NewzIntel.com

    • Checkout Page
    • Contact Us
    • Default Redirect Page
    • Frontpage
    • Home-2
    • Home-3
    • Lost Password
    • Member Login
    • Member LogOut
    • Member TOS Page
    • My Account
    • NewzIntel Alert Control-Panel
    • NewzIntel Latest Reports
    • Post Views Counter
    • Privacy Policy
    • Public Individual Page
    • Register
    • Subscription Plan
    • Thank You Page

Category: Justice

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: In Dialogue with Viet Nam, Experts of the Human Rights Committee Commend the Strengthened Human Rights Framework, Raise Issues Concerning Discrimination and Reports of Media Repression

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Human Rights Committee today concluded its consideration of the fourth periodic report of Viet Nam on how it implements the provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.  Committee Experts commended steps Viet Nam had taken to strengthen its legal and institutional framework for human rights, and raised issues concerning discrimination in various areas of public life and reports of a repressive media landscape.

    A Committee Expert praised the important steps Viet Nam had taken to strengthen its legal and institutional framework for human rights, saying they reflected a clear commitment to international cooperation and legal reform. They welcomed the recent decision to reduce the number of capital offenses from 18 to 10, a significant step toward limiting the scope of application of the death penalty.

    However, Viet Nam lacked a law developing the principle of non-discrimination in areas such as employment, health, education, politics and justice, another Expert noted, asking for further information on the number of complaints of acts of discrimination.

    The Committee also expressed concern about reports of a repressive media landscape in Viet Nam, where journalists, bloggers and human rights activists were often intimidated into silence.  One Expert asked for comments on allegations of targeted surveillance arbitrarily conducted on political activists, journalists, and human rights defenders.

    Thanh Tịnh Nguyễn, Deputy Minister of Justice and head of the delegation, said Viet Nam had consistently devoted special attention, strong efforts, and firm commitment to promoting and ensuring the effective implementation of human rights and citizens’ rights, including civil and political rights.  Legal, administrative, and judicial reforms in Viet Nam, as well as law enforcement practices, were all anchored in a people-centred approach.

    In the ensuing discussion, the delegation, in response to these questions and others, said human rights had been upheld and promoted in Viet Nam over the past forty years and the State’s legal system was sufficiently comprehensive to fully implement the Covenant.

    The law was very comprehensive to prevent any discrimination in civil and personal life, the delegation said.  Everybody was equal before the law, including in the labour sector, where the law prohibited discrimination, including salary discrimination between men and women and against guest workers.  Discrimination was also forbidden in education.

    The right of freedom of expression could not, the delegation said, be used to violate the rights of others or of organisations or harm social order.  The policy of Viet Nam safeguarded the freedom of expression and of the press, but needed to be in line with international law.  Viet Nam strictly dealt with efforts to defame the State and cause division among the different parts of society, in line with international agreements.

    In concluding remarks, Mr. Nguyễn said the protection and promotion of human rights were the objective and result of a long struggle by many generations of Vietnamese people. Viet Nam worked to ensure the happiness of the people, which was the ultimate goal of its policies, and had worked to improve its legal system to ensure that people would be the beneficiaries of its policies.

    Changrok Soh, Committee Chairperson, in concluding remarks, said the dialogue had addressed key elements of the implementation of the Covenant.  The adoption of certain institutional safeguards to combat discrimination and domestic violence was positive, but there were several remaining concerns requiring attention, including regarding severe restrictions on fundamental freedoms related to assembly, speech, and religion.  There were also credible allegations of torture and ill-treatment, and persistent challenges for vulnerable groups, he concluded.

    The delegation of Viet Nam was made up of representatives of the Ministry of Justice; the Office of the Government; the Supreme People’s Procuracy; the Ministry of Public Security; the Ministry of Home Affairs; the Supreme People’s Court; the Ministry of Culture, Sport and Tourism; the Ministry of Ethnic Minorities and Religions; the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; and the Permanent Mission of Viet Nam to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Human Rights Committee’s one hundred and forty-fourth session is being held from 23 June to 17 July 2025.  All the documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties, can be found on the session’s webpage.  Meeting summary releases can be found here.  The webcast of the Committee’s public meetings can be accessed via the UN Web TV webpage.

    The Committee will next meet in public at 10 a.m., Thursday 10 July to hold an informal meeting with States.

    Report

    The Committee has before it the fourth periodic report of Viet Nam (CCPR/C/VNM/4).

    Presentation of the Report

    THANH TỊNH NGUYỄN, Deputy Minister of Justice and head of the delegation, said, guided by the principle of placing people at the centre — as both the goal and the driving force of development, Viet Nam had consistently devoted special attention, strong efforts, and firm commitment to promoting and ensuring the effective implementation of human rights and citizens’ rights, including civil and political rights.  Legal, administrative, and judicial reforms in Viet Nam, as well as law enforcement practices, were all anchored in a people-centred approach, whereby the people were regarded as the primary beneficiaries of the system.  These efforts aimed to implement effective measures to protect and ensure human rights and citizens’ rights in accordance with the law.  Immediately following the constructive dialogue with the Committee in 2019, the Government of Viet Nam adopted a national action plan to implement the Covenant and the Committee’s recommendations, with the aim of clearly identifying areas in need of improvement and undertaking necessary institutional and practical measures to ensure substantive progress.

    With regard to institutional and legal reform, since the submission of the fourth national report, Viet Nam had amended, supplemented, or enacted over 150 laws and resolutions of the National Assembly, many of which were directly related to the lives of the people and aimed at advancing civil and political rights.  Most recently, Viet Nam adopted the amended Criminal Code, which narrowed the scope of application of the death penalty by abolishing capital punishment for eight offences, and had recently adopted Resolution 66 on reforming the legislative process.  Viet Nam was also vigorously advancing a comprehensive reform of the State administrative apparatus.

    Viet Nam had undertaken a range of measures to enhance transparency, openness, and efficiency in the implementation of laws and policies.  Human rights education had been integrated into the national curriculum.  Viet Nam had issued and effectively implemented a range of policies that directly promoted and protected civil and political rights.  In the area of social security policy, Viet Nam remained firmly committed to ensuring social welfare, public safety, and the well-being of its people, under the guiding principle of “leaving no one behind.”  Viet Nam had also taken proactive measures to respond to climate change and to support the people in the context of disaster relief efforts. It had further placed strong emphasis on investing in infrastructure and enabling conditions to ensure public access to information, and was currently recognised as one of the countries with the most affordable internet access.  Rapid developments had significantly contributed to the realisation of the rights to freedom of the press, freedom of expression, and access to information.

    In the process of ensuring, protecting, and promoting the realisation of human rights, Viet Nam continued to face various difficulties and challenges arising from multiple factors that affect the implementation of the Covenant. These included limited resources; instances where the enforcement of laws had not met expectations; and the growing impact of global issues and non-traditional security threats in the context of Viet Nam’s  international integration.

    Viet Nam was in the process of building and perfecting a socialist rule-of-law State for the people, in order to build a high-quality legal system that effectively ensured and protected human rights and citizens’ rights, in a manner consistent with national realities and international standards.  In this process, Viet Nam would continue to seriously fulfil its international human rights commitments, and further promote dialogue and cooperation in this important area.  At the same time, Viet Nam would implement comprehensive measures to better promote, protect, and ensure the enjoyment of civil and political rights, and to improve resilience to climate change — particularly for vulnerable groups — through appropriate steps in the time to come.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said the Committee acknowledged the important steps Viet Nam had taken to strengthen its legal and institutional framework for human rights.  These developments reflected a clear commitment to international cooperation and legal reform.  The Committee commended Viet Nam for its recent decision to reduce the number of capital offenses from 18 to 10, which marked a significant step toward limiting the scope of application of the death penalty.

    Given reports that Directive 24 broadly defined international integration as a national security threat, leading to systemic restrictions on freedoms of expression, association, and movement, how did Viet Nam reconcile this directive with the Covenant’s articles 19, 21, and 22, an Expert asked.  Regarding disaster response and recovery efforts, as well as campaigns to eliminate temporary housing, the report did not address the adoption of a precautionary approach or specific measures to protect the most vulnerable from the negative impacts of climate change and natural disasters, and the Expert asked what specific measures Viet Nam had adopted to implement a precautionary approach to environmental and climate risks, and how vulnerable groups were identified and protected in these policies.

    Regarding the death penalty, an Expert asked about the criteria used to select offences to be removed from the scope of the death penalty; the reasons that led Viet Nam to stop short of full abolition; and considerations that had prevented the country from following the path toward complete abolition of the death penalty.  What measures were in place to ensure full respect for due process guarantees in death penalty cases, and to prevent the imposition of the death penalty as a result of forced confessions?  On enforced disappearances, the Expert asked whether Vietnamese law defined and criminalised all acts of enforced disappearance in accordance with international standards, and about measures in place to ensure prompt, thorough, and impartial investigations into allegations of enforced disappearance and transnational repression.

    Another Expert asked for an update on progress made towards the establishment of the national human rights institution, and for more detailed and concrete information on the status of the legislative review and the reasons for the continued delays in establishing the body.  What measures did the State party plan to take to ensure that all allegations of torture and ill-treatment, solitary confinement, incommunicado detention and forced commitment to psychiatric facilities were promptly and thoroughly investigated by an independent body and that perpetrators were prosecuted and sanctioned with appropriate penalties, and to investigate all reported instances of deaths of prisoners while detained?  What measures would the State party take to ensure that national legislation protecting the rights of detainees was implemented in practice, in particular the right to medical care?

    An Expert commended the State party for its continued efforts to combat corruption, but noted that further efforts were needed to strengthen anti-corruption initiatives.  He expressed particular concern relating to allegations of corruption involving high-level public officials, judges, prosecutors, and law enforcement officers, and asked for information on any actions taken in response to such cases.  He noted reports indicating persistent concerns that the enforcement of anti-corruption laws was perceived as selective and politically driven.  The Expert asked for further details on the mandates, composition, appointment procedures, and safeguards in place to ensure the independence of the three types of agencies involved in anti-corruption efforts.  He also asked whether the draft Law on the State of Emergency was fully compatible with article four of the Covenant, including its substantive and procedural requirements.

    Viet Nam lacked a law developing the principle of non-discrimination in areas such as employment, health, education, politics and justice, an Expert noted, asking for further information on the number of complaints of acts of discrimination, and on investigations, sanctions and reparations for victims; about employees with disabilities in the public and private sectors; and on the existence of other protection mechanisms.  Regarding women’s rights, the Expert asked about progress that had been made over the last ten years, including regarding non-discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender, noting that women’s rights had been violated by these forms of discrimination.  Was the State going to work towards the legalisation of same-sex marriage or civil partnership?  Had measures been taken to address the issue of stigmatisation, harassment, violence and discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons?

    An Expert expressed concern for the realities of Khmer Krom women, who were highly vulnerable to various human rights violations due to their gender, facing a high risk of systematic inequalities and abuse.  Other areas of concern included the wide salary gap between men and women, as well as continuing differentiation of retirement ages between men and women, the participation of women in political life, and that there still needed to be evidence of a minimum degree of physical injury for an act to be legally recognised as rape.  In view of these, the Expert asked what measures had been taken to increase women’s participation, specifically ethnic minority women and women in rural areas, in all private and public sectors, as well as high-level decision-making positions and political life.

    The Expert also expressed concern about the situation of drug users confined to drug rehabilitation centres, asking for more information on measures taken to ensure that all legislation concerning drug detoxification and rehabilitation centres, particularly the provisions retaining compulsory drug treatment, including for children between 12 and 18, were in line with the Covenant.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said human rights had been upheld and promoted in Viet Nam over the past forty years and its legal system was sufficiently comprehensive to fully implement the Covenant.  There was a separate chapter in the Constitution on human rights that was in line with the Covenant.  Human rights could only be suspended for reasons of national security, public safety, and public health.  Only the National Assembly could suspend human rights, in line with the Constitution. As part of the law-making process in Viet Nam, there needed to be a consultation with stakeholders, including those affected by the law.  Human rights topics were now included in the national educational curriculum.  The State conducted many campaigns on human rights, and information on human rights was translated into various national minority languages and made available, including online.  Viet Nam had adopted various national measures to ensure national security and the safe and productive life of its people.

    Viet Nam was implementing the Covenant in various ways, including through its law and education.  According to the law, the Covenant needed to be prioritised if there were differences between it and the law.  If any discrepancies were identified, the Covenant took precedence.  There were training courses for judges and lawyers and other legal professionals on the provisions of the Covenant.

    Viet Nam was one of the countries seriously affected by climate change, which caused many socio-economic challenges.  The Government attached great importance to those whose rights had been affected by the phenomenon, and ensured that sustainable and green development and the climate change strategy of Viet Nam were prioritised in all policies.  Many important activities had been adopted for ethnic minorities, including access to adequate, clean water, and the development of a medical network that focused on climate change-related diseases.  The Government had also developed a plan to review infrastructure in climate change-prone areas, including water infrastructure.  The climate change strategy had many implications on the enjoyment of the human rights of the people.  Viet Nam promoted international cooperation to ensure that all could fight climate change issues, whilst cooperating with all international agencies.

    On discrimination against the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex community, anti-discrimination was a part of the legal framework, and over the past years Viet Nam had taken many steps to better protect the members of the community, to ensure that none would be discriminated against on the basis of their gender or sexual identity.  The provision in the law criminalising same-sex marriage had been removed more than 10 years ago, although there was no law legalising same-sex marriage.  The new Criminal Code, since 2015, contained provisions regarding sexual offences which protected lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons.  In 2022, the Ministry of Health introduced a guideline giving direction to local authorities, which ensured that these persons could not be subject to discrimination. On oversight of activities in the medical sector, so far, no complaints had been received, meaning that there were no violations of the guidelines.  Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons had access to services to support them, and could change their legal identity, ensuring that they were not discriminated against.

    On anti-corruption efforts, Viet Nam had implemented many activities aiming to perfect the legal framework, including the adoption of the Anti-Corruption Law within the Criminal Code and related preventive measures.  It had also strengthened its monitoring activities, streamlined the administrative apparatus to better support the functions of the State, and was working to enhance efficiency.  Anti-corruption courses were available for legal practitioners, including at the local level.  Capacity building was one of the strongest commitments made by the Government.  There were specialised agencies working to prevent corruption, including a department on police in the Ministry of Security, and a department specialised on investigations and prosecutions of corruption cases within the Ministry of Justice.  Viet Nam had made significant efforts over the last few years to combat corruption and had recently made significant achievements, which it would strive to continue.

    The law was very comprehensive to prevent any discrimination in civil and personal life.  Everybody was equal before the law, including in the labour sector, where the law prohibited discrimination, including salary discrimination between men and women and against guest workers.  Discrimination was also forbidden in education.  The law provided a significant number of sanctions to reduce gender inequality.  Efforts had been strengthened to ensure the equal representation of women in political life — women were provided with more opportunities for leadership positions and were given training to gain the necessary skills to participate in political life.  There was an action plan in the Ministry of Labour to ensure equal access of men and women to business, investment capital, and health services.  The gap between retirement age between men and women was being reviewed by the Government; the current discrepancy was not discriminatory but reflected the situation of the population.  Many different policies and programmes were being implemented for persons with disabilities, including those providing employment opportunities.

    On the establishment of the national human rights institution, much work had been done in this regard.  This was an important long-term goal that required serious consideration to ensure that the institution would be in line with international commitments and Viet Nam’s needs and specificities.  There were currently other mechanisms in place, including the equivalent of an Ombudsman, and a National Committee on Women and Children, which fulfilled the same role, promoting the rights of the people of Viet Nam.  Viet Nam was still reviewing the situation in order to be able to establish a model national human rights institution.

    According to Vietnamese law, prisoners had the right to access medical care, including medical check-ups and access to hospital services for regular treatment if their care could not be provided in the prison.  On transfers to psychiatric facilities, if a person showed any signs of psychiatric illness, they would be sent for forensic examination, and if the examination indicated it was required, they would be transferred to psychiatric facilities, where they were entitled to medical treatment.

    Human rights, including the right to life, could only be restricted in certain circumstances provided for in the Constitution.  Depriving others of their right to life was a criminal affair which needed to be prosecuted.  Viet Nam implemented various measures recommended by international bodies during the COVID-19 pandemic to lower the rate of transmission in accordance with the law, on the basis of public health and in order to safeguard the health of the people. There was a free vaccination campaign, with no discrimination.  At the end of the pandemic, Viet Nam brought the restrictions to an end.

    Juveniles were not subject to the death penalty, the delegation said, and Viet Nam was getting closer to international standards, moving forward to a phase in which it would review the Criminal Code.  It also had a road map to move forward in making it ever more difficult to condemn a person to death.  Work had also been done to ensure that there was no overlap with torture in the application of the death penalty.  There was an oversight mechanism and strong and stringent sanctions to be applied to the perpetrators of torture.

    One law included specific regulation of detention conditions, including the minimum space per detainee, access to food and drinkable water, and women-specific products.  All prisoners were entitled to medical support and treatment.  There was compulsory drug rehabilitation and detoxification, aiming to help persons end their addiction.  There was a strict procedure for this, which included a passage in front of a court.

    Follow-Up Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said the situation of women still raised questions.  Misconceptions about sexual violence, the wish to preserve the harmony of the family, mediation according to the law of 2022, and the fear of rehabilitation were all obstacles before women, making them reluctant to report acts of violence committed against them in different spheres, including domestic violence and harassment in the workplace.  The legal definition of rape remained of concern to the Committee.  What were the activities carried out under the national communication programme on gender equality and the National Strategy on Gender Equality?  What measures were taken to identify the factors that prevented women victims from reporting abuse, and to align the legal definition of rape with the Covenant and other international standards?  What remedies had been offered to victims and what was the number of cases that had been referred to alternative dispute resolution processes?

    Another Expert asked about the oversight mechanisms that existed to examine cases of torture and their findings.  Had there been any cases of torture, and if there were any, had the perpetrators been prosecuted?  One Expert said the results of corruption investigations could vary depending on who initiated and drove the process.  In certain cases, political manoeuvring could influence investigations; statistical data would help clarify the nature of the cases.  Viet Nam had not submitted any notification under article four, paragraph three of the Covenant — did this mean it did not consider itself to ever have been under a situation of public emergency?

    Another Expert raised the issue of a comprehensive law on non-discrimination and the potential detention of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons in separate facilities apart from the general population, asking if this was being done according to human rights principles.  According to the Adoption Law of 2010, adoption could only be done by people with opposite-sex partners, or by a single person.  The Expert asked about the extent to which a homosexual person could adopt.  On discrimination against persons with disabilities in the world of work, he asked for specific, concrete data regarding the number of persons employed under programmes to end discrimination in the labour market.

    An Expert asked whether there was a legal procedure that enabled individuals sentenced to death to seek a review of their convictions based on newly discovered evidence of their innocence, and what remedies were provided for persons who were shown to have been wrongly convicted?  Again on the death penalty, another Expert asked how many executions had taken place, and how many persons were on death row?  Was there an offence related to kidnapping for financial gain, as this could be assimilated to enforced disappearance?

    In Viet Nam, the international human rights treaties did hold precedence, and nothing stopped the courts from applying them.  Why, to date, had no court invoked the Covenant with regard to the rights and provisions enshrined within it?

    Regarding the plan of action against climate change, the Expert was pleased to recognise that minorities in occupied territories who were particularly vulnerable to climate change were included; he asked whether these minorities were consulted during the drafting of the plans and whether they were respecting traditional farming methods and techniques?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the law of Viet Nam mentioned the hierarchy of international legislation and domestic law; priority was given to the international commitments and agreements.  The definition of rape in the Criminal Code was divided into two categories, including one for those over 13 and one for those under 13, for whom the law did not require any evidence of force or circumstances such as alcoholic consumption to elicit sexual activities.  The law did not distinguish between married and unmarried rape.

    On domestic violence, the delegation said even though much effort had been made to combat this violence, the detection and handling of such cases had not yet been satisfactory.  The Government had issued a decree on domestic violence.  Data would be provided more comprehensively later. There were opportunities for the victim to express themselves.  There were also local supportive networks for the victims of violence, and there were psychological and medical services provided for such victims.  There were media and communication events held on domestic violence, and campaigns to raise awareness, providing information for victims so that they would be more willing to raise their voice.

    Regarding torture and the death penalty, there were eight crimes which could be punished by the penalty, including treason, murder, rape, terrorism, crimes against humanity, crimes of war, illegal production of narcotics, and drug trafficking. Keeping the data regarding executions private was often due to national security and defence reasons, and also for the protection of the privacy of the family and victims of the perpetrator.  There was a procedure for review of judgements — at any point, a complaint could be made and an appeal made on the basis of wrongful conviction.  In the case of a wrongful conviction, there was a law on State compensation.  If there was any violation or wrongful conviction identified, then the State would provide compensation, including a public apology.  The law was very comprehensive when it came to illegal detention of others.  There was a hierarchy of oversight mechanisms which applied to cases of torture.

