Vietnam Briefing: Another Congressional Candidate Arrested While Congress Elects New Leaders
The Vietnam Briefing is released every Monday.
Another congressional candidate arrested
Independent journalist Le Trong Hung, a candidate for the National People’s Congress, was arrested on March 27 by Hanoi local police, VOA cited his family.
He had filed his candidacy earlier this year and his application was approved by election officials.
Hung is known for running his social media-based TV channel called Chan Hung TV, that broadcasted information about victims of injustice, including farmers who had lost their land and people who had been wrongfully convicted.
Besides Hung, another person arrested after declaring his candidacy is Tran Quoc Khanh, as we reported two weeks ago. The general election will be held on May 23, 2021.
The National Assembly is convening to decide top state positions
If things go as planned, Vietnam will have a new president, a new prime minister and a new chairperson of the National Assembly potentially by April 7.
Some other top seats of the National Assembly and the cabinet will also be considered.
It’s now officially announced that current Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc will be nominated to be president of the state.
Tension in the South China Sea
Not only has China sent warplanes into Taiwan’s air space over the past week, but also hundreds of Chinese vessels have also massed in disputed areas in the South China Sea.
From Reuters:
“Vietnam’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Le Thi Thu Hang on Thursday said the Chinese vessels at the reef, which Hanoi calls Da Ba Dau, had infringed on its sovereignty.
‘Vietnam requests that China stop this violation and respect Vietnam’s sovereignty,’ Hang told a regular briefing.
A Vietnamese coastguard vessel could be seen moored near the disputed area on Thursday, according to ship tracking data published by the Marine Traffic website.
Hang said Vietnam’s coastguard was ‘exercising its duties as regulated by laws’, including international law.”
Rapping Vietnam Ambassador Daniel Kritenbrink tapped as Joe Biden’s top Asia envoy
He made headlines last month in Vietnam by rapping in both English and Vietnamese. Now he’s nominated for one of the top seats in the US State Department.
From The South China Morning Post:
“The US ambassador who made a splash in Vietnam by making a rap video may soon get a promotion – to be the top diplomat for Asia under President Joe Biden. Daniel Kritenbrink, a career diplomat who speaks Chinese and Japanese, was nominated by Biden to be the assistant secretary of state for East Asia and the Pacific, a White House statement said.”
Learn more about Vietnam:
Vietnam proves immune to China’s vaccine diplomacy campaign
March 27, 2021 | Nikkei Asia
“It would be a stretch to accredit that one comment as an accurate measure of public sentiment in Vietnam toward the Chinese-made vaccine. But in Southeast Asia, Vietnam has remained a prominent outlier to China’s fanfare vaccine diplomacy campaign.”
Biden can address Vietnam’s currency valuation without Section 301
March 27, 2021 | East Asia Forum
“While there were intense talks during the Trump administration — including a call between Trump and Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc — there are no reports suggesting any ongoing talks with the Biden administration.”
China, Vietnam Lead Three-Speed Asian Recovery, World Bank Says
March 26, 2021 | Bloomberg
“A three-speed recovery is taking hold across East Asia and the Pacific, with China and Vietnam already beating their pre-pandemic levels of economic growth while other countries could take years more to heal, according to World Bank projections.”
Vietnam’s New Government Election: The Sooner the Better?
March 23, 2021 | Fulcrum
“There is little reason for the Community Party of Vietnam to repeat its “fast track” procedure to get a new government in place. The Party’s reputation is best served by its playing by the rules.”
Why Biden Sends Warships to the South China Sea, Just as Trump Did
March 22, 2021 | VOA News
“U.S. President Joe Biden is keeping pace with his predecessor in the frequency of American warships sent to Asia, analysts believe, a way to get a foothold in contested seas and routinize warnings aimed at the region’s strongest maritime force, Beijing.”