are subject to Government
allocation, and therefore frequently no longer available for community use. Only 24 per
cent of ethnic minorities reported having rights in forestry land.12 Studies conclude that
many do not have access to forest resources, even in areas where there are few other
livelihood opportunities, and that poverty and livelihood improvement are rarely mentioned
in forestry planning. This has reportedly been disruptive to traditional forest-based minority
economies.
32.
Ethnic Khmer minority representatives reported the loss of ancestral farmlands in
the fertile Mekong Delta. They maintained that Khmer were relocated away from southern
border provinces during the war with Cambodia owing to their perceived ties with that
country. Upon their return, lands had allegedly been allocated to ethnic Kinh, leaving many
landless. Huge resettlement efforts brought ethnic Kinh to territories previously occupied
by ethnic Khmer. Sources stated that many ethnic Khmer had consequently become poor
wage labourers. Protests over land rights have been witnessed, even though they are
generally banned or have allegedly met with a harsh response by the authorities. The
Government contests these claims with regard to the treatment of demonstrators, but
11
12
See “The Government committee is not enough: CEMA of Vietnam”, Asian Indigenous and Tribal
Peoples Network, October – December 2008, available from www.aitpn.org/IRQ/VolIII/issue_4/story06.html.
See Claude René Heimo, “Forest and forest land allocation in Viet Nam: some open questions”,
available from the website www.snvworld.org.
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