    Regarding detention, Viet Nam did not use the method of transferring prisoners away from their residential addresses as a punishment.  Prisoners were kept close to their families.  Pregnant women, foreigners and juveniles were given particular consideration.  However, very violent or dangerous criminals were kept separate from other members of the same criminal network in prison, for reasons of security.  Viet Nam was making great efforts to improve conditions for prisoners, and was amending the law on custody and detention to ensure there could be no violation of human rights.

    Only certain persons were subject to compulsory detoxification and addiction treatment, and such decisions needed to be made by the local authority and reviewed by the court to ensure that they were valid.  There were no cases of forced labour at the compulsory detoxification centres, but there was therapeutic labour, which aimed to help inmates to learn to take care of themselves.  Inmates were allowed to enjoy sports and other leisure activities.

    There were several pilot programmes to respond to climate change, with engagement from the local to the central level, and communication campaigns for the ethnic and mountain areas.  There were a wide range of collaborative events, including with non-governmental organizations, and inputs from partners were carefully considered by the authorities when they developed strategies to mitigate climate change.

    There was fertile ground for the growth of a national human rights institution, but to achieve this, legal amendments, including of the Constitution, were needed, making it a time-consuming process.  Viet Nam was paying more attention to streamlining the governmental structure.  In the future, it would carefully consider the Paris Principles when establishing such an institution.  However, great efforts were being made to safeguard, protect and promote human rights already.  There was a mechanism already in place to deal with corruption, which dealt with reports and allegations of corruption from individuals.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said the Criminal Procedure Code provided that Government prosecutors could hold suspects accused of national security crimes in detention for an unlimited period without trial or judicial review.  Prosecutors could restrict access to legal counsel in cases related to suspects accused of “national security” crimes until the conclusion of the investigation and with no time limits.  What concrete measures would be taken to ensure that any deprivation of liberty was lawful and that detained persons were afforded legal safeguards from the outset of their detention?  How would the State ensure that pre-trial detention was used only as a measure of last resort and for the shortest period, following a proper, individualised assessment and for reasons expressly provided by law and in line with international human rights standard and the Covenant?

    Reports before the Committee indicated that trafficking in persons continued to be a serious concern.  There was a lack of a clear framework for the protection of non-Vietnamese nationals trafficked to Viet Nam, or transited through Viet Nam to a third country.  There had been no substantive changes in Government policies and efforts to combat labour trafficking in the State-run labour export programme.  What measures were being taken to strengthen international legal cooperation and national law enforcement capacities to investigate and respond to the linkages between cybercrime, human trafficking and migrant smuggling, and to strengthen international cooperation to ensure cross-border access to supporting services?

    Another Expert said the Committee remained concerned about directives on international travel that closely managed officials, party members and Vietnamese citizens who went abroad, and by the fact that the law allowed authorities to postpone the departure of any person on various broad grounds.  What new measures had been taken to guarantee freedom of movement, and what were the legal grounds for decisions to restrict international travel on Vietnamese citizens and legal grounds for such bans?  The Expert also asked for comment on reports asserting that members of ethnic and religious minorities and indigenous people had been prevented from leaving Viet Nam to seek asylum; and that human rights defenders and religious activists were routinely subject to discriminatory restrictions on their freedom of movement.

    Significant progress had been made in juvenile justice, thanks to an increased awareness of the importance of legal institutional reforms.  However, these improvements were reportedly neither systematic nor comprehensive, and detention of children in conflict with the law was still common.  What efforts had been made to amend the legislation to address the protection gaps for children aged 16 and 17 years and the definition of a child to cover persons up to 18 years of age?  What measures had been taken to strengthen the juvenile justice system by setting up additional specialised courts with trained judges, improving community-based diversion, and ensuring children were not deprived of liberty?

    The Committee was concerned about reports of a repressive media landscape in Viet Nam, where journalists, bloggers and human rights activists were often intimidated into silence, another Expert said, asking for comments on allegations of targeted surveillance arbitrarily conducted on political activists, journalists, and human rights defenders.

    Regarding judicial independence, another Expert asked what specific measures were in place to guarantee the presumption of innocence, access to a lawyer of one’s choice, and a trial within a reasonable time for journalists, human rights defenders, political activists, and individuals accused of national security crimes.  What concrete steps had the State party taken to prevent and punish threats, intimidation, or harassment against lawyers for their work on sensitive cases?  Had any independent mechanisms for judicial oversight over legislative and executive actions been established or implemented? On participation in public affairs, the same Expert asked what measures had been taken to encourage and promote political pluralism.  What steps had been taken to eliminate proxy voting in practice, and had an independent electoral monitoring body been established?

    On the freedom of association, despite the constitutional proclamation of the right of association, an Expert expressed concern that there was no framework law regulating this right in a coherent and protective manner.  There had also been reports of systematic repression of religious minorities practising their faith outside the control of State-recognised religious organisations.  What measures had Viet Nam taken to ensure that the right of association, including the right to establish and register independent religious or social associations, could be exercised without interference?  What guarantees existed to prevent the use of the Penal Code against minority religious communities that did not wish to integrate into State-controlled structures?  Further, he asked for detailed information on the rules applicable to associations receiving foreign funding and on the differences in legal treatment between national associations, foreign associations and those receiving international funding.  What steps had Viet Nam taken to ensure that tax and criminal laws were not used in a disproportionate or discriminatory manner against human rights defenders?

    The Committee welcomed the programmes implemented by the State party for the economic and social development of minorities.  However, there had been multiple reports of persistent discrimination against these minority groups, in particular against the Khmer Krom and Montagnards.  What concrete actions had Viet Nam taken to eradicate systematic discrimination against these communities in education, employment and public services?

    On freedom of conscience and religious belief, what was the procedure for registration or recognition for religious groups, an Expert asked, inquiring how long the process typically took from initiation to decision?  Was the applicant allowed an opportunity to respond or appeal during the review process? What were the reasons for denying registration to certain organizations?  How did the State party justify the non-registration of relatively large religious groups such as Cao Dai and Hoa Hao?  What measures were in place to ensure that individuals were free to choose their religion without coercion?

    Regarding freedom of expression, what amendments was the State party considering to the Press Law, the Expert asked.  What legal safeguards existed to ensure that measures affecting online freedom of expression were strictly necessary and proportionate, and in compliance with the Covenant?  What mechanisms were in place to prevent and address harassment and intimidation of individuals, including journalists and online activists, who expressed views critical of the Government?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said ethnic minorities in Viet Nam were entitled to all human rights and citizen rights, and equal access to public services.  Many regulations prohibited discrimination on ethnic grounds.  The Government was implementing a socio-economic plan to ensure development of ethnic affairs.  Ethnic minorities were given the full opportunity to participate in economic and social life, and to stand for election: 70 per cent of the National Assembly were members of ethnic minorities.  Ethnic minorities could participate in many political activities. There were policies encouraging their equal participation in public service and their culture and cultural identity.  Ethnic minority groups had the right to equality of employment, including equal pay. There was vocational training for ethnic minorities, which was regulated by the law.

    Authorities ensured the freedom of religion by citizens.  The State checked the implementation of the law on freedom of religion and belief.  There were favourable conditions that ensured detainees or persons in custody could exercise their religion.  The State did not require registration for religious collectives and religious activities could take place without registration if they were not against the law.

    There had been changes to the law on the People’s Court, regarding the appointment of judges, to further guarantee their independence.  There was a stringent procedure for their appointment.  Interference with judicial activities was prohibited by law, and there was a mechanism to oversee the activities of judges to ensure that they complied with the law.  Regarding corruption, several cases had been prosecuted against high-ranking persons, and the results of these were publicised.  The victims of corruption were protected, as provided for in the Criminal Code.  Activities that hindered the judicial procedure could also be punished according to the law.

    On juvenile justice, there was a new Juvenile Justice Law since November 2024, which entered into effect in 2025, which was consistent with international standards on juvenile justice and provided new regulations to better protect juvenile perpetrators and victims, with diverse measures that could be applied to offenders.  The law also introduced family-friendly measures to ensure that the procedure would be more victim-friendly.  Penalties against juvenile offenders could include non-custodial punishments, and juvenile offenders below a certain age who were detained were kept separately, under the oversight of trained officers.  There were 38 juvenile courts at the provincial level.  Much attention was paid to training and capacity-building of the judges of these courts.

    A high percentage of Viet Nam’s population had access to the Internet, with good technology and infrastructure, the delegation said, but there was a need for a better mechanism to ensure confidentiality and privacy.  The State had issued a decree to strengthen cyber security to ensure that information was only collected in line with international standards and with the commitments Viet Nam had made, without hindering data flow.  The National Assembly of Viet Nam had adopted a law on protection of personal data, which was a strong commitment to the protection of privacy in line with international standards.  It also guaranteed the right to complain if such privacy was violated. Viet Nam’s efforts had been recognised by the international community.

    The right of freedom of expression could not, however, be used to violate the rights of others or of organisations and did not harm social order.  The policy of Viet Nam safeguarded the freedom of expression and of the press, but this needed to be in line with international law.  Cyber security in Viet Nam was not against these commitments and principles, which restrictions were aligned with.

    On the freedom of association, the delegation said this right was one of the most basic rights and was clearly provided for by the law and several Government decrees.  Viet Nam had more than 70,000 associations, many of which operated nationwide.  There were an increasing number of associations, operating in various sectors in order to cover the needs of the people, and operating in a way that contributed to the socio-economic development of the country.  The requirement of registration and reporting on financial resources was a popular regulation adopted to prevent any violation of the law by an association, such as conducting terrorism or money laundering. These regulations aimed at administrative management only, and were not based on discrimination.  The freedom of religion and belief was safeguarded through the Constitution and other legislation.

    To ensure transparency in elections, the National Assembly had established the National Election Council, which would make decisions on dismissing any false elections and rehosting them, and applying a penalty on those who had perpetrated fraud.  The 2021 election had the greatest number of electors ever.  There were no cases of serious violation of electoral regulations.  Viet Nam encouraged voters to select the candidates that satisfied the requirements for the position.  Elections were well-organised in Viet Nam.  Many regulations and provisions had been introduced on standing for election for members of the National Assembly to ensure the right of freedom to stand for election.

    On prevention of human trafficking in the labour sector, the law introduced a number of provisions to better protect Vietnamese workers working abroad.  The employment fee had been eliminated; only a brokerage fee could be charged. After a worker finalised a contract, they currently paid a limited fee, but Viet Nam was moving towards a model where the employer would pay this fee.  Campaigns were being held to ensure workers were aware of the risks of being trafficked when working abroad, and to give them more information about reliable channels for migrating, and of the risks of migrating outside of these channels.

    On civic space in Viet Nam, civil society organizations had the freedom to operate and could make contributions to the socio-economic development of the country, as long as they acted in line with the law.  Members of civil society organisations, including human rights defenders, would only be arrested if they violated the law, and the organisations needed to comply with the law and fulfil their obligations, including regarding tax regulations.  Arrests, detention and prosecution of such persons were only done in line with the law.

    Viet Nam adopted a revised version of its anti-trafficking law in January 2025 that was consistent with international standards and included a revised definition of human trafficking. The Criminal Code would be revised to ensure that it complied with the anti-trafficking law.  Anyone who reported to the authorities complaining of being a victim of trafficking would be protected and supported.  The law also contained provisions on rescue and identification of victims.  Viet Nam worked with the border and police of neighbouring countries to fight against human trafficking and to protect and defend victims, providing them with shelter and medical attention to cover their needs.

    Regarding freedom of movement, Viet Nam respected this fully with regard to its citizens, ensuring that they were protected and promoting their freedom of residence.  The law contained a list of prohibited activities.  Anybody leaving or entering the country needed to respect the relevant laws.  Freedom of movement could be restricted based on national security, public health, and public defence.  There was no single case of restriction of freedom of movement in Viet Nam for ethnic or religious reasons; all cases were because laws had been violated.

    Viet Nam supported the right of freedom of expression, but strictly dealt with violations of those rights, particularly in efforts to defame the State and cause division among the different parts of society, and this was in line with international agreements. 

    The Penal Code provided for detention only under clear and specific conditions, and also provided for other forms of detention.  Detention was only imposed if it was deemed necessary.  Detainees had the full right to family visits and to communicate with others, with the right to access legal counsel.  Limitations to legal counsel were in line with international standards, and only applied in severe cases of necessity, including those affecting national security.  Suspects could also be detained in these cases to ensure that the investigation would be sufficient.  Since 2019 to date, there had been no cases of abuse of this power.

    Follow-Up Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said he was not fully satisfied with responses on a few issues, including regarding who was responsible for the disciplinary procedure for judges, and how their independence from the Government was ensured. How was the presumption of innocence and access to a lawyer guaranteed, and how were lawyers protected in sensitive cases from facing threats of reprisal?  How was the independence of the National Electoral Council ensured?

    On the freedom of expression, an Expert noted that this was not an absolute right but said that concerns lay in the breadth of the restrictions allowed for by the State party.  Restrictions needed to be as narrowly defined as possible.  The Committee did not take exception to detention for violation of laws, but it took exception to excessive lengths of detention and forms of harassment perpetrated on the accused.  The State party recognised the importance of religious freedom, but at the same time referred to a need for registration, which was a limitation of this freedom.

    Another Expert addressed the situation of those arrested for national security reasons, noting that this was a broad concept, and that sometimes national security laws were applied to prisoners of conscience and persons with certain religious beliefs.  The Expert said he was unsure how this was relevant to national security.  The Working Group on Arbitrary Detention had found cases of arbitrary detention where there had been restriction of freedom of religion, restrictions on access to legal counsel, and other inappropriate restrictions, and he asked for a comment on this.

    Regarding the right to freedom of association, an Expert asked whether any of the restrictions to this right could be removed, and whether the Government was envisaging any law on the freedom of association.  According to information received, persons who spoke minority languages and other minorities were not allowed to participate in international fora, which was a matter of concern.  On the rights of indigenous peoples and minorities, had any of the rights that had been developed globally been recognised in Viet Nam, where there appeared to be a resistance to recognising indigenous peoples.  Did they benefit from the core rights existing in international law? 

    Further clarification was requested on the conditions under which the Government interfered with the right to privacy by cutting telephone lines, interrupting cell phones and Internet services for political activists and their families.  Did the Government consider abolishing or amending relevant legislation, or providing more solid grounds for the registering of media users using real names and phone numbers, including those outside Viet Nam?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Criminal Code included a provision on the presumption of innocence, so defendants were considered to be innocent until found guilty by a legal decision by a court of Viet Nam.  Only the courts had the authority to declare somebody guilty, and there needed to be sufficient access to legal counsel.  If there was lack of evidence, then the court needed to declare a person innocent.  There were many mechanisms to oversee and monitor judges’ performance, and there were inspections of local and central courts, investigations of denunciations or allegations of violations, and disciplinary actions provided for in case these were substantiated.

    Regarding elections, independent candidates needed to prepare a dossier and send their application to the local authorities, who would review it to make sure that it respected the law, after which they would send the dossier to the standing committee and the provincial election committee, as well as the National Election Council.  There was a stringent procedure for considering the application for election by independent candidates.  On restriction of the freedom of association, a recent decree had been enacted that created favourable conditions for associations without discrimination. There were no plans to introduce any other new laws, as the current legislation satisfied requirements.

    On privacy, cybersecurity and freedom of expression and speech, Viet Nam’s policy was to have a healthy cyberspace that did not infringe upon the enjoyment of rights.  The cybersecurity of Viet Nam aimed to promote the use of the Internet whilst striking a balance between the rise of the country and the needs of the people, and had been developed on the basis of learning from experiences of other countries, in consultation with public and private bodies.  The cybersecurity law provided precise conditions in which there could be restrictions of access to the Internet, but this law did not hinder human rights and only related to cases where individuals violated the law. Cybersecurity did not hinder the use of the Internet unless it was to defend the Government.

    The freedom of expression and of the press was not an absolute right and needed to be exercised in line with the law.  Registration was used to this end to protect the legitimate rights of all people and to develop a healthy Internet space.  The right to freedom and belief had been effectively supported over previous years, thanks to the implementation of a new law from 2018, the delegation said.

    Given the characteristics of the people in question, Viet Nam did not use the term “indigenous people”, using instead the terms “ethnic minority” or “small minority”, the delegation said.  The guarantee of rights for ethnic minorities was a significant achievement, given the geographical structure of Viet Nam.  These people were facilitated in their access to their human and citizenship rights.

    On arbitrary detention, the right to access to defence counsel was never limited for detainees.  Only the Prosecutor General had the power to make the decision to limit such access, but no cases of this were recorded.  On tax evasion, there were regulations on this all over the world, and penalties were imposed, and this could not be considered a punitive measure.

    Closing Statements

    THANH TỊNH NGUYỄN, Deputy Minister of Justice and head of the delegation, said Viet Nam appreciated the dialogue.  The delegation had engaged openly and sincerely, and aimed to provide all answers. Protection and promotion of human rights were the objective and result of a long struggle by many generations of Vietnamese people.  Human rights were a universal and global value, and their protection was a goal for all countries, but each country had a different mechanism to ensure these rights for citizens in line with its socio-economic situation.  Viet Nam worked to ensure the happiness of the people, which was the ultimate goal of its policies, and it had worked to this end to improve its legal system to ensure that people would be the beneficiaries of its policies.  Viet Nam remained steadfast in its aim to build a democratic, equitable and harmonious society, implementing sustainable social policies based on human rights for the people, who were placed at the heart of State policies.  Good laws also needed to be enforced and implemented to ensure positive results, and this was also the policy of the Government.  Viet Nam’s Government was committed to implementing the Covenant.

    CHANGROK SOH, Committee Chairperson, expressed sincere gratitude to all those who had contributed to the dialogue.  Over the past two days, the dialogue had addressed key elements of the implementation of the Covenant.  The adoption of certain institutional safeguards to combat discrimination and to combat domestic violence was positive, but there were a number of remaining concerns requiring attention, including severe restriction on fundamental freedoms related to assembly, speech, and religion.  There were also credible allegations of torture and ill-treatment, and persistent challenges for vulnerable groups, including women and children, ethnic minorities, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons.

    ___________

    This document is produced by the United Nations Information Service at Geneva and is intended for public information; it is not an official document.
    The English and French versions of our news releases are different because they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

    CCPR25.016E

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: In Dialogue with Viet Nam, Experts of the Human Rights Committee Commend the Strengthened Human Rights Framework, Raise Issues Concerning Discrimination and Reports of Media Repression

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Human Rights Committee today concluded its consideration of the fourth periodic report of Viet Nam on how it implements the provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.  Committee Experts commended steps Viet Nam had taken to strengthen its legal and institutional framework for human rights, and raised issues concerning discrimination in various areas of public life and reports of a repressive media landscape.

    A Committee Expert praised the important steps Viet Nam had taken to strengthen its legal and institutional framework for human rights, saying they reflected a clear commitment to international cooperation and legal reform. They welcomed the recent decision to reduce the number of capital offenses from 18 to 10, a significant step toward limiting the scope of application of the death penalty.

    However, Viet Nam lacked a law developing the principle of non-discrimination in areas such as employment, health, education, politics and justice, another Expert noted, asking for further information on the number of complaints of acts of discrimination.

    The Committee also expressed concern about reports of a repressive media landscape in Viet Nam, where journalists, bloggers and human rights activists were often intimidated into silence.  One Expert asked for comments on allegations of targeted surveillance arbitrarily conducted on political activists, journalists, and human rights defenders.

    Thanh Tịnh Nguyễn, Deputy Minister of Justice and head of the delegation, said Viet Nam had consistently devoted special attention, strong efforts, and firm commitment to promoting and ensuring the effective implementation of human rights and citizens’ rights, including civil and political rights.  Legal, administrative, and judicial reforms in Viet Nam, as well as law enforcement practices, were all anchored in a people-centred approach.

    In the ensuing discussion, the delegation, in response to these questions and others, said human rights had been upheld and promoted in Viet Nam over the past forty years and the State’s legal system was sufficiently comprehensive to fully implement the Covenant.

    The law was very comprehensive to prevent any discrimination in civil and personal life, the delegation said.  Everybody was equal before the law, including in the labour sector, where the law prohibited discrimination, including salary discrimination between men and women and against guest workers.  Discrimination was also forbidden in education.

    The right of freedom of expression could not, the delegation said, be used to violate the rights of others or of organisations or harm social order.  The policy of Viet Nam safeguarded the freedom of expression and of the press, but needed to be in line with international law.  Viet Nam strictly dealt with efforts to defame the State and cause division among the different parts of society, in line with international agreements.

    In concluding remarks, Mr. Nguyễn said the protection and promotion of human rights were the objective and result of a long struggle by many generations of Vietnamese people. Viet Nam worked to ensure the happiness of the people, which was the ultimate goal of its policies, and had worked to improve its legal system to ensure that people would be the beneficiaries of its policies.

    Changrok Soh, Committee Chairperson, in concluding remarks, said the dialogue had addressed key elements of the implementation of the Covenant.  The adoption of certain institutional safeguards to combat discrimination and domestic violence was positive, but there were several remaining concerns requiring attention, including regarding severe restrictions on fundamental freedoms related to assembly, speech, and religion.  There were also credible allegations of torture and ill-treatment, and persistent challenges for vulnerable groups, he concluded.

    The delegation of Viet Nam was made up of representatives of the Ministry of Justice; the Office of the Government; the Supreme People’s Procuracy; the Ministry of Public Security; the Ministry of Home Affairs; the Supreme People’s Court; the Ministry of Culture, Sport and Tourism; the Ministry of Ethnic Minorities and Religions; the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; and the Permanent Mission of Viet Nam to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Human Rights Committee’s one hundred and forty-fourth session is being held from 23 June to 17 July 2025.  All the documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties, can be found on the session’s webpage.  Meeting summary releases can be found here.  The webcast of the Committee’s public meetings can be accessed via the UN Web TV webpage.

    The Committee will next meet in public at 10 a.m., Thursday 10 July to hold an informal meeting with States.

    Report

    The Committee has before it the fourth periodic report of Viet Nam (CCPR/C/VNM/4).

    Presentation of the Report

    THANH TỊNH NGUYỄN, Deputy Minister of Justice and head of the delegation, said, guided by the principle of placing people at the centre — as both the goal and the driving force of development, Viet Nam had consistently devoted special attention, strong efforts, and firm commitment to promoting and ensuring the effective implementation of human rights and citizens’ rights, including civil and political rights.  Legal, administrative, and judicial reforms in Viet Nam, as well as law enforcement practices, were all anchored in a people-centred approach, whereby the people were regarded as the primary beneficiaries of the system.  These efforts aimed to implement effective measures to protect and ensure human rights and citizens’ rights in accordance with the law.  Immediately following the constructive dialogue with the Committee in 2019, the Government of Viet Nam adopted a national action plan to implement the Covenant and the Committee’s recommendations, with the aim of clearly identifying areas in need of improvement and undertaking necessary institutional and practical measures to ensure substantive progress.

    With regard to institutional and legal reform, since the submission of the fourth national report, Viet Nam had amended, supplemented, or enacted over 150 laws and resolutions of the National Assembly, many of which were directly related to the lives of the people and aimed at advancing civil and political rights.  Most recently, Viet Nam adopted the amended Criminal Code, which narrowed the scope of application of the death penalty by abolishing capital punishment for eight offences, and had recently adopted Resolution 66 on reforming the legislative process.  Viet Nam was also vigorously advancing a comprehensive reform of the State administrative apparatus.

    Viet Nam had undertaken a range of measures to enhance transparency, openness, and efficiency in the implementation of laws and policies.  Human rights education had been integrated into the national curriculum.  Viet Nam had issued and effectively implemented a range of policies that directly promoted and protected civil and political rights.  In the area of social security policy, Viet Nam remained firmly committed to ensuring social welfare, public safety, and the well-being of its people, under the guiding principle of “leaving no one behind.”  Viet Nam had also taken proactive measures to respond to climate change and to support the people in the context of disaster relief efforts. It had further placed strong emphasis on investing in infrastructure and enabling conditions to ensure public access to information, and was currently recognised as one of the countries with the most affordable internet access.  Rapid developments had significantly contributed to the realisation of the rights to freedom of the press, freedom of expression, and access to information.

    In the process of ensuring, protecting, and promoting the realisation of human rights, Viet Nam continued to face various difficulties and challenges arising from multiple factors that affect the implementation of the Covenant. These included limited resources; instances where the enforcement of laws had not met expectations; and the growing impact of global issues and non-traditional security threats in the context of Viet Nam’s  international integration.

    Viet Nam was in the process of building and perfecting a socialist rule-of-law State for the people, in order to build a high-quality legal system that effectively ensured and protected human rights and citizens’ rights, in a manner consistent with national realities and international standards.  In this process, Viet Nam would continue to seriously fulfil its international human rights commitments, and further promote dialogue and cooperation in this important area.  At the same time, Viet Nam would implement comprehensive measures to better promote, protect, and ensure the enjoyment of civil and political rights, and to improve resilience to climate change — particularly for vulnerable groups — through appropriate steps in the time to come.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said the Committee acknowledged the important steps Viet Nam had taken to strengthen its legal and institutional framework for human rights.  These developments reflected a clear commitment to international cooperation and legal reform.  The Committee commended Viet Nam for its recent decision to reduce the number of capital offenses from 18 to 10, which marked a significant step toward limiting the scope of application of the death penalty.

    Given reports that Directive 24 broadly defined international integration as a national security threat, leading to systemic restrictions on freedoms of expression, association, and movement, how did Viet Nam reconcile this directive with the Covenant’s articles 19, 21, and 22, an Expert asked.  Regarding disaster response and recovery efforts, as well as campaigns to eliminate temporary housing, the report did not address the adoption of a precautionary approach or specific measures to protect the most vulnerable from the negative impacts of climate change and natural disasters, and the Expert asked what specific measures Viet Nam had adopted to implement a precautionary approach to environmental and climate risks, and how vulnerable groups were identified and protected in these policies.

    Regarding the death penalty, an Expert asked about the criteria used to select offences to be removed from the scope of the death penalty; the reasons that led Viet Nam to stop short of full abolition; and considerations that had prevented the country from following the path toward complete abolition of the death penalty.  What measures were in place to ensure full respect for due process guarantees in death penalty cases, and to prevent the imposition of the death penalty as a result of forced confessions?  On enforced disappearances, the Expert asked whether Vietnamese law defined and criminalised all acts of enforced disappearance in accordance with international standards, and about measures in place to ensure prompt, thorough, and impartial investigations into allegations of enforced disappearance and transnational repression.

    Another Expert asked for an update on progress made towards the establishment of the national human rights institution, and for more detailed and concrete information on the status of the legislative review and the reasons for the continued delays in establishing the body.  What measures did the State party plan to take to ensure that all allegations of torture and ill-treatment, solitary confinement, incommunicado detention and forced commitment to psychiatric facilities were promptly and thoroughly investigated by an independent body and that perpetrators were prosecuted and sanctioned with appropriate penalties, and to investigate all reported instances of deaths of prisoners while detained?  What measures would the State party take to ensure that national legislation protecting the rights of detainees was implemented in practice, in particular the right to medical care?

    An Expert commended the State party for its continued efforts to combat corruption, but noted that further efforts were needed to strengthen anti-corruption initiatives.  He expressed particular concern relating to allegations of corruption involving high-level public officials, judges, prosecutors, and law enforcement officers, and asked for information on any actions taken in response to such cases.  He noted reports indicating persistent concerns that the enforcement of anti-corruption laws was perceived as selective and politically driven.  The Expert asked for further details on the mandates, composition, appointment procedures, and safeguards in place to ensure the independence of the three types of agencies involved in anti-corruption efforts.  He also asked whether the draft Law on the State of Emergency was fully compatible with article four of the Covenant, including its substantive and procedural requirements.

    Viet Nam lacked a law developing the principle of non-discrimination in areas such as employment, health, education, politics and justice, an Expert noted, asking for further information on the number of complaints of acts of discrimination, and on investigations, sanctions and reparations for victims; about employees with disabilities in the public and private sectors; and on the existence of other protection mechanisms.  Regarding women’s rights, the Expert asked about progress that had been made over the last ten years, including regarding non-discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender, noting that women’s rights had been violated by these forms of discrimination.  Was the State going to work towards the legalisation of same-sex marriage or civil partnership?  Had measures been taken to address the issue of stigmatisation, harassment, violence and discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons?

    An Expert expressed concern for the realities of Khmer Krom women, who were highly vulnerable to various human rights violations due to their gender, facing a high risk of systematic inequalities and abuse.  Other areas of concern included the wide salary gap between men and women, as well as continuing differentiation of retirement ages between men and women, the participation of women in political life, and that there still needed to be evidence of a minimum degree of physical injury for an act to be legally recognised as rape.  In view of these, the Expert asked what measures had been taken to increase women’s participation, specifically ethnic minority women and women in rural areas, in all private and public sectors, as well as high-level decision-making positions and political life.

    The Expert also expressed concern about the situation of drug users confined to drug rehabilitation centres, asking for more information on measures taken to ensure that all legislation concerning drug detoxification and rehabilitation centres, particularly the provisions retaining compulsory drug treatment, including for children between 12 and 18, were in line with the Covenant.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said human rights had been upheld and promoted in Viet Nam over the past forty years and its legal system was sufficiently comprehensive to fully implement the Covenant.  There was a separate chapter in the Constitution on human rights that was in line with the Covenant.  Human rights could only be suspended for reasons of national security, public safety, and public health.  Only the National Assembly could suspend human rights, in line with the Constitution. As part of the law-making process in Viet Nam, there needed to be a consultation with stakeholders, including those affected by the law.  Human rights topics were now included in the national educational curriculum.  The State conducted many campaigns on human rights, and information on human rights was translated into various national minority languages and made available, including online.  Viet Nam had adopted various national measures to ensure national security and the safe and productive life of its people.

    Viet Nam was implementing the Covenant in various ways, including through its law and education.  According to the law, the Covenant needed to be prioritised if there were differences between it and the law.  If any discrepancies were identified, the Covenant took precedence.  There were training courses for judges and lawyers and other legal professionals on the provisions of the Covenant.

    Viet Nam was one of the countries seriously affected by climate change, which caused many socio-economic challenges.  The Government attached great importance to those whose rights had been affected by the phenomenon, and ensured that sustainable and green development and the climate change strategy of Viet Nam were prioritised in all policies.  Many important activities had been adopted for ethnic minorities, including access to adequate, clean water, and the development of a medical network that focused on climate change-related diseases.  The Government had also developed a plan to review infrastructure in climate change-prone areas, including water infrastructure.  The climate change strategy had many implications on the enjoyment of the human rights of the people.  Viet Nam promoted international cooperation to ensure that all could fight climate change issues, whilst cooperating with all international agencies.

    On discrimination against the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex community, anti-discrimination was a part of the legal framework, and over the past years Viet Nam had taken many steps to better protect the members of the community, to ensure that none would be discriminated against on the basis of their gender or sexual identity.  The provision in the law criminalising same-sex marriage had been removed more than 10 years ago, although there was no law legalising same-sex marriage.  The new Criminal Code, since 2015, contained provisions regarding sexual offences which protected lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons.  In 2022, the Ministry of Health introduced a guideline giving direction to local authorities, which ensured that these persons could not be subject to discrimination. On oversight of activities in the medical sector, so far, no complaints had been received, meaning that there were no violations of the guidelines.  Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons had access to services to support them, and could change their legal identity, ensuring that they were not discriminated against.

    On anti-corruption efforts, Viet Nam had implemented many activities aiming to perfect the legal framework, including the adoption of the Anti-Corruption Law within the Criminal Code and related preventive measures.  It had also strengthened its monitoring activities, streamlined the administrative apparatus to better support the functions of the State, and was working to enhance efficiency.  Anti-corruption courses were available for legal practitioners, including at the local level.  Capacity building was one of the strongest commitments made by the Government.  There were specialised agencies working to prevent corruption, including a department on police in the Ministry of Security, and a department specialised on investigations and prosecutions of corruption cases within the Ministry of Justice.  Viet Nam had made significant efforts over the last few years to combat corruption and had recently made significant achievements, which it would strive to continue.

    The law was very comprehensive to prevent any discrimination in civil and personal life.  Everybody was equal before the law, including in the labour sector, where the law prohibited discrimination, including salary discrimination between men and women and against guest workers.  Discrimination was also forbidden in education.  The law provided a significant number of sanctions to reduce gender inequality.  Efforts had been strengthened to ensure the equal representation of women in political life — women were provided with more opportunities for leadership positions and were given training to gain the necessary skills to participate in political life.  There was an action plan in the Ministry of Labour to ensure equal access of men and women to business, investment capital, and health services.  The gap between retirement age between men and women was being reviewed by the Government; the current discrepancy was not discriminatory but reflected the situation of the population.  Many different policies and programmes were being implemented for persons with disabilities, including those providing employment opportunities.

    On the establishment of the national human rights institution, much work had been done in this regard.  This was an important long-term goal that required serious consideration to ensure that the institution would be in line with international commitments and Viet Nam’s needs and specificities.  There were currently other mechanisms in place, including the equivalent of an Ombudsman, and a National Committee on Women and Children, which fulfilled the same role, promoting the rights of the people of Viet Nam.  Viet Nam was still reviewing the situation in order to be able to establish a model national human rights institution.

    According to Vietnamese law, prisoners had the right to access medical care, including medical check-ups and access to hospital services for regular treatment if their care could not be provided in the prison.  On transfers to psychiatric facilities, if a person showed any signs of psychiatric illness, they would be sent for forensic examination, and if the examination indicated it was required, they would be transferred to psychiatric facilities, where they were entitled to medical treatment.

    Human rights, including the right to life, could only be restricted in certain circumstances provided for in the Constitution.  Depriving others of their right to life was a criminal affair which needed to be prosecuted.  Viet Nam implemented various measures recommended by international bodies during the COVID-19 pandemic to lower the rate of transmission in accordance with the law, on the basis of public health and in order to safeguard the health of the people. There was a free vaccination campaign, with no discrimination.  At the end of the pandemic, Viet Nam brought the restrictions to an end.

    Juveniles were not subject to the death penalty, the delegation said, and Viet Nam was getting closer to international standards, moving forward to a phase in which it would review the Criminal Code.  It also had a road map to move forward in making it ever more difficult to condemn a person to death.  Work had also been done to ensure that there was no overlap with torture in the application of the death penalty.  There was an oversight mechanism and strong and stringent sanctions to be applied to the perpetrators of torture.

    One law included specific regulation of detention conditions, including the minimum space per detainee, access to food and drinkable water, and women-specific products.  All prisoners were entitled to medical support and treatment.  There was compulsory drug rehabilitation and detoxification, aiming to help persons end their addiction.  There was a strict procedure for this, which included a passage in front of a court.

    Follow-Up Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said the situation of women still raised questions.  Misconceptions about sexual violence, the wish to preserve the harmony of the family, mediation according to the law of 2022, and the fear of rehabilitation were all obstacles before women, making them reluctant to report acts of violence committed against them in different spheres, including domestic violence and harassment in the workplace.  The legal definition of rape remained of concern to the Committee.  What were the activities carried out under the national communication programme on gender equality and the National Strategy on Gender Equality?  What measures were taken to identify the factors that prevented women victims from reporting abuse, and to align the legal definition of rape with the Covenant and other international standards?  What remedies had been offered to victims and what was the number of cases that had been referred to alternative dispute resolution processes?

    Another Expert asked about the oversight mechanisms that existed to examine cases of torture and their findings.  Had there been any cases of torture, and if there were any, had the perpetrators been prosecuted?  One Expert said the results of corruption investigations could vary depending on who initiated and drove the process.  In certain cases, political manoeuvring could influence investigations; statistical data would help clarify the nature of the cases.  Viet Nam had not submitted any notification under article four, paragraph three of the Covenant — did this mean it did not consider itself to ever have been under a situation of public emergency?

    Another Expert raised the issue of a comprehensive law on non-discrimination and the potential detention of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons in separate facilities apart from the general population, asking if this was being done according to human rights principles.  According to the Adoption Law of 2010, adoption could only be done by people with opposite-sex partners, or by a single person.  The Expert asked about the extent to which a homosexual person could adopt.  On discrimination against persons with disabilities in the world of work, he asked for specific, concrete data regarding the number of persons employed under programmes to end discrimination in the labour market.

    An Expert asked whether there was a legal procedure that enabled individuals sentenced to death to seek a review of their convictions based on newly discovered evidence of their innocence, and what remedies were provided for persons who were shown to have been wrongly convicted?  Again on the death penalty, another Expert asked how many executions had taken place, and how many persons were on death row?  Was there an offence related to kidnapping for financial gain, as this could be assimilated to enforced disappearance?

    In Viet Nam, the international human rights treaties did hold precedence, and nothing stopped the courts from applying them.  Why, to date, had no court invoked the Covenant with regard to the rights and provisions enshrined within it?

    Regarding the plan of action against climate change, the Expert was pleased to recognise that minorities in occupied territories who were particularly vulnerable to climate change were included; he asked whether these minorities were consulted during the drafting of the plans and whether they were respecting traditional farming methods and techniques?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the law of Viet Nam mentioned the hierarchy of international legislation and domestic law; priority was given to the international commitments and agreements.  The definition of rape in the Criminal Code was divided into two categories, including one for those over 13 and one for those under 13, for whom the law did not require any evidence of force or circumstances such as alcoholic consumption to elicit sexual activities.  The law did not distinguish between married and unmarried rape.

    On domestic violence, the delegation said even though much effort had been made to combat this violence, the detection and handling of such cases had not yet been satisfactory.  The Government had issued a decree on domestic violence.  Data would be provided more comprehensively later. There were opportunities for the victim to express themselves.  There were also local supportive networks for the victims of violence, and there were psychological and medical services provided for such victims.  There were media and communication events held on domestic violence, and campaigns to raise awareness, providing information for victims so that they would be more willing to raise their voice.

    Regarding torture and the death penalty, there were eight crimes which could be punished by the penalty, including treason, murder, rape, terrorism, crimes against humanity, crimes of war, illegal production of narcotics, and drug trafficking. Keeping the data regarding executions private was often due to national security and defence reasons, and also for the protection of the privacy of the family and victims of the perpetrator.  There was a procedure for review of judgements — at any point, a complaint could be made and an appeal made on the basis of wrongful conviction.  In the case of a wrongful conviction, there was a law on State compensation.  If there was any violation or wrongful conviction identified, then the State would provide compensation, including a public apology.  The law was very comprehensive when it came to illegal detention of others.  There was a hierarchy of oversight mechanisms which applied to cases of torture.

    Regarding detention, Viet Nam did not use the method of transferring prisoners away from their residential addresses as a punishment.  Prisoners were kept close to their families.  Pregnant women, foreigners and juveniles were given particular consideration.  However, very violent or dangerous criminals were kept separate from other members of the same criminal network in prison, for reasons of security.  Viet Nam was making great efforts to improve conditions for prisoners, and was amending the law on custody and detention to ensure there could be no violation of human rights.

    Only certain persons were subject to compulsory detoxification and addiction treatment, and such decisions needed to be made by the local authority and reviewed by the court to ensure that they were valid.  There were no cases of forced labour at the compulsory detoxification centres, but there was therapeutic labour, which aimed to help inmates to learn to take care of themselves.  Inmates were allowed to enjoy sports and other leisure activities.

    There were several pilot programmes to respond to climate change, with engagement from the local to the central level, and communication campaigns for the ethnic and mountain areas.  There were a wide range of collaborative events, including with non-governmental organizations, and inputs from partners were carefully considered by the authorities when they developed strategies to mitigate climate change.

    There was fertile ground for the growth of a national human rights institution, but to achieve this, legal amendments, including of the Constitution, were needed, making it a time-consuming process.  Viet Nam was paying more attention to streamlining the governmental structure.  In the future, it would carefully consider the Paris Principles when establishing such an institution.  However, great efforts were being made to safeguard, protect and promote human rights already.  There was a mechanism already in place to deal with corruption, which dealt with reports and allegations of corruption from individuals.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said the Criminal Procedure Code provided that Government prosecutors could hold suspects accused of national security crimes in detention for an unlimited period without trial or judicial review.  Prosecutors could restrict access to legal counsel in cases related to suspects accused of “national security” crimes until the conclusion of the investigation and with no time limits.  What concrete measures would be taken to ensure that any deprivation of liberty was lawful and that detained persons were afforded legal safeguards from the outset of their detention?  How would the State ensure that pre-trial detention was used only as a measure of last resort and for the shortest period, following a proper, individualised assessment and for reasons expressly provided by law and in line with international human rights standard and the Covenant?

    Reports before the Committee indicated that trafficking in persons continued to be a serious concern.  There was a lack of a clear framework for the protection of non-Vietnamese nationals trafficked to Viet Nam, or transited through Viet Nam to a third country.  There had been no substantive changes in Government policies and efforts to combat labour trafficking in the State-run labour export programme.  What measures were being taken to strengthen international legal cooperation and national law enforcement capacities to investigate and respond to the linkages between cybercrime, human trafficking and migrant smuggling, and to strengthen international cooperation to ensure cross-border access to supporting services?

    Another Expert said the Committee remained concerned about directives on international travel that closely managed officials, party members and Vietnamese citizens who went abroad, and by the fact that the law allowed authorities to postpone the departure of any person on various broad grounds.  What new measures had been taken to guarantee freedom of movement, and what were the legal grounds for decisions to restrict international travel on Vietnamese citizens and legal grounds for such bans?  The Expert also asked for comment on reports asserting that members of ethnic and religious minorities and indigenous people had been prevented from leaving Viet Nam to seek asylum; and that human rights defenders and religious activists were routinely subject to discriminatory restrictions on their freedom of movement.

    Significant progress had been made in juvenile justice, thanks to an increased awareness of the importance of legal institutional reforms.  However, these improvements were reportedly neither systematic nor comprehensive, and detention of children in conflict with the law was still common.  What efforts had been made to amend the legislation to address the protection gaps for children aged 16 and 17 years and the definition of a child to cover persons up to 18 years of age?  What measures had been taken to strengthen the juvenile justice system by setting up additional specialised courts with trained judges, improving community-based diversion, and ensuring children were not deprived of liberty?

    The Committee was concerned about reports of a repressive media landscape in Viet Nam, where journalists, bloggers and human rights activists were often intimidated into silence, another Expert said, asking for comments on allegations of targeted surveillance arbitrarily conducted on political activists, journalists, and human rights defenders.

    Regarding judicial independence, another Expert asked what specific measures were in place to guarantee the presumption of innocence, access to a lawyer of one’s choice, and a trial within a reasonable time for journalists, human rights defenders, political activists, and individuals accused of national security crimes.  What concrete steps had the State party taken to prevent and punish threats, intimidation, or harassment against lawyers for their work on sensitive cases?  Had any independent mechanisms for judicial oversight over legislative and executive actions been established or implemented? On participation in public affairs, the same Expert asked what measures had been taken to encourage and promote political pluralism.  What steps had been taken to eliminate proxy voting in practice, and had an independent electoral monitoring body been established?

    On the freedom of association, despite the constitutional proclamation of the right of association, an Expert expressed concern that there was no framework law regulating this right in a coherent and protective manner.  There had also been reports of systematic repression of religious minorities practising their faith outside the control of State-recognised religious organisations.  What measures had Viet Nam taken to ensure that the right of association, including the right to establish and register independent religious or social associations, could be exercised without interference?  What guarantees existed to prevent the use of the Penal Code against minority religious communities that did not wish to integrate into State-controlled structures?  Further, he asked for detailed information on the rules applicable to associations receiving foreign funding and on the differences in legal treatment between national associations, foreign associations and those receiving international funding.  What steps had Viet Nam taken to ensure that tax and criminal laws were not used in a disproportionate or discriminatory manner against human rights defenders?

    The Committee welcomed the programmes implemented by the State party for the economic and social development of minorities.  However, there had been multiple reports of persistent discrimination against these minority groups, in particular against the Khmer Krom and Montagnards.  What concrete actions had Viet Nam taken to eradicate systematic discrimination against these communities in education, employment and public services?

    On freedom of conscience and religious belief, what was the procedure for registration or recognition for religious groups, an Expert asked, inquiring how long the process typically took from initiation to decision?  Was the applicant allowed an opportunity to respond or appeal during the review process? What were the reasons for denying registration to certain organizations?  How did the State party justify the non-registration of relatively large religious groups such as Cao Dai and Hoa Hao?  What measures were in place to ensure that individuals were free to choose their religion without coercion?

    Regarding freedom of expression, what amendments was the State party considering to the Press Law, the Expert asked.  What legal safeguards existed to ensure that measures affecting online freedom of expression were strictly necessary and proportionate, and in compliance with the Covenant?  What mechanisms were in place to prevent and address harassment and intimidation of individuals, including journalists and online activists, who expressed views critical of the Government?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said ethnic minorities in Viet Nam were entitled to all human rights and citizen rights, and equal access to public services.  Many regulations prohibited discrimination on ethnic grounds.  The Government was implementing a socio-economic plan to ensure development of ethnic affairs.  Ethnic minorities were given the full opportunity to participate in economic and social life, and to stand for election: 70 per cent of the National Assembly were members of ethnic minorities.  Ethnic minorities could participate in many political activities. There were policies encouraging their equal participation in public service and their culture and cultural identity.  Ethnic minority groups had the right to equality of employment, including equal pay. There was vocational training for ethnic minorities, which was regulated by the law.

    Authorities ensured the freedom of religion by citizens.  The State checked the implementation of the law on freedom of religion and belief.  There were favourable conditions that ensured detainees or persons in custody could exercise their religion.  The State did not require registration for religious collectives and religious activities could take place without registration if they were not against the law.

    There had been changes to the law on the People’s Court, regarding the appointment of judges, to further guarantee their independence.  There was a stringent procedure for their appointment.  Interference with judicial activities was prohibited by law, and there was a mechanism to oversee the activities of judges to ensure that they complied with the law.  Regarding corruption, several cases had been prosecuted against high-ranking persons, and the results of these were publicised.  The victims of corruption were protected, as provided for in the Criminal Code.  Activities that hindered the judicial procedure could also be punished according to the law.

    On juvenile justice, there was a new Juvenile Justice Law since November 2024, which entered into effect in 2025, which was consistent with international standards on juvenile justice and provided new regulations to better protect juvenile perpetrators and victims, with diverse measures that could be applied to offenders.  The law also introduced family-friendly measures to ensure that the procedure would be more victim-friendly.  Penalties against juvenile offenders could include non-custodial punishments, and juvenile offenders below a certain age who were detained were kept separately, under the oversight of trained officers.  There were 38 juvenile courts at the provincial level.  Much attention was paid to training and capacity-building of the judges of these courts.

    A high percentage of Viet Nam’s population had access to the Internet, with good technology and infrastructure, the delegation said, but there was a need for a better mechanism to ensure confidentiality and privacy.  The State had issued a decree to strengthen cyber security to ensure that information was only collected in line with international standards and with the commitments Viet Nam had made, without hindering data flow.  The National Assembly of Viet Nam had adopted a law on protection of personal data, which was a strong commitment to the protection of privacy in line with international standards.  It also guaranteed the right to complain if such privacy was violated. Viet Nam’s efforts had been recognised by the international community.

    The right of freedom of expression could not, however, be used to violate the rights of others or of organisations and did not harm social order.  The policy of Viet Nam safeguarded the freedom of expression and of the press, but this needed to be in line with international law.  Cyber security in Viet Nam was not against these commitments and principles, which restrictions were aligned with.

    On the freedom of association, the delegation said this right was one of the most basic rights and was clearly provided for by the law and several Government decrees.  Viet Nam had more than 70,000 associations, many of which operated nationwide.  There were an increasing number of associations, operating in various sectors in order to cover the needs of the people, and operating in a way that contributed to the socio-economic development of the country.  The requirement of registration and reporting on financial resources was a popular regulation adopted to prevent any violation of the law by an association, such as conducting terrorism or money laundering. These regulations aimed at administrative management only, and were not based on discrimination.  The freedom of religion and belief was safeguarded through the Constitution and other legislation.

    To ensure transparency in elections, the National Assembly had established the National Election Council, which would make decisions on dismissing any false elections and rehosting them, and applying a penalty on those who had perpetrated fraud.  The 2021 election had the greatest number of electors ever.  There were no cases of serious violation of electoral regulations.  Viet Nam encouraged voters to select the candidates that satisfied the requirements for the position.  Elections were well-organised in Viet Nam.  Many regulations and provisions had been introduced on standing for election for members of the National Assembly to ensure the right of freedom to stand for election.

    On prevention of human trafficking in the labour sector, the law introduced a number of provisions to better protect Vietnamese workers working abroad.  The employment fee had been eliminated; only a brokerage fee could be charged. After a worker finalised a contract, they currently paid a limited fee, but Viet Nam was moving towards a model where the employer would pay this fee.  Campaigns were being held to ensure workers were aware of the risks of being trafficked when working abroad, and to give them more information about reliable channels for migrating, and of the risks of migrating outside of these channels.

    On civic space in Viet Nam, civil society organizations had the freedom to operate and could make contributions to the socio-economic development of the country, as long as they acted in line with the law.  Members of civil society organisations, including human rights defenders, would only be arrested if they violated the law, and the organisations needed to comply with the law and fulfil their obligations, including regarding tax regulations.  Arrests, detention and prosecution of such persons were only done in line with the law.

    Viet Nam adopted a revised version of its anti-trafficking law in January 2025 that was consistent with international standards and included a revised definition of human trafficking. The Criminal Code would be revised to ensure that it complied with the anti-trafficking law.  Anyone who reported to the authorities complaining of being a victim of trafficking would be protected and supported.  The law also contained provisions on rescue and identification of victims.  Viet Nam worked with the border and police of neighbouring countries to fight against human trafficking and to protect and defend victims, providing them with shelter and medical attention to cover their needs.

    Regarding freedom of movement, Viet Nam respected this fully with regard to its citizens, ensuring that they were protected and promoting their freedom of residence.  The law contained a list of prohibited activities.  Anybody leaving or entering the country needed to respect the relevant laws.  Freedom of movement could be restricted based on national security, public health, and public defence.  There was no single case of restriction of freedom of movement in Viet Nam for ethnic or religious reasons; all cases were because laws had been violated.

    Viet Nam supported the right of freedom of expression, but strictly dealt with violations of those rights, particularly in efforts to defame the State and cause division among the different parts of society, and this was in line with international agreements. 

    The Penal Code provided for detention only under clear and specific conditions, and also provided for other forms of detention.  Detention was only imposed if it was deemed necessary.  Detainees had the full right to family visits and to communicate with others, with the right to access legal counsel.  Limitations to legal counsel were in line with international standards, and only applied in severe cases of necessity, including those affecting national security.  Suspects could also be detained in these cases to ensure that the investigation would be sufficient.  Since 2019 to date, there had been no cases of abuse of this power.

    Follow-Up Questions by Committee Experts

    A Committee Expert said he was not fully satisfied with responses on a few issues, including regarding who was responsible for the disciplinary procedure for judges, and how their independence from the Government was ensured. How was the presumption of innocence and access to a lawyer guaranteed, and how were lawyers protected in sensitive cases from facing threats of reprisal?  How was the independence of the National Electoral Council ensured?

    On the freedom of expression, an Expert noted that this was not an absolute right but said that concerns lay in the breadth of the restrictions allowed for by the State party.  Restrictions needed to be as narrowly defined as possible.  The Committee did not take exception to detention for violation of laws, but it took exception to excessive lengths of detention and forms of harassment perpetrated on the accused.  The State party recognised the importance of religious freedom, but at the same time referred to a need for registration, which was a limitation of this freedom.

    Another Expert addressed the situation of those arrested for national security reasons, noting that this was a broad concept, and that sometimes national security laws were applied to prisoners of conscience and persons with certain religious beliefs.  The Expert said he was unsure how this was relevant to national security.  The Working Group on Arbitrary Detention had found cases of arbitrary detention where there had been restriction of freedom of religion, restrictions on access to legal counsel, and other inappropriate restrictions, and he asked for a comment on this.

    Regarding the right to freedom of association, an Expert asked whether any of the restrictions to this right could be removed, and whether the Government was envisaging any law on the freedom of association.  According to information received, persons who spoke minority languages and other minorities were not allowed to participate in international fora, which was a matter of concern.  On the rights of indigenous peoples and minorities, had any of the rights that had been developed globally been recognised in Viet Nam, where there appeared to be a resistance to recognising indigenous peoples.  Did they benefit from the core rights existing in international law? 

    Further clarification was requested on the conditions under which the Government interfered with the right to privacy by cutting telephone lines, interrupting cell phones and Internet services for political activists and their families.  Did the Government consider abolishing or amending relevant legislation, or providing more solid grounds for the registering of media users using real names and phone numbers, including those outside Viet Nam?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the Criminal Code included a provision on the presumption of innocence, so defendants were considered to be innocent until found guilty by a legal decision by a court of Viet Nam.  Only the courts had the authority to declare somebody guilty, and there needed to be sufficient access to legal counsel.  If there was lack of evidence, then the court needed to declare a person innocent.  There were many mechanisms to oversee and monitor judges’ performance, and there were inspections of local and central courts, investigations of denunciations or allegations of violations, and disciplinary actions provided for in case these were substantiated.

    Regarding elections, independent candidates needed to prepare a dossier and send their application to the local authorities, who would review it to make sure that it respected the law, after which they would send the dossier to the standing committee and the provincial election committee, as well as the National Election Council.  There was a stringent procedure for considering the application for election by independent candidates.  On restriction of the freedom of association, a recent decree had been enacted that created favourable conditions for associations without discrimination. There were no plans to introduce any other new laws, as the current legislation satisfied requirements.

    On privacy, cybersecurity and freedom of expression and speech, Viet Nam’s policy was to have a healthy cyberspace that did not infringe upon the enjoyment of rights.  The cybersecurity of Viet Nam aimed to promote the use of the Internet whilst striking a balance between the rise of the country and the needs of the people, and had been developed on the basis of learning from experiences of other countries, in consultation with public and private bodies.  The cybersecurity law provided precise conditions in which there could be restrictions of access to the Internet, but this law did not hinder human rights and only related to cases where individuals violated the law. Cybersecurity did not hinder the use of the Internet unless it was to defend the Government.

    The freedom of expression and of the press was not an absolute right and needed to be exercised in line with the law.  Registration was used to this end to protect the legitimate rights of all people and to develop a healthy Internet space.  The right to freedom and belief had been effectively supported over previous years, thanks to the implementation of a new law from 2018, the delegation said.

    Given the characteristics of the people in question, Viet Nam did not use the term “indigenous people”, using instead the terms “ethnic minority” or “small minority”, the delegation said.  The guarantee of rights for ethnic minorities was a significant achievement, given the geographical structure of Viet Nam.  These people were facilitated in their access to their human and citizenship rights.

    On arbitrary detention, the right to access to defence counsel was never limited for detainees.  Only the Prosecutor General had the power to make the decision to limit such access, but no cases of this were recorded.  On tax evasion, there were regulations on this all over the world, and penalties were imposed, and this could not be considered a punitive measure.

    Closing Statements

    THANH TỊNH NGUYỄN, Deputy Minister of Justice and head of the delegation, said Viet Nam appreciated the dialogue.  The delegation had engaged openly and sincerely, and aimed to provide all answers. Protection and promotion of human rights were the objective and result of a long struggle by many generations of Vietnamese people.  Human rights were a universal and global value, and their protection was a goal for all countries, but each country had a different mechanism to ensure these rights for citizens in line with its socio-economic situation.  Viet Nam worked to ensure the happiness of the people, which was the ultimate goal of its policies, and it had worked to this end to improve its legal system to ensure that people would be the beneficiaries of its policies.  Viet Nam remained steadfast in its aim to build a democratic, equitable and harmonious society, implementing sustainable social policies based on human rights for the people, who were placed at the heart of State policies.  Good laws also needed to be enforced and implemented to ensure positive results, and this was also the policy of the Government.  Viet Nam’s Government was committed to implementing the Covenant.

    CHANGROK SOH, Committee Chairperson, expressed sincere gratitude to all those who had contributed to the dialogue.  Over the past two days, the dialogue had addressed key elements of the implementation of the Covenant.  The adoption of certain institutional safeguards to combat discrimination and to combat domestic violence was positive, but there were a number of remaining concerns requiring attention, including severe restriction on fundamental freedoms related to assembly, speech, and religion.  There were also credible allegations of torture and ill-treatment, and persistent challenges for vulnerable groups, including women and children, ethnic minorities, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons.

    ___________

    This document is produced by the United Nations Information Service at Geneva and is intended for public information; it is not an official document.
    The English and French versions of our news releases are different because they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

    CCPR25.016E

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Rutledge, Tennessee, Man Sentenced to Over 24 Years in Prison for Production of Child Pornography

    Source: US FBI

    GREENEVILLE, Tenn. – On July 1, 2025, Patrick E. McAneny Jr, 28, of Rutledge, Tennessee, was sentenced to 292 months imprisonment by the Honorable Clifton L. Corker, United States District Judge, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Greeneville.  Upon his release from prison, McAneny will be on supervised release for 20 years.  He will be required to register with state sex offender registries and comply with special sex offender conditions during his supervised release.

    As part of the plea agreement filed with the court, McAneny plead guilty to count one of an indictment charging him with use of a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of such conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a).

    According to the written plea agreement filed with the court, McAneny began an online relationship with a 12-year-old girl.  On February 4, 2024, McAneny traveled from his home in Grainger County, Tennessee to pick up the minor from her home in Hamblen County, Tennessee. She did not have permission to leave her home.  Her family reported her missing the same day. From February 4 to February 6, 2024, while at McAneny’s home he took photos, and video recorded the minor and himself engaged in sexual acts.  McAneny sent a video of the minor victim engaged in sexual acts with him to a third party online.  The person contacted law enforcement upon receipt of the video.  Based on the call law enforcement was able to locate the 12-year-old girl at McAneny’s home.

    U.S. Attorney Francis M. Hamilton III, of the Eastern District of Tennessee, and Special Agent in Charge Joe Carrico, of the FBI Nashville Field Office, made the announcement.

    The criminal indictment was the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigations, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and the Hamblen and Grainger County Sheriff’s Office.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Meghan L. Gomez represented the United States at the sentencing.                

    This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood (PSC), a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006, by the Department of Justice to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse.  Led by the United States Attorney’s Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, PSC marshals federal, state, and local resources to locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who sexually exploit children, and to identify and rescue victims.  For more information about PSC, please visit www.justice.gov/psc.

    For more information about internet safety education, please visit www.justice.gov/psc/resources.html and click on the tab “resources.”

                                                                                                                   ###

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Rutledge, Tennessee, Man Sentenced to Over 24 Years in Prison for Production of Child Pornography

    Source: US FBI

    GREENEVILLE, Tenn. – On July 1, 2025, Patrick E. McAneny Jr, 28, of Rutledge, Tennessee, was sentenced to 292 months imprisonment by the Honorable Clifton L. Corker, United States District Judge, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Greeneville.  Upon his release from prison, McAneny will be on supervised release for 20 years.  He will be required to register with state sex offender registries and comply with special sex offender conditions during his supervised release.

    As part of the plea agreement filed with the court, McAneny plead guilty to count one of an indictment charging him with use of a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of such conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a).

    According to the written plea agreement filed with the court, McAneny began an online relationship with a 12-year-old girl.  On February 4, 2024, McAneny traveled from his home in Grainger County, Tennessee to pick up the minor from her home in Hamblen County, Tennessee. She did not have permission to leave her home.  Her family reported her missing the same day. From February 4 to February 6, 2024, while at McAneny’s home he took photos, and video recorded the minor and himself engaged in sexual acts.  McAneny sent a video of the minor victim engaged in sexual acts with him to a third party online.  The person contacted law enforcement upon receipt of the video.  Based on the call law enforcement was able to locate the 12-year-old girl at McAneny’s home.

    U.S. Attorney Francis M. Hamilton III, of the Eastern District of Tennessee, and Special Agent in Charge Joe Carrico, of the FBI Nashville Field Office, made the announcement.

    The criminal indictment was the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigations, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and the Hamblen and Grainger County Sheriff’s Office.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Meghan L. Gomez represented the United States at the sentencing.                

    This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood (PSC), a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006, by the Department of Justice to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse.  Led by the United States Attorney’s Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, PSC marshals federal, state, and local resources to locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who sexually exploit children, and to identify and rescue victims.  For more information about PSC, please visit www.justice.gov/psc.

    For more information about internet safety education, please visit www.justice.gov/psc/resources.html and click on the tab “resources.”

                                                                                                                   ###

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Justice Department Announces Arrest of Prolific Chinese State-Sponsored Contract Hacker

    Source: US State of North Dakota

    China’s Ministry of State Security Directed the Theft of COVID-19 Research and the Exploitation of Microsoft Exchange Server Vulnerabilities, Known Publicly as the Indiscriminate ‘HAFNIUM’ Intrusion Campaign

    The Justice Department announced today that Xu Zewei (徐泽伟), 33, of the People’s Republic of China was arrested on July 3 in Italy at the request of the United States. Xu and his co-defendant, PRC national Zhang Yu (张宇), 44, are charged in a nine-count indictment, unsealed today in the Southern District of Texas, for their involvement in computer intrusions between February 2020 and June 2021, including the indiscriminate HAFNIUM computer intrusion campaign that compromised thousands of computers worldwide, including in the United States. Xu was arrested in Milan, Italy, and will face extradition proceedings.

    According to court documents, officers of the PRC’s Ministry of State Security’s (MSS) Shanghai State Security Bureau (SSSB) directed Xu to conduct this hacking. The MSS and SSSB are PRC intelligence services responsible for PRC’s domestic counterintelligence, non-military foreign intelligence, and aspects of the PRC’s political and domestic security. When conducting the computer intrusions, Xu worked for a company named Shanghai Powerock Network Co. Ltd. (Powerock). Powerock was one of many “enabling” companies in the PRC that conducted hacking for the PRC government.

    “This arrest underscores the United States’ patient and tireless commitment to pursuing hackers who seek to steal information belonging to U.S. companies and universities,” said John A. Eisenberg, Assistant Attorney General for the National Security Division. “The Justice Department will find you and hold you accountable for threatening our cybersecurity and harming our people and institutions.”

    “The indictment alleges that Xu was hacking and stealing crucial COVID-19 research at the behest of the Chinese government while that same government was simultaneously withholding information about the virus and its origins,” said Nicholas Ganjei, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Texas. “The Southern District of Texas has been waiting years to bring Xu to justice and that day is nearly at hand. As this case shows, even if it takes years, we will track hackers down and make them answer for their crimes. The United States does not forget.”

    “In February 2020, as the world entered a pandemic, Xu Zewei and other cyber actors working on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) targeted American universities to steal groundbreaking COVID-19 research. The following year, these same actors, operating as a group publicly known as HAFNIUM, exploited zero-day vulnerabilities in U.S. systems to steal additional research,” said Assistant Director Brett Leatherman of FBI’s Cyber Division. “Through HAFNIUM, the CCP targeted over 60,000 U.S. entities, successfully victimizing more than 12,700 in order to steal sensitive information. This arrest, carried out with our Italian law enforcement partners, demonstrates the FBI’s relentless commitment to holding CCP-sponsored hackers accountable for their crimes.” 

    According to court documents, in early 2020, Xu and his co-conspirators hacked and otherwise targeted U.S.-based universities, immunologists, and virologists conducting research into COVID‑19 vaccines, treatment, and testing. Xu and others reported their activities to officers in the SSSB who were supervising and directing the hacking activities. For example, on or about Feb. 19, 2020, Xu provided an SSSB officer with confirmation that he had compromised the network of a research university located in the Southern District of Texas. On or about Feb. 22, 2020, the SSSB officer directed Xu to target and access specific email accounts (mailboxes) belonging to virologists and immunologists engaged in COVID-19 research for the university. Xu later confirmed for the SSSB officer that he acquired the contents of the researchers’ mailboxes.

    Beginning in late 2020, Xu and his co-conspirators exploited certain vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange Server, a widely-used Microsoft product for sending, receiving, and storing email messages. Their exploitation of Microsoft Exchange Server was at the forefront of a massive campaign targeting thousands of computers worldwide and known publicly as “HAFNIUM.” In March 2021, Microsoft publicly disclosed the intrusion campaign by state-sponsored hackers operating out of China. Throughout March 2021, Microsoft and other industry partners released detection tools, patches, and other information to assist victim entities in identifying and mitigating this cyber incident. Additionally, the FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency released a Joint Advisory on Compromise of Microsoft Exchange Server on March 10, 2021. However, by the end of March 2021, hundreds of web shells remained on certain U.S.-based computers running Microsoft Exchange Server software. In April 2021, the Justice Department announced a court-authorized operation to remediate hundreds of computers in the United States made vulnerable by HAFNIUM actors. In July 2021, the United States and foreign partners attributed the HAFNIUM campaign to the PRC’s MSS.

    Among the victims of Xu’s exploitation of Microsoft Exchange Server were another university located in the Southern District of Texas and a law firm with offices worldwide, including in Washington, D.C. After exploiting computers running Microsoft Exchange Server, Xu and his co-conspirators installed web shells on them to enable their remote administration. These web shells were specific to HAFNIUM actors at the time. As with the earlier COVID-19 research intrusions, Xu and Zhang worked together on the HAFNIUM intrusions, under the supervision and direction of SSSB officers. For example, on or about Jan. 30, 2021, Xu confirmed to Zhang that he had compromised the other university’s network. Later, on or about Feb. 28, 2021, Xu updated a SSSB officer on his successful intrusions. This SSSB officer then directed Xu to obtain a list of other, successful intrusions from a second SSSB officer. Unauthorized access to the law firm’s network allowed Xu and his co-conspirators to steal information from mailboxes and search them for information regarding specific U.S. policy makers and government agencies. Their search terms included “Chinese sources,” “MSS,” and “HongKong.”

    The announcement of charges against Xu is the latest describing the PRC’s use of an extensive network of private companies and contractors in China to hack and steal information in a manner that obscured the PRC government’s involvement. Operating from their safe haven and motivated by profit, this network of private companies and contractors in China cast a wide net to identify vulnerable computers, exploit those computers, and then identify information that it could sell directly or indirectly to the PRC government. This largely indiscriminate approach results in more victims in the United States and elsewhere, more systems worldwide left vulnerable to future exploitation by third parties, and more stolen information, often of no interest to the PRC government and, therefore, sold to other third parties.

    Xu is charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and two counts of wire fraud, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison for each count; conspiracy to cause damage to and obtain information by unauthorized access to protected computers, to commit wire fraud, and to commit identity theft, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison; two counts of obtaining information by unauthorized access to protected computers, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison; two counts of intentional damage to a protected computer, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison; and aggravated identity theft, which carries a maximum penalty of two years in prison. Zhang Yu, remains at large. Anyone with information about his whereabouts is asked to contact the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324).

    The FBI’s Houston Field Office is investigating the case. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs provided valuable assistance in securing the defendant’s arrest.

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mark McIntyre and John Marck for the Southern District of Texas and Deputy Chief Matthew Anzaldi of the National Security Division’s National Security Cyber Section are prosecuting the case. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs is handling the extradition.

    An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Justice Department Announces Arrest of Prolific Chinese State-Sponsored Contract Hacker

    Source: United States Attorneys General 2

    China’s Ministry of State Security Directed the Theft of COVID-19 Research and the Exploitation of Microsoft Exchange Server Vulnerabilities, Known Publicly as the Indiscriminate ‘HAFNIUM’ Intrusion Campaign

    The Justice Department announced today that Xu Zewei (徐泽伟), 33, of the People’s Republic of China was arrested on July 3 in Italy at the request of the United States. Xu and his co-defendant, PRC national Zhang Yu (张宇), 44, are charged in a nine-count indictment, unsealed today in the Southern District of Texas, for their involvement in computer intrusions between February 2020 and June 2021, including the indiscriminate HAFNIUM computer intrusion campaign that compromised thousands of computers worldwide, including in the United States. Xu was arrested in Milan, Italy, and will face extradition proceedings.

    According to court documents, officers of the PRC’s Ministry of State Security’s (MSS) Shanghai State Security Bureau (SSSB) directed Xu to conduct this hacking. The MSS and SSSB are PRC intelligence services responsible for PRC’s domestic counterintelligence, non-military foreign intelligence, and aspects of the PRC’s political and domestic security. When conducting the computer intrusions, Xu worked for a company named Shanghai Powerock Network Co. Ltd. (Powerock). Powerock was one of many “enabling” companies in the PRC that conducted hacking for the PRC government.

    “This arrest underscores the United States’ patient and tireless commitment to pursuing hackers who seek to steal information belonging to U.S. companies and universities,” said John A. Eisenberg, Assistant Attorney General for the National Security Division. “The Justice Department will find you and hold you accountable for threatening our cybersecurity and harming our people and institutions.”

    “The indictment alleges that Xu was hacking and stealing crucial COVID-19 research at the behest of the Chinese government while that same government was simultaneously withholding information about the virus and its origins,” said Nicholas Ganjei, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Texas. “The Southern District of Texas has been waiting years to bring Xu to justice and that day is nearly at hand. As this case shows, even if it takes years, we will track hackers down and make them answer for their crimes. The United States does not forget.”

    “In February 2020, as the world entered a pandemic, Xu Zewei and other cyber actors working on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) targeted American universities to steal groundbreaking COVID-19 research. The following year, these same actors, operating as a group publicly known as HAFNIUM, exploited zero-day vulnerabilities in U.S. systems to steal additional research,” said Assistant Director Brett Leatherman of FBI’s Cyber Division. “Through HAFNIUM, the CCP targeted over 60,000 U.S. entities, successfully victimizing more than 12,700 in order to steal sensitive information. This arrest, carried out with our Italian law enforcement partners, demonstrates the FBI’s relentless commitment to holding CCP-sponsored hackers accountable for their crimes.” 

    According to court documents, in early 2020, Xu and his co-conspirators hacked and otherwise targeted U.S.-based universities, immunologists, and virologists conducting research into COVID‑19 vaccines, treatment, and testing. Xu and others reported their activities to officers in the SSSB who were supervising and directing the hacking activities. For example, on or about Feb. 19, 2020, Xu provided an SSSB officer with confirmation that he had compromised the network of a research university located in the Southern District of Texas. On or about Feb. 22, 2020, the SSSB officer directed Xu to target and access specific email accounts (mailboxes) belonging to virologists and immunologists engaged in COVID-19 research for the university. Xu later confirmed for the SSSB officer that he acquired the contents of the researchers’ mailboxes.

    Beginning in late 2020, Xu and his co-conspirators exploited certain vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange Server, a widely-used Microsoft product for sending, receiving, and storing email messages. Their exploitation of Microsoft Exchange Server was at the forefront of a massive campaign targeting thousands of computers worldwide and known publicly as “HAFNIUM.” In March 2021, Microsoft publicly disclosed the intrusion campaign by state-sponsored hackers operating out of China. Throughout March 2021, Microsoft and other industry partners released detection tools, patches, and other information to assist victim entities in identifying and mitigating this cyber incident. Additionally, the FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency released a Joint Advisory on Compromise of Microsoft Exchange Server on March 10, 2021. However, by the end of March 2021, hundreds of web shells remained on certain U.S.-based computers running Microsoft Exchange Server software. In April 2021, the Justice Department announced a court-authorized operation to remediate hundreds of computers in the United States made vulnerable by HAFNIUM actors. In July 2021, the United States and foreign partners attributed the HAFNIUM campaign to the PRC’s MSS.

    Among the victims of Xu’s exploitation of Microsoft Exchange Server were another university located in the Southern District of Texas and a law firm with offices worldwide, including in Washington, D.C. After exploiting computers running Microsoft Exchange Server, Xu and his co-conspirators installed web shells on them to enable their remote administration. These web shells were specific to HAFNIUM actors at the time. As with the earlier COVID-19 research intrusions, Xu and Zhang worked together on the HAFNIUM intrusions, under the supervision and direction of SSSB officers. For example, on or about Jan. 30, 2021, Xu confirmed to Zhang that he had compromised the other university’s network. Later, on or about Feb. 28, 2021, Xu updated a SSSB officer on his successful intrusions. This SSSB officer then directed Xu to obtain a list of other, successful intrusions from a second SSSB officer. Unauthorized access to the law firm’s network allowed Xu and his co-conspirators to steal information from mailboxes and search them for information regarding specific U.S. policy makers and government agencies. Their search terms included “Chinese sources,” “MSS,” and “HongKong.”

    The announcement of charges against Xu is the latest describing the PRC’s use of an extensive network of private companies and contractors in China to hack and steal information in a manner that obscured the PRC government’s involvement. Operating from their safe haven and motivated by profit, this network of private companies and contractors in China cast a wide net to identify vulnerable computers, exploit those computers, and then identify information that it could sell directly or indirectly to the PRC government. This largely indiscriminate approach results in more victims in the United States and elsewhere, more systems worldwide left vulnerable to future exploitation by third parties, and more stolen information, often of no interest to the PRC government and, therefore, sold to other third parties.

    Xu is charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and two counts of wire fraud, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison for each count; conspiracy to cause damage to and obtain information by unauthorized access to protected computers, to commit wire fraud, and to commit identity theft, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison; two counts of obtaining information by unauthorized access to protected computers, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison; two counts of intentional damage to a protected computer, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison; and aggravated identity theft, which carries a maximum penalty of two years in prison. Zhang Yu, remains at large. Anyone with information about his whereabouts is asked to contact the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324).

    The FBI’s Houston Field Office is investigating the case. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs provided valuable assistance in securing the defendant’s arrest.

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mark McIntyre and John Marck for the Southern District of Texas and Deputy Chief Matthew Anzaldi of the National Security Division’s National Security Cyber Section are prosecuting the case. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs is handling the extradition.

    An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Srebrenica, 30 years on: UN officials and survivors call for truth, justice and vigilance

    Source: United Nations 2

    “I have survived a genocide,” said Munira Subašić, whose youngest son – her favourite – and 21 other family members were murdered in the July 1995 Srebrenica massacre.

    “And the world and Europe was just watching in silence.”

    Now president of the Mothers of Srebrenica and Žepa, Ms. Subašić spoke at a special commemoration, urging global leaders not to forget the past and to deliver justice for the victims and survivors.

    “When you kill a mother’s child, you have killed a part of her,” Ms. Subašic said.

    Europe’s worst atrocity since World War II

    The 1995 genocide, perpetrated by the Bosnian Serb army, led to the killing of at least 8,372 men and boys, the displacement of thousands and destruction of entire communities in Srebrenica – which had been designed a “safe area” by the UN Security Council.

    A small and lightly armed unit of Dutch peacekeepers under the UN flag were unable to resist the large Bosnian Serb force, which overran the town of Srebrenica.

    The massacre has been formally recognized as genocide by both the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY).

    Last year, the General Assembly designated 11 July as the International Day of Reflection and Commemoration for the 1995 Genocide in Srebrenica.  

    UN Photo/Loey Felipe

    An exhibition marking the 30-year anniversary of the 1995 genocide in Srebrenica is held at UN headquarters in New York.

    Remember and honour the victims 

    Speaking on behalf of UN Secretary-General António Guterres, Chef de Cabinet Courtenay Rattray paid tribute to those who lost their lives and to the courage of their families. 

    “Today we remember and honour the victims. We pay tribute to the strength, dignity and resilience of the survivors,” he said.      

    Mr. Guterres, in his message, said the international community must continue to stand against hatred, division, and denial.

    “Only by recognizing the suffering of all victims can we build mutual understanding, trust, and lasting peace,” he said. “We must ensure the voices of Srebrenica survivors continue to be heard – countering denial, distortion and revisionism.”  

    The dangers of forgetting  

    UN officials expressed concern over ongoing efforts to deny the genocide and glorify those convicted of war crimes. They warned that such narratives can fuel division and hinder reconciliation.

    “Education remains our strongest defence against the erosion of memory,” said Philémon Yang, President of the General Assembly. “We must not only remember history, but learn from it so that tragedies like Srebrenica are never repeated.”

    Learning from the past is especially important today – the Secretary-General noted that the same “dangerous currents” which led to the genocide in Srebrenica are present again in the world today.  

    “After Srebrenica, the world said – once again – ‘Never Again.’ Yet, hate speech is on the rise again, fuelling discrimination, extremism and violence,” Mr. Guterres said.

    A family scattered

    Mirela Osmanović, a young professional at the Srebrenica Memorial Center, was born after the genocide but lives with its impact. Two of her brothers were killed. Some of their remains were found, but parts of their bodies are still missing. Their absence, she said, weighs on her family daily.

    “My parents forbade themselves any joy while their sons, my brothers, lay somewhere in the ground, incomplete, scattered across mass graves – as if every smile would be betrayal, as if happiness might mean forgetting.”

    The pain of this loss is always with her family even as the world promised that Srebrenica would never happen again.  

    “We were given words, resolutions, statements, solemn promises of ‘never again,’” she said. “And yet, 30 years later, we are still asking what does ‘never again’ mean?”

    A new generation, still asking questions

    Ms. Osmanović speaks frequently with young people around the world who ask what happens when violence ends.

    “What happens when the headlines fade, when the graves are found and facts are clear? Does justice follow?”

    Her answer is that justice does not follow often enough.  

    “Justice if it comes too late or only on paper cannot restore trust. And peace without dignity is not peace at all.”

    In 2015, UN News spoke to Adama Dieng, the Secretary-General’s special advisor on the prevention of genocide, about the importance of remembering the Srebrenica genocide. 

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: ‘Uphold Lessons of Srebrenica, Preserve Historical Truth, Protect Human Dignity’, Secretary-General Tells Member States, on Observance of International Day

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    Following are UN Secretary-General António Guterres’ remarks, delivered by Chef de Cabinet Courtenay Rattray, to the General Assembly on the observance of the International Day of Reflection and Commemoration of the 1995 Genocide in Srebrenica, in New York today:

    The world comes together in solidarity and reflection on this thirtieth anniversary of the genocide in Srebrenica — the worst atrocity on European soil since the Second World War.

    In July 1995, more than 8,000 Bosnian men and boys were systematically separated from their families, executed and buried in mass graves.  Thousands of women, children and older persons were forcibly displaced.  An entire generation was lost.  The intention was the elimination of Bosnian Muslims in Srebrenica.

    Today, we remember and honour the victims.  We pay tribute to the strength, dignity and courage of the survivors and families.  And we acknowledge hard truths.

    Thirty years ago, the United Nations and the world failed the people of Srebrenica.  This collective failure was not an accident of history.  It was the result of policies, propaganda and international indifference.

    Since then, the survivors, the families of victims, in particular the “Mothers of Srebrenica”, have shown extraordinary courage in their pursuit of truth and justice.  They are helping to raise new generations with love, not hate.

    Their unwavering resolve and bravery — facing the perpetrators again and again — have been vital to the determination made by the International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals and the International Court of Justice:  The determination that the acts committed at Srebrenica in 1995 constituted genocide.

    The Tribunal made clear that criminal responsibility for the crime of genocide under international law is individualized.  It cannot be attributed to any ethnic, religious or other group or community as a whole.  And the International Court of Justice made clear that States have a clear obligation to prevent genocide.

    We must uphold and preserve these judicially established findings; and we must ensure the voices of Srebrenica survivors continue to be heard — countering denial, distortion and revisionism.  Only by recognizing the suffering of all victims can we build mutual understanding, trust and lasting peace.

    Every person in Bosnia and Herzegovina deserves a future free from the shadows of conflict and division.  Today, as we remember, we must also confront reality.

    After Srebrenica, once again, the world said “never again”. Yet, hate speech is on the rise again — fuelling discrimination, extremism and violence.  We see the glorification of war criminals again.  We see the same dangerous currents that once led to atrocity crimes again.  We cannot ignore these warning signs.

    I call on every Member State to fulfil their shared responsibility:  To uphold the lessons of Srebrenica, to preserve historical truth and to protect human dignity.

    Let us confront denial with truth — and impunity with justice; and let us honour our obligations under international humanitarian law and international human rights law, as well as the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.  In memory of the victims; in solidarity with the survivors and their loved ones; and in the name of our shared humanity.

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Collins Announces the Nomination of Joshua Dunlap to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Maine Susan Collins

    Washington, D.C. — U.S. Senator Susan Collins announced today that Joshua Dunlap, of Scarborough, Maine, has been nominated by President Donald Trump to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. 

    In February, Senator Collins established a Federal Appointments Advisory Committee to evaluate candidates for Senate-confirmed positions in Maine. As the senior Republican member of Maine’s congressional delegation, Senator Collins is advising the Trump Administration as it selects candidates for federal positions in the state, and the Committee’s recommendations are an integral part of that process.

    “Mr. Joshua Dunlap was a top candidate recommended by my Federal Appointments Advisory Committee for this important position.  Mr. Dunlap currently serves as a Partner at Pierce Atwood LLP where he co-chairs the firm’s Appellate & Amici team. His wealth of appellate experience, along with his intelligence and temperament, make him an excellent choice to serve on the federal bench,” said Senator Collins. “A native of Vassalboro, now living in Scarborough, he will serve Maine well in this critical role. I look forward to working with my colleagues in the Senate to swiftly confirm Mr. Dunlap.”

    A native of Vassalboro, Maine, Mr. Dunlap is currently a partner in the litigation group of Pierce Atwood LLP, where he co-chairs the firm’s Appellate & Amici team. He has practiced at Pierce Atwood for over fifteen years, handling substantial civil litigation matters in both appellate and trial courts. 

    His practice in federal and state courts has involved a wide range of common law, statutory, and constitutional claims. Mr. Dunlap currently serves as the chair for the Maine Appellate Rules Committee, to which he was appointed by the Maine Supreme Judicial Court. 

    As an associate, Mr. Dunlap assisted multiple special masters, including the Honorable William J. Kayatta, Jr., and Ralph I. Lancaster, Jr., in overseeing original jurisdiction proceedings before the Supreme Court of the United States. 

    Prior to returning to Pierce Atwood, Mr. Dunlap clerked for the Honorable Paul J. Kelly, Jr., of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.

    Mr. Dunlap graduated from the Notre Dame Law School, where he was the first in his class. 

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Padilla, Booker Unveil New Bill to Require Immigration Officers to Display Clear Identification

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.)

    Padilla, Booker Unveil New Bill to Require Immigration Officers to Display Clear Identification

    Padilla also leads 13 Democrats in letter to DHS requesting information about ICE’s use of unidentified plainclothes agents

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senators Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Immigration Subcommittee, and Cory Booker (D-N.J.) introduced new legislation to require immigration enforcement officers to display clearly visible identification during public-facing enforcement actions. The Visible Identification Standards for Immigration-Based Law Enforcement (VISIBLE) Act of 2025 would strengthen oversight, transparency, and accountability for the Trump Administration’s indiscriminate and alarming immigration enforcement tactics that have terrorized communities across California and the nation.

    Under the Trump Administration’s mass deportation agenda, civil immigration enforcement operations have increasingly involved Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officers engaging with the public while wearing unmarked tactical gear, concealing clothing, and face coverings that obscure both agency affiliation and personal identity. Without visible badges, names, or insignia, members of the public often have no way to confirm whether they are interacting with legitimate government officials.

    This lack of transparency endangers public safety by causing widespread confusion and fear, especially in communities already subject to heightened immigration scrutiny. It also increases operational and safety risks for law enforcement personnel by creating an opportunity for immigration enforcement impersonators and compounding uncertainty in high-stress situations. Clear, consistent, visible identification helps reduce miscommunication during enforcement encounters, strengthens officer credibility, and improves public cooperation, all of which are vital to mission success. The VISIBLE Act would place a critical check on the government’s power, ensuring basic transparency safeguards that protect public trust and legitimacy in immigration enforcement operations.

    “When federal immigration agents show up and pull someone off the street in plainclothes with their face obscured and no visible identification, it only escalates tensions and spreads fear while shielding federal agents from basic accountability,” said Senator Padilla. “Immigration agents should be required to display their agency and name or badge number — just like police and other local law enforcement agencies. The VISIBLE Act’s commonsense requirements will restore transparency and ensure impersonators can’t exploit the panic and confusion caused by unidentifiable federal immigration enforcement agents.”

    “For weeks, Americans have watched federal agents with no visible identification detain people off the streets and instill fear in communities across the country. Reports of individuals impersonating ICE officers have only increased the risk to public and officer safety. The lack of visible identification and uniform standards for immigration enforcement officers has created confusion, stoked fear, and undermined public trust in law enforcement,” said Senator Booker. “The VISIBLE Act is a necessary response grounded in law enforcement best practices that will prohibit immigration enforcement officers from wearing face coverings and require them to display their name or badge number and the agency they represent. We must act to maintain trust between law enforcement and the communities they serve, and this legislation is a necessary step toward a more transparent, accountable, and safe immigration enforcement system.”

    “This bill is an important step toward keeping immigration enforcement officers and all the people in America safe. Masked, plainclothes officers create an unreasonable risk of escalating violence and unnerve everyone who sees them,” said Scott Shuchart, Former ICE and DHS (Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties) Official. “As much as the cop in blues is a staple of American life, the masked bandit is a symbol of fear, and having government agents dressed like paramilitaries is un-American. Based on my experience in government, the VISIBLE Act makes good sense and would be straightforward for DHS officials to implement.”

    The ongoing immigration enforcement operations in Los Angeles County by unidentified federal agents have stoked fear and uncertainty throughout the region amid President Trump’s unprecedented escalation of militarized tactics. Recently at Dodger Stadium, plainclothes immigration agents parked outside of the stadium lot without identifying themselves. In Bell, masked agents wearing fatigues detained at least three people at a car wash, and in Pasadena, an agent exited an unmarked vehicle in the middle of the road and aimed his pistol at a group of pedestrians without identifying himself. From June 6 to June 22, immigration enforcement agents — many lacking identifying information — arrested 1,618 immigrants for deportation in Los Angeles County and surrounding areas.

    Specifically, the VISIBLE Act:

    • Requires immigration enforcement officers — including DHS personnel such as Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), federal agents detailed to immigration operations, and deputized state or local officers — to display clearly legible identification, including their agency name or initials and either their name or badge number, in a manner that remains visible and unobscured by tactical gear or clothing;
    • Prohibits non-medical face coverings (such as masks or balaclavas) that obscure identity or facial visibility, with exceptions for environmental hazards or covert operations; and
    • Requires DHS to establish disciplinary procedures for violations, report annually to Congress on compliance, and investigate complaints through its Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties.

    The bill does not apply to covert or non-public facing operations, nor does it prohibit face coverings when necessary for officer safety. It also does not apply to enforcement actions conducted solely under criminal authority.

    The VISIBLE Act is cosponsored by Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), Patty Murray (D-Wash.), Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.), Gary Peters (D-Mich.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Peter Welch (D-Vt.), and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.).

    The bill is endorsed by the ACLU and Public Counsel.

    A one-pager on the bill is available here.

    Full text of the bill is available here.

    Senator Padilla also led 13 Democratic Senators in a letter criticizing ICE for engaging in counterproductive, theatrical enforcement activities — including raids on courthouses and restaurants — and requesting information from the agency on its mask and uniform policies. The Senators argued that these tactics are designed to sow fear and chaos and that allowing masked, plainclothes officers to engage in public raids creates situations where bad actors can commit crimes while claiming to be ICE agents.

    In addition to Padilla, the letter was also signed by Senators Blumenthal, Booker, Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Hirono, Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), Murray, Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.), Schiff, Smith, Van Hollen, Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), Welch, and Wyden.

    Full text of the letter is available here.

    Senator Padilla has been outspoken in criticizing Trump’s mass deportations and unprecedented militarization and escalation of tensions by deploying National Guard troops and active-duty U.S. Marines to respond to overwhelmingly peaceful protests in Los Angeles. Padilla recently led the entire Senate Democratic Caucus in demanding that President Trump immediately withdraw all military forces from Los Angeles and cease all threats to deploy the National Guard or active-duty servicemembers to American cities. Padilla spoke on the Senate floor following his forcible removal from Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem’s press conference, where he was thrown to the ground and handcuffed after attempting to ask a question. He has spoken at a spotlight hearing and on the Senate floor multiple other times to blast President Trump for manufacturing a crisis by launching indiscriminate ICE raids across Los Angeles and using that crisis to dramatically expand executive power. Padilla is also leading legislation to restrict the President’s authority under the 217-year-old Insurrection Act and limit the domestic deployment of military troops for law enforcement purposes.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congress Codifies 28 of President Trump’s Executive Actions in One Big Beautiful Bill

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04)

    Congress Codifies 28 of President Trump’s Executive Actions in One Big Beautiful Bill

    Washington, July 8, 2025

    WASHINGTON — Last week, when House Republicans passed President Trump’s signature legislation, the One Big Beautiful Bill, they codified into law 28 executive actions taken by President Trump.

    “President Trump has done more to improve the lives of working Americans in the last six months than almost anyone could have imagined,” said Speaker Johnson. “He has repaired Joe Biden’s damage and kickstarted America’s new Golden Age. To help accomplish the mission, Congress has cemented President Trump’s agenda by passing the Administration’s signature legislation—the One Big Beautiful Bill. In this historic act, Republicans included 28 of President Trump’s top executive actions – now codifying some of the most significant America First priorities.”

    Executive Actions Codified into Law by the One Big Beautiful Bill:

    1. Securing our Borders
    2. Declaring A National Emergency At The Southern Border Of The United States
    3. Protecting the American People Against Invasion
    4. Ending Taxpayer Subsidization of Open Borders
    5. Restricting the Entry of Foreign Nationals to Protect the United States from Foreign Terrorists and other National Security and Public Safety Threats
    6. Implementing the President’s “DOGE” Cost Efficiency Initiative
    7. Protecting America’s Bank Account Against Fraud, Waste, and Abuse
    8. Continuing the Reduction of the Federal Bureaucracy
    9. Stopping Waste, Fraud, and Abuse by Eliminating Information Silos 
    10. Iron Dome for America
    11. Unleashing American Drone Dominance
    12. Restoring America’s Maritime Dominance
    13. Unleashing American Energy
    14. Reinvigorating America’s Beautiful Clean Coal Industry
    15. Unleashing Alaska’s Extraordinary Resource Potential
    16. Declaring a National Energy Emergency
    17. Immediate Measures to Increase American Mineral Production
    18. Immediate Expansion of American Timber Production
    19. Clarifying The Military’s Role In Protecting The Territorial Integrity Of The United States
    20. Keeping Americans Safe in Aviation
    21. Improving Education Outcomes by Empowering Parents, States, and Communities
    22. Reforming Accreditation to Strengthen Higher Education
    23. Establishing the President’s Make America Health Again Commission
    24. Further Amendment to Duties Addressing the Synthetic Opioid Supply Chain in the People’s Republic of China as Applied to Low-Value Imports
    25. The Organization for Economic Co-operations and Development (OECD) Global Tax Deal (Global Tax Deal)
    26. Enforcing the Hyde Amendment
    27. Celebrating America’s 250th Birthday – Garden of Heroes
    28. Making the District of Columbia Safe and Beautiful

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: U.S. Marshals New York/New Jersey Regional Fugitive Task Force Completes Operation ‘Apex Hammer’ with 264 Arrests

    Source: US Marshals Service

    Newark, NJ – The U.S. Marshals Service New York/New Jersey Regional Fugitive Task Force, in coordination with federal, state, and local law enforcement partners, has concluded Operation Apex Hammer, a high-impact fugitive apprehension initiative resulting in the arrest of 264 violent offenders, including murder suspects, sex offenders, and known gang members.

    Launched in early June 2025, Operation Apex Hammer targeted the nation’s most dangerous fugitives and individuals wanted for crimes including homicide, armed robbery, assault, weapons trafficking, and sexual offenses involving children. The month-long operation spanned throughout the state of New Jersey focusing on areas with high rates of violent crime and outstanding felony warrants with most arrests taking place in Camden and Newark.

    “Operation Apex Hammer sent a clear message,” said U.S. Marshal for the District of New Jersey Juan Mattos Jr. “The U.S. Marshals and our partner agencies will never stop pursuing those who threaten the safety of our communities. This operation reflects our unwavering commitment to protect communities by targeting and removing the most dangerous individuals from our streets.”

    Among the notable arrests:

    • Lorenzo Benitez, 54, an illegal alien from Guatemala, wanted out of Keansburg for multiple counts of sexual assault, arrested June 4 in Plainfield.
    • Darlin Franco-Guzman, 25, an illegal alien from Honduras, wanted out of Baltimore County for burglary and attempted sexual assault of a 12-year-old female, arrested June 10 in Trenton.
    • Stephen Bullock, 32, wanted for the kidnapping and sexual assault of a 76-year-old woman in Camden County, arrested June 13 in Hi-Nella.
    • Shawn Davis, 38, wanted for a 2024 homicide in Trenton, arrested June 13 in Brooklyn, New York.
    • Luis Duval-Jimenez, 31, wanted for attempted murder after he ran over a South Brunswick police officer with his vehicle in May 2025, arrested June 18 in North Arlington.
    • Trasuf Bennett, 20, and a juvenile accomplice, wanted for the drive-by shooting murder of a 20-year-old male victim in Milleville, arrested June 19 in Trenton.
    • Francisco Ruiz, 67, wanted for sexual assault by contact, terroristic threats, endangering the welfare of a child, and criminal restraint, arrested June 20 in Bayonne.

    In addition to the arrests of 17 homicide suspects and 95 gang members, a total of 14 illegal firearms were seized. Of the 264 arrested, 31 were captured out-of-state and 2 overseas. Emphasizing the seriousness of the criminality of these 264 fugitives, they combined for an astounding total of 2,625 prior arrests.

    “This was a unified effort,” said Mattos. “Our task force, federal agencies, local, and state partners worked side-by-side to ensure this mission’s success. The results speak for themselves.”

    “I have seen firsthand the unwavering dedication of our law enforcement partners, and I proudly stand with them in this fight,” said Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey, Alina Habba. “Operation Apex Hammer is proof of what we can accomplish when we come together to drive violent crime out of our communities. I especially commend the U.S. Marshals Service for their relentless pursuit of dangerous fugitives and their commitment to bringing those who terrorize our neighborhoods to justice.” 

    Operation Apex Hammer was focused on identifying and apprehending high-threat fugitives using intelligence-led policing, community engagement, and interagency collaboration. The U.S. Marshals Service remains committed to pursuing justice and ensuring that the nation’s most dangerous fugitives are brought to justice.

    The U.S. Marshals Service New York/New Jersey Regional Fugitive Task Force is comprised of individuals from the following agencies:

    New Jersey State Police, New Jersey State Parole, New Jersey Department of Corrections, Port Authority Police Department, Passaic County Sheriff, Essex County Sheriff, Union County Sheriff, Mercer County Sheriff, Monmouth County Sheriff, Ocean County Sheriff, Burlington County Sheriff, Camden County Sheriff, Hudson County Sheriff, Gloucester County Sheriff, Salem County Sheriff, Atlantic County Sheriff, Somerset County Sheriff, Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office, Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office, Camden County Prosecutor’s Office, Salem County Prosecutor’s Office, Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office, Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office, Gloucester County Prosecutor’s Office, Cumberland County Prosecutor’s Office, Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office, Morris County Prosecutor’s Office, Newark PD, Jersey City PD, Trenton PD, Camden Metro PD, Atlantic City PD, Asbury Park PD, Vineland PD, Pennsauken PD, Flemington PD, Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Removal Operations, U.S. Customs and Border Protection,  and U.S. Postal Inspection Service.

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Unsealed Indictment Charges Three Men with Stealing Dozens of High-End and Luxury Vehicles Worth Over $5 Million

    Source: US FBI

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Three Charlotte men are facing federal charges for conspiring to steal and transport across state lines dozens of luxury and high-end vehicles worth well over $5 million, announced Russ Ferguson, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina. A criminal indictment was filed in June and unsealed today in federal court.

    Jason Byrnes, Special Agent in Charge of the United States Secret Service, Charlotte Field Office, and Chief Johnny Jennings of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Police Department (CMPD) join U.S. Attorney Ferguson in making today’s announcement.

    Aquanzae Jamal Switzer, 24, Da’Quante Antwone Banks, 24, and Trajan Dakiel Mack, 26, all of Charlotte, are charged with conspiracy to transport, possess, and sell stolen vehicles in interstate commerce, possession of a stolen vehicle, and interstate transportation of a stolen vehicle.

    “This multi-state automobile theft ring was organized and sophisticated,” said U.S. Attorney Russ Ferguson. “Organized crime has no place in the Western District of North Carolina, and I am grateful to our law enforcement partners for disrupting this operation.”

    The indictment alleges that, between 2022 and April 2024, the defendants engaged in a conspiracy to steal dozens of high-end motor vehicles worth millions of dollars from individuals, car dealerships, and other businesses located in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, and Tennessee. To maximize their profits, Switzer, Banks, and Mack allegedly targeted luxury models by BMW, Land Rover, and Mercedez-Benz, as well trucks, sports utility vehicles, and high-end horsepower models manufactured by Chevrolet, Ford and Jeep.

    The defendants allegedly stole multiple vehicles at once, generally at night, using key fob programmers, and conspired with other individuals who served as drivers of the stolen vehicles. For example, the indictment alleges that the defendants, aided and abetted by others, stole 12 vehicles from a car dealership located in Lillington, North Carolina. To avoid detection, the co-conspirators used temporary and fictitious vehicles tags on the stolen vehicles, removed the GPS navigation and tracking systems from the vehicles, and changed the appearance of the stolen vehicles soon after the thefts.

    According to allegations in the indictment, the co-defendants and their co-conspirators often sold the stolen vehicles at prices significantly below their retail value and kept some of the vehicles for personal use and to further facilitate the scheme.

    The conspiracy charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison. The charges of possession of a stolen vehicle and interstate transportation of a stolen vehicle each carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. If convicted, a federal district court judge will determine any sentence imposed after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    This is the sixth indictment filed in the U.S. District Court in Charlotte for federal offenses involving the interstate theft of vehicles since 2023. Previously, federal charges were filed against three Charlotte men for conspiring to steal luxury vehicles and transporting them across state lines. A Charlotte man was indicted for stealing high-end vehicles, including several vehicles from the Charlotte Douglas International Airport. Two individuals were charged for a scheme that involved buying and selling stolen vehicles from across the country. Five individuals were indicted for stealing luxury vehicles from dealerships throughout the United States, and two additional individuals were indicted for orchestrating high-end auto thefts from businesses in South Carolina.

    The charges against the defendants are allegations and they are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    U.S. Attorney Ferguson commended the Secret Service and CMPD for their investigation of this case and thanked the FBI and the National Insurance Crime Bureau and Homeland Security Investigations for their assistance with the prior prosecutions. 

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys William Bozin and Daniel Ryan of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Charlotte are prosecuting the cases.

     

     

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Analysis: The Shrouds: new Cronenberg film is an elusive meditation on death, grief and environmental ethics

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Laura O’Flanagan, PhD Candidate, School of English, Dublin City University

    American filmmaker David Cronenberg is a leading figure in body horror, a film genre that explores disturbing and often grotesque aspects of the human body. Films such as The Fly (1986), eXistenZ (1999) and Crimes of the Future (2022) depict scenes of physical mutilation, illness and technological invasion to represent deeper fears about identity, society and the human condition.

    Through intense bodily imagery, Cronenberg’s films raise powerful questions about human relationships with technology and nature. As our relationship with technology rapidly evolves alongside escalating environmental catastrophe, there is a timely significance in these ideas.

    His latest film, The Shrouds, evokes the writing of Stacy Alaimo, a scholar known for her work exploring the connections between the human body, the environment, and the social forces that shape both. Alaimo’s work combines feminist and materialist ideas and examines how our bodies are physically connected to the world around us – not separate from nature or society, but shaped by both ecological systems and social structures.

    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    Like Cronenberg, Alaimo is interested in the entanglement of human flesh with more-than-human worlds, alongside the interplay between bodies and objects.

    In The Shrouds, the body, specifically that of Becca (Diane Kruger) is placed firmly at the centre of the story. Appearing both as a decaying corpse and naked in dream sequences, her body bears fresh surgical scars which are unbandaged and exposed.

    Becca’s body is shown as intensely vulnerable, a gendered depiction of femaleness which is controlled literally by the male gaze through the “shroud”, a piece of sci-fi wearable tech. It comprises a suit of MRI and X-ray cameras which encases a corpse, allowing decomposition to be monitored through a live video link with an app.

    This conceit embeds Becca both in the Earth and in technology, creating deeply memorable imagery which challenges viewers to think about death, grief and the environmental ethics surrounding human burial.

    The presentation of Becca’s body evokes Alaimo’s concept of transcorporeality. In her 2010 book Bodily Natures, Alaimo describes transcorporeality as the idea that “the human is ultimately inseparable from ‘the environment’” – continually transformed through interactions with the landscape, chemicals, technology and non-human forces. Becca’s corpse, decaying in real-time on a live link, highlights this connection.

    Grief: the fictional and the personal

    The film opens with Karsh (Vincent Kassel), Becca’s bereaved husband, in a dentist’s chair being told, “Grief is rotting your teeth”. The film as a whole can be read as a meditation on how grief seeps into and changes the body.

    Written following the death of David Cronenberg’s wife (and initially conceived of as a Netflix series), Cronenberg has rejected the idea that it is fully autobiographical. It is, however, difficult to fully separate the director from the story.

    Cassel as Karsh physically resembles Cronenberg in the film, blurring the boundary between fiction and the personal. Physical duplication is a disorienting motif of the film. Kruger reappears as Becca’s sister Terri and as an animated AI assistant named Honey.

    Alongside the grotesque images of her decaying body, these versions of Kruger are especially striking. Cassel’s performance as the controlling and obsessive Karsh is nuanced and understated. His desire to monitor Becca’s decomposition is presented as a logical step to regain possession of her from her illness, and is deeply disturbing.

    It also has ominous and timely resonance in our modern world, where controversial technology exists that permits artificial intelligence to create avatars of the dead to comfort the bereaved.

    The film becomes a mimetic piece on grief, where boundaries between imagination and reality dissolve. Cronenberg’s frequent collaborator Howard Shore provides an ambient score that reinforces this dissolution. Ethereal and bass-rich, it features spacious, slowly evolving melodies wrapped in velvety synth textures which evoke a dream-like soundscape.

    As the plot progresses into a tangle of conspiracy theories, lines blur between Karsh’s dreams and reality. Background plots drift unresolved, characters are vaguely sketched. Themes of environmental activism versus capitalist enterprise, the exploitation of technology, illegal surveillance and government corruption are all threaded through the story, but none are fully realised. This is not a film which offers a straightforward narrative or closure. Like grief, it remains raw, fluid and difficult to contain.

    Throughout, the film returns to Becca’s decaying body, encased in a shroud that is described as both toxic and radioactive, an object of controversy for eco-activists. “She’s dead, remember, she can’t do anything,” Karsh’s companion reminds him.

    But this is not true for Becca. In death, her body is watched and consumed by systems of surveillance and ecological anxiety. Symbolising Alaimo’s concept of transcorporeality, Becca’s decaying corpse, wrapped in technology, but buried in the Earth, is deeply connected to the environment and cannot be separated from it. Her body is influenced by both its natural surroundings and social factors such as the shroud’s technology, outside interference and Karsh’s control.

    Karsh asserts that burial is a complex matter, converging politics, religion and economics. The Shrouds raises questions that touch on all of these, but provides no tangible answers. Some viewers will be frustrated by the film’s lack of logical structure and resolution. But it is also fair to say that this is how it mirrors the pathways of grief itself: unwieldy, unpredictable and consuming.

    Laura O’Flanagan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. The Shrouds: new Cronenberg film is an elusive meditation on death, grief and environmental ethics – https://theconversation.com/the-shrouds-new-cronenberg-film-is-an-elusive-meditation-on-death-grief-and-environmental-ethics-260009

    MIL OSI Analysis –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Norman Tebbit, Conservative minister known as Thatcher’s enforcer, dies at 94

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Martin Farr, Senior Lecturer in Contemporary British History, Newcastle University

    No man more embodied Thatcherism in the eyes of the public in the 1980s than Norman Tebbit, who died on July 7, aged 94.

    Though certainly no yuppie, Lord Tebbit entitled his memoirs Upwardly Mobile. Margaret’s Thatcher’s triumph was also his. She saw in the Essex MP just the uncompromising approach to transforming Britain to which she too was committed.

    Both had been disgusted by the Conservative government of Edward Heath blinking when it sought to face down trade unions in the early 1970s. The experience was elemental to their plan for government.

    Others were more important to the New Right/neoliberal project elected in 1979: Conservative minister Keith Joseph, and Thatcher’s two chancellors, Geoffrey Howe and Nigel Lawson.

    But Tebbit provided something no one else in Thatcher’s cabinet could: an innate connection with white, working-class voters, who may once have been Labour – Tebbit lauded Clement Attlee and Ernest Bevin – but whose values were held to have been washed away in the postwar tide of union militancy, social permissiveness, European integration, and mass immigration.


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    He became a Conservative almost because, rather than in spite, of his background. “Essex man” was a presiding personification of the period.

    Unlike almost all of Thatcher’s ministers, Tebbit did not go to university, but left school at 16 to encounter the “closed shop”: that one had to be a member of a particular union to work in a particular workplace. He became determined at that moment to end this practice, and with it so much else of postwar social democracy.

    Thirty years later he did, as Thatcher’s secretary of state for employment. Tebbit’s 1982 Employment Act avenged the unions’ defeat of Heath. Union rights were weakened, never to be restored, and those of employers emboldened. It was a significant contribution to Thatcherism’s ledger.

    As secretary of state for trade and industry, Tebbit pursued privatisation – the return (as its proponents, simply, put it) of nationalised industries to the private sector – with passion. The postwar settlement in Britain was being upended.

    Public image

    In an age before the televising of parliament (much less 24-hour news and social media), Tebbit cut through in a way few politicians did.

    At at a time of inner-city violence, the public knew Tebbit’s unemployed father, decades earlier, didn’t riot but “got on his bike and looked for work”. No one else could have been called – in the words of Labour’s Michael Foot – a “semi-house-trained polecat”. TV’s puppet satire Spitting Image portrayed him as the “Chingford Strangler”, dressed in biker leathers.

    Tebbit felt no need for his contempt for socialism to be leavened by charm or humour. There was invariably a slight sense of menace. He had no interest in ingratiating or propitiating. And so he was as loved by Conservative party members as he was hated by the left. He welcomed their hatred.

    Tebbit in particular despised the swinging 60s – fittingly, he entered parliament in the election in which Harold Wilson’s government was unexpectedly ejected – and its legacy of “insufferable, smug, sanctimonious, naive, guilt-ridden, wet, pink orthodoxy”. Thus his trenchancy on immigration, overseas aid (a “sink of iniquity, corruption and violence”), sexuality (he was one of the few still to use the word “sodomite”) and Europe (he was a Eurosceptic before Euroscepticism).

    In 1990 Tebbit asked of British-born people of Asian heritage: “Which side do they cheer for? Are you still harking back to where you came from or where you are?”. Tebbit’s “cricket test” is second only to Enoch Powell’s “rivers of blood” speech in the annals of inflammatory – they and their supporters would say candid – rhetoric relating to immigration. Neither would mind the association.




    Read more:
    Tory humiliation down to campaign length and cult of May – Norman Tebbit Q&A


    What silenced most – if not quite all – of his critics, was Tebbit at his most vulnerable. Following the IRA bombing of the Grand Hotel Brighton in 1984, live television footage of him, only partially clad in his pyjamas, covered in dust, being stretchered out of the rubble, became the defining image of the atrocity.

    The following year Thatcher moved him from trade and industry to, less happily, chairman of the Conservative party. It was a job that required a lighter touch than Tebbit’s.

    Nevertheless, as chairman, he delivered the Conservatives’ third election victory, of 1987 – ensuring the permanence of the transformation – only to immediately retire to the backbenches. Margaret, his wife, had been paralysed by the bomb, and he devoted himself to her care for more than 30 years until her death.

    As warranted as his departure from government may have been, Thatcher “bitterly regretted” losing him, a feeling she felt for few. Her defenestration in November 1990 is much harder to imagine had Tebbit still been in the cabinet.

    Norman Tebbit’s conservatism and nationalism harked back to an earlier age, yet presaged the populism of the 2020s. In his remarks following the news of Tebbit’s death, Nigel Farage said he thought him “a great man”.

    Tebbit’s values endure in public discourse, in more ways than he might have expected even a few years ago. But in his last months he was either unable, or unwilling, to say whether those values were those of the Conservatives, the traditional party of the right, or of another project. That may be a final Tebbit “test”.

    Martin Farr does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. Norman Tebbit, Conservative minister known as Thatcher’s enforcer, dies at 94 – https://theconversation.com/norman-tebbit-conservative-minister-known-as-thatchers-enforcer-dies-at-94-260716

    MIL OSI Analysis –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Norman Tebbit, Conservative minister known as Thatcher’s enforcer, dies at 94

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Martin Farr, Senior Lecturer in Contemporary British History, Newcastle University

    No man more embodied Thatcherism in the eyes of the public in the 1980s than Norman Tebbit, who died on July 7, aged 94.

    Though certainly no yuppie, Lord Tebbit entitled his memoirs Upwardly Mobile. Margaret’s Thatcher’s triumph was also his. She saw in the Essex MP just the uncompromising approach to transforming Britain to which she too was committed.

    Both had been disgusted by the Conservative government of Edward Heath blinking when it sought to face down trade unions in the early 1970s. The experience was elemental to their plan for government.

    Others were more important to the New Right/neoliberal project elected in 1979: Conservative minister Keith Joseph, and Thatcher’s two chancellors, Geoffrey Howe and Nigel Lawson.

    But Tebbit provided something no one else in Thatcher’s cabinet could: an innate connection with white, working-class voters, who may once have been Labour – Tebbit lauded Clement Attlee and Ernest Bevin – but whose values were held to have been washed away in the postwar tide of union militancy, social permissiveness, European integration, and mass immigration.


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    He became a Conservative almost because, rather than in spite, of his background. “Essex man” was a presiding personification of the period.

    Unlike almost all of Thatcher’s ministers, Tebbit did not go to university, but left school at 16 to encounter the “closed shop”: that one had to be a member of a particular union to work in a particular workplace. He became determined at that moment to end this practice, and with it so much else of postwar social democracy.

    Thirty years later he did, as Thatcher’s secretary of state for employment. Tebbit’s 1982 Employment Act avenged the unions’ defeat of Heath. Union rights were weakened, never to be restored, and those of employers emboldened. It was a significant contribution to Thatcherism’s ledger.

    As secretary of state for trade and industry, Tebbit pursued privatisation – the return (as its proponents, simply, put it) of nationalised industries to the private sector – with passion. The postwar settlement in Britain was being upended.

    Public image

    In an age before the televising of parliament (much less 24-hour news and social media), Tebbit cut through in a way few politicians did.

    At at a time of inner-city violence, the public knew Tebbit’s unemployed father, decades earlier, didn’t riot but “got on his bike and looked for work”. No one else could have been called – in the words of Labour’s Michael Foot – a “semi-house-trained polecat”. TV’s puppet satire Spitting Image portrayed him as the “Chingford Strangler”, dressed in biker leathers.

    Tebbit felt no need for his contempt for socialism to be leavened by charm or humour. There was invariably a slight sense of menace. He had no interest in ingratiating or propitiating. And so he was as loved by Conservative party members as he was hated by the left. He welcomed their hatred.

    Tebbit in particular despised the swinging 60s – fittingly, he entered parliament in the election in which Harold Wilson’s government was unexpectedly ejected – and its legacy of “insufferable, smug, sanctimonious, naive, guilt-ridden, wet, pink orthodoxy”. Thus his trenchancy on immigration, overseas aid (a “sink of iniquity, corruption and violence”), sexuality (he was one of the few still to use the word “sodomite”) and Europe (he was a Eurosceptic before Euroscepticism).

    In 1990 Tebbit asked of British-born people of Asian heritage: “Which side do they cheer for? Are you still harking back to where you came from or where you are?”. Tebbit’s “cricket test” is second only to Enoch Powell’s “rivers of blood” speech in the annals of inflammatory – they and their supporters would say candid – rhetoric relating to immigration. Neither would mind the association.




    Read more:
    Tory humiliation down to campaign length and cult of May – Norman Tebbit Q&A


    What silenced most – if not quite all – of his critics, was Tebbit at his most vulnerable. Following the IRA bombing of the Grand Hotel Brighton in 1984, live television footage of him, only partially clad in his pyjamas, covered in dust, being stretchered out of the rubble, became the defining image of the atrocity.

    The following year Thatcher moved him from trade and industry to, less happily, chairman of the Conservative party. It was a job that required a lighter touch than Tebbit’s.

    Nevertheless, as chairman, he delivered the Conservatives’ third election victory, of 1987 – ensuring the permanence of the transformation – only to immediately retire to the backbenches. Margaret, his wife, had been paralysed by the bomb, and he devoted himself to her care for more than 30 years until her death.

    As warranted as his departure from government may have been, Thatcher “bitterly regretted” losing him, a feeling she felt for few. Her defenestration in November 1990 is much harder to imagine had Tebbit still been in the cabinet.

    Norman Tebbit’s conservatism and nationalism harked back to an earlier age, yet presaged the populism of the 2020s. In his remarks following the news of Tebbit’s death, Nigel Farage said he thought him “a great man”.

    Tebbit’s values endure in public discourse, in more ways than he might have expected even a few years ago. But in his last months he was either unable, or unwilling, to say whether those values were those of the Conservatives, the traditional party of the right, or of another project. That may be a final Tebbit “test”.

    Martin Farr does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. Norman Tebbit, Conservative minister known as Thatcher’s enforcer, dies at 94 – https://theconversation.com/norman-tebbit-conservative-minister-known-as-thatchers-enforcer-dies-at-94-260716

    MIL OSI Analysis –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Submissions: The Shrouds: new Cronenberg film is an elusive meditation on death, grief and environmental ethics

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Laura O’Flanagan, PhD Candidate, School of English, Dublin City University

    American filmmaker David Cronenberg is a leading figure in body horror, a film genre that explores disturbing and often grotesque aspects of the human body. Films such as The Fly (1986), eXistenZ (1999) and Crimes of the Future (2022) depict scenes of physical mutilation, illness and technological invasion to represent deeper fears about identity, society and the human condition.

    Through intense bodily imagery, Cronenberg’s films raise powerful questions about human relationships with technology and nature. As our relationship with technology rapidly evolves alongside escalating environmental catastrophe, there is a timely significance in these ideas.

    His latest film, The Shrouds, evokes the writing of Stacy Alaimo, a scholar known for her work exploring the connections between the human body, the environment, and the social forces that shape both. Alaimo’s work combines feminist and materialist ideas and examines how our bodies are physically connected to the world around us – not separate from nature or society, but shaped by both ecological systems and social structures.

    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    Like Cronenberg, Alaimo is interested in the entanglement of human flesh with more-than-human worlds, alongside the interplay between bodies and objects.

    In The Shrouds, the body, specifically that of Becca (Diane Kruger) is placed firmly at the centre of the story. Appearing both as a decaying corpse and naked in dream sequences, her body bears fresh surgical scars which are unbandaged and exposed.

    Becca’s body is shown as intensely vulnerable, a gendered depiction of femaleness which is controlled literally by the male gaze through the “shroud”, a piece of sci-fi wearable tech. It comprises a suit of MRI and X-ray cameras which encases a corpse, allowing decomposition to be monitored through a live video link with an app.

    This conceit embeds Becca both in the Earth and in technology, creating deeply memorable imagery which challenges viewers to think about death, grief and the environmental ethics surrounding human burial.

    The presentation of Becca’s body evokes Alaimo’s concept of transcorporeality. In her 2010 book Bodily Natures, Alaimo describes transcorporeality as the idea that “the human is ultimately inseparable from ‘the environment’” – continually transformed through interactions with the landscape, chemicals, technology and non-human forces. Becca’s corpse, decaying in real-time on a live link, highlights this connection.

    Grief: the fictional and the personal

    The film opens with Karsh (Vincent Kassel), Becca’s bereaved husband, in a dentist’s chair being told, “Grief is rotting your teeth”. The film as a whole can be read as a meditation on how grief seeps into and changes the body.

    Written following the death of David Cronenberg’s wife (and initially conceived of as a Netflix series), Cronenberg has rejected the idea that it is fully autobiographical. It is, however, difficult to fully separate the director from the story.

    Cassel as Karsh physically resembles Cronenberg in the film, blurring the boundary between fiction and the personal. Physical duplication is a disorienting motif of the film. Kruger reappears as Becca’s sister Terri and as an animated AI assistant named Honey.

    Alongside the grotesque images of her decaying body, these versions of Kruger are especially striking. Cassel’s performance as the controlling and obsessive Karsh is nuanced and understated. His desire to monitor Becca’s decomposition is presented as a logical step to regain possession of her from her illness, and is deeply disturbing.

    It also has ominous and timely resonance in our modern world, where controversial technology exists that permits artificial intelligence to create avatars of the dead to comfort the bereaved.

    The film becomes a mimetic piece on grief, where boundaries between imagination and reality dissolve. Cronenberg’s frequent collaborator Howard Shore provides an ambient score that reinforces this dissolution. Ethereal and bass-rich, it features spacious, slowly evolving melodies wrapped in velvety synth textures which evoke a dream-like soundscape.

    As the plot progresses into a tangle of conspiracy theories, lines blur between Karsh’s dreams and reality. Background plots drift unresolved, characters are vaguely sketched. Themes of environmental activism versus capitalist enterprise, the exploitation of technology, illegal surveillance and government corruption are all threaded through the story, but none are fully realised. This is not a film which offers a straightforward narrative or closure. Like grief, it remains raw, fluid and difficult to contain.

    Throughout, the film returns to Becca’s decaying body, encased in a shroud that is described as both toxic and radioactive, an object of controversy for eco-activists. “She’s dead, remember, she can’t do anything,” Karsh’s companion reminds him.

    But this is not true for Becca. In death, her body is watched and consumed by systems of surveillance and ecological anxiety. Symbolising Alaimo’s concept of transcorporeality, Becca’s decaying corpse, wrapped in technology, but buried in the Earth, is deeply connected to the environment and cannot be separated from it. Her body is influenced by both its natural surroundings and social factors such as the shroud’s technology, outside interference and Karsh’s control.

    Karsh asserts that burial is a complex matter, converging politics, religion and economics. The Shrouds raises questions that touch on all of these, but provides no tangible answers. Some viewers will be frustrated by the film’s lack of logical structure and resolution. But it is also fair to say that this is how it mirrors the pathways of grief itself: unwieldy, unpredictable and consuming.

    Laura O’Flanagan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. The Shrouds: new Cronenberg film is an elusive meditation on death, grief and environmental ethics – https://theconversation.com/the-shrouds-new-cronenberg-film-is-an-elusive-meditation-on-death-grief-and-environmental-ethics-260009

    MIL OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Norman Tebbit, Conservative minister known as Thatcher’s enforcer, dies at 94

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Martin Farr, Senior Lecturer in Contemporary British History, Newcastle University

    No man more embodied Thatcherism in the eyes of the public in the 1980s than Norman Tebbit, who died on July 7, aged 94.

    Though certainly no yuppie, Lord Tebbit entitled his memoirs Upwardly Mobile. Margaret’s Thatcher’s triumph was also his. She saw in the Essex MP just the uncompromising approach to transforming Britain to which she too was committed.

    Both had been disgusted by the Conservative government of Edward Heath blinking when it sought to face down trade unions in the early 1970s. The experience was elemental to their plan for government.

    Others were more important to the New Right/neoliberal project elected in 1979: Conservative minister Keith Joseph, and Thatcher’s two chancellors, Geoffrey Howe and Nigel Lawson.

    But Tebbit provided something no one else in Thatcher’s cabinet could: an innate connection with white, working-class voters, who may once have been Labour – Tebbit lauded Clement Attlee and Ernest Bevin – but whose values were held to have been washed away in the postwar tide of union militancy, social permissiveness, European integration, and mass immigration.


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    He became a Conservative almost because, rather than in spite, of his background. “Essex man” was a presiding personification of the period.

    Unlike almost all of Thatcher’s ministers, Tebbit did not go to university, but left school at 16 to encounter the “closed shop”: that one had to be a member of a particular union to work in a particular workplace. He became determined at that moment to end this practice, and with it so much else of postwar social democracy.

    Thirty years later he did, as Thatcher’s secretary of state for employment. Tebbit’s 1982 Employment Act avenged the unions’ defeat of Heath. Union rights were weakened, never to be restored, and those of employers emboldened. It was a significant contribution to Thatcherism’s ledger.

    As secretary of state for trade and industry, Tebbit pursued privatisation – the return (as its proponents, simply, put it) of nationalised industries to the private sector – with passion. The postwar settlement in Britain was being upended.

    Public image

    In an age before the televising of parliament (much less 24-hour news and social media), Tebbit cut through in a way few politicians did.

    At at a time of inner-city violence, the public knew Tebbit’s unemployed father, decades earlier, didn’t riot but “got on his bike and looked for work”. No one else could have been called – in the words of Labour’s Michael Foot – a “semi-house-trained polecat”. TV’s puppet satire Spitting Image portrayed him as the “Chingford Strangler”, dressed in biker leathers.

    Tebbit felt no need for his contempt for socialism to be leavened by charm or humour. There was invariably a slight sense of menace. He had no interest in ingratiating or propitiating. And so he was as loved by Conservative party members as he was hated by the left. He welcomed their hatred.

    Tebbit in particular despised the swinging 60s – fittingly, he entered parliament in the election in which Harold Wilson’s government was unexpectedly ejected – and its legacy of “insufferable, smug, sanctimonious, naive, guilt-ridden, wet, pink orthodoxy”. Thus his trenchancy on immigration, overseas aid (a “sink of iniquity, corruption and violence”), sexuality (he was one of the few still to use the word “sodomite”) and Europe (he was a Eurosceptic before Euroscepticism).

    In 1990 Tebbit asked of British-born people of Asian heritage: “Which side do they cheer for? Are you still harking back to where you came from or where you are?”. Tebbit’s “cricket test” is second only to Enoch Powell’s “rivers of blood” speech in the annals of inflammatory – they and their supporters would say candid – rhetoric relating to immigration. Neither would mind the association.




    Read more:
    Tory humiliation down to campaign length and cult of May – Norman Tebbit Q&A


    What silenced most – if not quite all – of his critics, was Tebbit at his most vulnerable. Following the IRA bombing of the Grand Hotel Brighton in 1984, live television footage of him, only partially clad in his pyjamas, covered in dust, being stretchered out of the rubble, became the defining image of the atrocity.

    The following year Thatcher moved him from trade and industry to, less happily, chairman of the Conservative party. It was a job that required a lighter touch than Tebbit’s.

    Nevertheless, as chairman, he delivered the Conservatives’ third election victory, of 1987 – ensuring the permanence of the transformation – only to immediately retire to the backbenches. Margaret, his wife, had been paralysed by the bomb, and he devoted himself to her care for more than 30 years until her death.

    As warranted as his departure from government may have been, Thatcher “bitterly regretted” losing him, a feeling she felt for few. Her defenestration in November 1990 is much harder to imagine had Tebbit still been in the cabinet.

    Norman Tebbit’s conservatism and nationalism harked back to an earlier age, yet presaged the populism of the 2020s. In his remarks following the news of Tebbit’s death, Nigel Farage said he thought him “a great man”.

    Tebbit’s values endure in public discourse, in more ways than he might have expected even a few years ago. But in his last months he was either unable, or unwilling, to say whether those values were those of the Conservatives, the traditional party of the right, or of another project. That may be a final Tebbit “test”.

    Martin Farr does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. Norman Tebbit, Conservative minister known as Thatcher’s enforcer, dies at 94 – https://theconversation.com/norman-tebbit-conservative-minister-known-as-thatchers-enforcer-dies-at-94-260716

    MIL OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Attorney General Bonta Blasts U.S. EPA for Illegally Terminating Environmental Justice Grants

    Source: US State of California Department of Justice

    OAKLAND – California Attorney General Rob Bonta today co-led a multistate coalition of 20 attorneys general in submitting an amicus brief supporting Earthjustice, Public Rights Project, and Southern Environmental Law Center in their class action lawsuit against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for unlawfully terminating the Environmental and Climate Justice Block Grant program. The funding, secured through the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), was explicitly appropriated by Congress to ensure that communities across the country would have access to clean air, safe water, and healthy homes, with a particular focus on supporting disadvantaged communities nationwide. In today’s amicus brief, the attorneys general argue that the Trump Administration’s actions to terminate the grant program will leave hundreds of local communities nationwide unable to pursue vital environmental justice and public health projects — jeopardizing their fight for clean air, safe water, and climate resilience efforts.  

    “Congress directed these funds to protect public health and address long-standing environmental injustices in communities that have borne the brunt of pollution for decades,” said Attorney General Bonta. “We are not going to stand by while this administration continues to take illegal action and dismantle environmental justice programs where they are most urgently needed.” 

    More than 200 grantees of the terminated program within the coalition of states— including non-profits, local and regional governments, Native American tribes, and educational institutions — were slated to receive over $1.38 billion to support frontline communities in combating pollution, improving public health infrastructure, and building climate resilience. Due to the termination of this program, at least 40 grantees within California have lost access to over $301 million in funding from the EPA, which represents the greatest number of EPA grantees and highest amount of EJ funding from EPA flowing to any single state.

    In the amicus brief, Attorney General Bonta, alongside the coalition, argues that: 

    • The termination of the program disproportionately harms marginalized and historically disadvantaged communities — including Native American tribes, non-profits serving low-income neighborhoods, and communities of color — undermining the core purpose of Congress’s instruction to EPA when it passed the IRA. 
    • By halting critical environmental justice and public health improvement projects, the Trump Administration’s actions put vulnerable populations at increased health risk. 
    • The Plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits in their argument that the EPA acted unlawfully by rescinding grants that were explicitly authorized by Congress under the IRA.

    Attorney General Bonta co-led the filing of today’s amicus brief, together with the Attorneys General of New York and Massachusetts, and is joined by the following states and territories: Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Hawai‘i, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.

    A copy of the amicus brief can be found here.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Phoenix Return Preparer Indicted for Filing False Tax Returns for Himself and Others

    Source: US State of California

    A Phoenix man made his initial appearance in federal court recently after a grand jury in Phoenix returned an indictment charging him with filing false tax returns for himself and for clients of his tax preparation business.

    The following is according to the indictment: from 2021 to 2023, Pacifique Kashosi allegedly prepared and filed false tax returns for clients of Africa Union Tax Services LLC, his return preparation business.  On those returns, Kashosi claimed false or inflated sick and family leave and fuel credits that created or increased refunds to which he knew the clients were not entitled. The indictment further alleges that Kashosi earned income through the operation of his tax preparation business for the years 2022 and 2023 that he did not report on the tax returns he filed for himself for those two years.

    If convicted, Kashosi faces a maximum penalty of three years in prison for each count of aiding and assisting in the preparation of a false tax return. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Karen Kelly of the Justice Department’s Tax Division and U.S. Attorney Timothy Courchaine for the District of Arizona made the announcement.

    IRS Criminal Investigation is investigating the case.

    Assistant Chief Andrew Kameros of the Tax Division and Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin Rapp for the District of Arizona are prosecuting the case.

    An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Lame Deer Woman Pleads Guilty to Sex Trafficking a Minor

    Source: US FBI

    BILLINGS – A Lame Deer woman accused of sex trafficking a minor admitted to charges today, U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme said.

    The defendant, Veronica Clarice Baker, 29, pleaded guilty to one count of sex trafficking of a minor. Baker faces a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment of 10 years, a $250,000 fine, and 5 years to a lifetime of supervised release.

    U.S. Magistrate Judge Timothy J. Cavan presided. U.S. District Court Judge Susan P. Watters will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors. Sentencing will be set at a later time. Baker was detained pending further proceedings.

    The government alleged in court documents that sometime prior to April 9, 2023, Baker met Dr. Usman Khan on a social media website for people interested in a commercial sex relationship.  Then, on or about April 9, 2023, Baker and Khan communicated for the purpose of arranging a commercial sex date between Khan and Jane Doe 1. Baker had known Jane Doe 1 for some time and Doe had, on occasion, watched Baker’s children. Baker knew Jane Doe 1, who was under the age of 18 at the time, was a minor.

    On April 9, 2023, while Baker and Khan were texting about Baker providing Jane Doe 1 for the purpose of a commercial sex date, Baker and Doe were in a hotel room in Billings. Baker sent Khan pictures of her and of Jane Doe 1 and she and Khan discussed rates. Ultimately, Baker agreed to transport Jane Doe 1 to Khan’s residence for the purpose of a commercial sex date. Baker left Jane Doe 1 at Khan’s residence and Jane Doe 1 and Khan engaged in sexual activity. Khan paid Jane Doe 1 for the encounter, and Doe provided some of the money to Baker.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Zeno Baucus prosecuted the case. The FBI conducted the investigation.

    This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and CEOS, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit Justice.gov/PSC.

    XXX

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Mexican Citizen Sentenced to Prison for Carjacking a U.S. Postal Service Truck

    Source: US FBI

    SALT LAKE CITY, Utah – Wilber Castellanos Hernandez, 33, an undocumented Mexican citizen, was sentenced to 30 months’ imprisonment after he pleaded guilty to carjacking a U.S. Postal Service Truck and threatening the U.S. Postal Service employee.

    In addition to his term of imprisonment, U.S. District Court Judge David Barlow sentenced Hernandez to 36 months’ supervised release and ordered him to pay $2,828.89 in restitution for damage to the postal vehicle and missing postal equipment.

    According to court documents and statements made at Hernandez’s change of plea and sentencing hearings, on February 5, 2024, Hernandez stole a U.S. Postal Service vehicle in Salt Lake City. He admitted to checking the door handle of the postal truck and entering the vehicle. When he was told to get out of the vehicle by the postal employee, he pointed a knife at him and fled from the area. Hernandez was tracked using GPS technology and stopped by law enforcement before he was subsequently taken into custody. See prior release here: Salt Lake City Man Accused of Carjacking a U.S. Postal Service Truck and Causing Multiple Car Accidents is Arrested and Charged.

    The U.S. Postal Inspection Service and an FBI Task Force Officer with the Salt Lake City Police Department investigated the case.

    Assistant United States Attorney Carlos A. Esqueda of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Utah prosecuted the case.

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results. For more information about Project Safe Neighborhoods, please visit Justice.gov/PSN.

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Mexican Citizen Sentenced to Prison for Carjacking a U.S. Postal Service Truck

    Source: US FBI

    SALT LAKE CITY, Utah – Wilber Castellanos Hernandez, 33, an undocumented Mexican citizen, was sentenced to 30 months’ imprisonment after he pleaded guilty to carjacking a U.S. Postal Service Truck and threatening the U.S. Postal Service employee.

    In addition to his term of imprisonment, U.S. District Court Judge David Barlow sentenced Hernandez to 36 months’ supervised release and ordered him to pay $2,828.89 in restitution for damage to the postal vehicle and missing postal equipment.

    According to court documents and statements made at Hernandez’s change of plea and sentencing hearings, on February 5, 2024, Hernandez stole a U.S. Postal Service vehicle in Salt Lake City. He admitted to checking the door handle of the postal truck and entering the vehicle. When he was told to get out of the vehicle by the postal employee, he pointed a knife at him and fled from the area. Hernandez was tracked using GPS technology and stopped by law enforcement before he was subsequently taken into custody. See prior release here: Salt Lake City Man Accused of Carjacking a U.S. Postal Service Truck and Causing Multiple Car Accidents is Arrested and Charged.

    The U.S. Postal Inspection Service and an FBI Task Force Officer with the Salt Lake City Police Department investigated the case.

    Assistant United States Attorney Carlos A. Esqueda of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Utah prosecuted the case.

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results. For more information about Project Safe Neighborhoods, please visit Justice.gov/PSN.

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK commits to international legal order with European partners

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    UK commits to international legal order with European partners

    The Attorney General Lord Hermer KC has reiterated the UK’s commitment to upholding international legal order at a flagship event with European partners held in London.

    Resetting the UK’s relationship with Europe, and proactively and unequivocally supporting the international legal order, are amongst the Government’s top priorities.

    To support this, the Attorney General’s Office (AGO) hosted a Venice Commission event on Monday 7 July in collaboration with the FCDO and the Bingham Centre for the Rule of law.

    The event was attended by key members of the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission, member states and civil society groups.

    Delegates discussed shared commitments to the rule of law, human rights and democracy, and contemporary challenges to the rules-based order, such as AI, migration and climate change.

    The event also provided an opportunity for the UK and European partners to actively support the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission’s work on updating its Rule of Law checklist.

    The event also marked the 35th anniversary of the creation of the Venice Commission (on 10 May 1990) and sought to identify ways in which the Venice Commission and the Council of Europe could give practical effect to the Principles.

    Speaking at the event the Attorney General Lord Hermer KC said:

    When I look at what you have been discussing today – protecting and promoting the rule of law and its importance to prosperity, freedom and security, I see discussions we need to have now – rooted in real world issues.

    At a time when it feels like the world is becoming ever more polarised and there is a tendency for retreat into the familiar and the insular – it is important to use what we have at our disposal to encourage cooperation and shared understanding.

    The Rule of Law Checklist is one of those rare things that does this and has intergovernmental support.

    Lord Collins of Highbury, Minister for Multilateral and Human Rights, said:

    The rule of law is not just a legal principle, but the foundation of public trust and institutional legitimacy, and only by communicating its everyday relevance can we build and sustain trust. 

    Members of The Venice Commission from across the world underscore the global desire for democracy and rights rooted in legal principles, and I hope the updated Rule of Law checklist will support efforts by governments globally to reinforce the crucial links between democracy, human rights, and the integrity of legal systems.

    Share this page

    The following links open in a new tab

    • Share on Facebook (opens in new tab)
    • Share on Twitter (opens in new tab)

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Individual Arrested for Child Exploitation

    Source: US FBI

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – On June 26, 2025, a federal grand jury in the District of Puerto Rico returned an indictment charging Juan Edgardo Negrón-Navarro, age 27, of Jayuya, PR, with coercion and enticement of minors, sexual exploitation of children, and interstate threat communications. Today, FBI special agents arrested Negrón-Navarro. 

    According to court documents, from in or about April 2023 to in or about May 2023, Juan Edgardo Negrón-Navarro did knowingly employ, use, persuade, induce, entice, and coerce a female minor between 15 and 16 years old (Minor 1) to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing visual depictions of such conduct. The defendant produced sexually explicit images of such conduct. Negrón-Navarro threatened Minor 1 by threatening to post the sexually explicit images on the Internet and to damage her reputation if she did not comply with sending sexually explicit images to him.

    Additionally, from in or about September 2024 to in or about November 2024, Juan Edgardo Negrón-Navarro did knowingly employ, use, persuade, induce, entice, and coerce another female minor while she was 17 years of age (Minor 2), to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing visual depictions of such conduct. At the same time, the defendant produced sexually explicit images of such conduct.

    Moreover, on or about August 3, 2024, Negrón-Navarro, through the Internet, threatened to kill an adult female if she did not send him sexually explicit images.

    The defendant is scheduled for his initial court appearance today before U.S. Magistrate Judge Marcos E. López of the U.S. District Court for the District of Puerto Rico. If convicted, the defendant faces a minimum term or imprisonment of 15 years and a maximum term of imprisonment of 30 years for the charge of sexual exploitation of children; a minimum term of imprisonment of 10 years up to life for the charge of coercion and enticement of a minor; and a maximum term of imprisonment of 20 years for the charge of interstate communications. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    U.S. Attorney W. Stephen Muldrow of the District of Puerto Rico; and Devin J. Kowalski, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI San Juan Field Office made the announcement.  

    “Child exploitation, in all its forms, are the most heinous crimes a person can commit, and the emotional pain inflicted on the victims is overwhelming,” said W. Stephen Muldrow, United States Attorney for the District of Puerto Rico. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office and our law enforcement partners are fully committed to identify, locate, arrest, and prosecute these criminals to the fullest extent of the law. Nonetheless, the community, including teachers and parents, must be vigilant and proactive with our children and educate them on how to protect themselves from these offenders.”

    “There is no place in Puerto Rico—or anywhere in America—for child predators,” said Devin J. Kowalski, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s San Juan Field Office. “If you exploit children, the heroic men and women of the FBI and our law enforcement partners are coming for you—no matter how long it takes or how much you try to hide.  That is a promise we intend to keep, every single time.”

    The FBI is investigating the case with the collaboration of the Puerto Rico Police Bureau.

    Assistant US Attorney (AUSA) Emelina Agrait-Barreto of the Child Exploitation and Immigration Unit is prosecuting the case.

    This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.justice.gov/psc.

    An indictment is merely an allegation, and all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Ransomville Man Going to Prison on Child Pornography Charge

    Source: US FBI

    BUFFALO, N.Y. – U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that John Stuart, 37, of Ransomville, NY, who was convicted of possession of child pornography involving a prepubescent minor, was sentenced to serve 36 months in prison and 25 years supervised release by U.S. District Judge Lawrence J. Vilardo. Stuart must also register as a sex offender.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Craig R. Gestring, who handled the case, stated that in August 2019, the FBI received a lead indicating that in May 2019, an online user accessed child sexual abuse and exploitation material via a website on the Tor network. Subsequent investigation traced the IP address to Stuart. In October 2020, a search warrant was executed at Stuart’s residence, during which law enforcement seized multiple electronic devices, including two laptop computers, a cell phone, a hard drive, and a desktop computer tower. A forensic review recovered approximately 8,000 videos and approximately 2,000 images of child pornography on one of the laptops, and approximately 150 images and one video of child pornography on the second laptop. Approximately 90 images and 150 videos of child pornography were recovered from the cell phone and approximately 90 images and two videos on the hard drive. Some of the images included depictions of violence against children.

    Stuart also admitted that during the execution of the search warrant, law enforcement recovered live marijuana plants, more than a pound of dried marijuana ready for consumption, and that he was a chronic user of marijuana. Stuart was also found to be in possession of three firearms. Because he was a user of controlled substances, Stuart was legally prohibited from owning or possessing firearms.

    The sentencing is the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Child Exploitation Task Force, under the direction of Acting Special Agent-in-Charge Matthew Miraglia, and the Cheektowaga Police Department, under the direction of Chief Brian Coons.

    # # # #  

     

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Tonawanda Doctor Pleads Guilty for His Role in Prescription Scam

    Source: US FBI

    BUFFALO, N.Y. – U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that William Stephan, 65, of Tonawanda, NY, who was convicted of misprision of felony, was sentenced to one year probation and 100 hours community service by U.S. District Judge Lawrence J. Vilardo.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles M. Kruly, who handled the case, stated that Stephan is a medical doctor with a family practice located in Tonawanda, NY. In April 2015, Stephan was asked by Erik Berg to sign prescriptions for compounded medications. Over a several-month period, he signed compounded prescriptions for 19 patients. When Berg presented these prescriptions to Stephan, they had already been filled out, as well as the number of refills. Stephan then typically signed these prescriptions based on Berg’s representation that the patient had a medical need for the prescription(s). When signing the prescriptions, Stephan did not take note of any refills he was authorizing. Prescriptions signed by Stephan for these patients were refilled more than 500 times. None of the 19 patients were Stephan’s patients.

    The compounded medications prescribed by Stephan carried substantial reimbursement rates, which averaged more than $16,000 per prescription. Health care benefit programs paid $8,750,315 in reimbursement for the prescriptions, including refills. Pharmacy benefit managers providing the prescriptions signed by Stephan, would not have approved the prescriptions for reimbursement if they had known that Berg had presented the prescriptions to Stephan already filled out, the compound formula did not address the particular medical needs of a particular patient, but rather to obtain the highest reimbursement from the insurance companies, and that Berg knew that Stephan did not have a doctor-patient relationship with the individual for whom the prescription was written.

    In addition, Stephan signed compounded prescriptions for other individuals, including Scott Trapp and Michael Luehrsen.

    In June 2016, Express Scripts, Inc. performed an audit of certain prescriptions written by Stephan. During the audit, he and Berg completed audit forms on which Stephan stated that he had written and signed certain prescriptions for compounded medications, concealing the fact that he had not, in fact, written out the prescriptions, and that he did not have a doctor-patient relationship with the patients.

    Berg and Luehrsen were previously convicted and awaiting sentencing. Trapp was previously convicted and sentenced.

    The sentencing is the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, under the direction of Acting Special Agent-in-Charge Mark Grimm.

    # # # #

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: MS-13 Gang Leader Sentenced to 68 Years in Prison for Eight Murders, Multiple Attempted Murders, Arson, Narcotics Trafficking, and Firearms Offenses

    Source: US FBI

    Alexi Saenz Led a Brutal Crime Wave that Terrorized the Communities of Brentwood and Central Islip in 2016 and 2017

    Earlier today, in federal court in Central Islip, Alexi Saenz, also known as “Blasty” and “Plaky,” the leader of the Brentwood/Central Islip chapter of the Sailors Locos Salvatruchas Westside (Sailors) clique of La Mara Salvatrucha, also known as the MS-13, a transnational criminal organization, was sentenced by United States District Judge Gary R. Brown to 68 years’ imprisonment.  On July 10, 2024, Saenz pleaded guilty to racketeering charges in connection with his participation in eight murders, namely, the January 28, 2016 murder of Michael Johnson; the April 29, 2016 murder of Oscar Acosta; the September 5, 2016 murder of Marcus Bohannon; the September 13, 2016 murders of Kayla Cuevas and Nisa Mickens; the October 10, 2016 murder of Javier Castillo; the October 13, 2016 murder of Dewann Stacks; and the January 30, 2017 murder of Esteban Alvarado-Bonilla, in addition to his participation in three attempted murders, and arson, narcotics trafficking, and firearms offenses.   

    Joseph Nocella, Jr, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York; Christopher G. Raia, Assistant Director in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation, New York Field Office (FBI New York); and Kevin Catalina, Commissioner, Suffolk County Police Department (SCPD), announced the sentence.

    “Alexi Saenz led an unspeakable reign of terror, killing, and crime that damaged his community and cost several people their lives,” stated United States Attorney Nocella.  “My Office and our law enforcement partners will continue to work tirelessly to hold the MS-13 and its members accountable for their horrific acts, including the pain they’ve caused victims and their loved ones.  This sentencing is one of many in our relentless pursuit to dismantle the MS-13 and other violent criminal organizations.” 

    “For years, Alexi Saenz wielded his role as a local MS-13 leader to facilitate and participate in eight brutal murders of perceived rivals. Saenz terrorized Long Island as he indiscriminately targeted and hunted a wide range of victims, with careless regard to innocent bystanders harmed by his actions. May today’s sentencing emphasize the FBI’s relentless determination to crush all gang violence plaguing our communities,” stated FBI New York Assistant Director in Charge Raia.

    “Alexi Saenz is a violent career criminal whose path of destruction ripped apart families and terrorized Suffolk County with his MS-13 cohorts,” stated SCPD Commissioner Catalina.  “I commend the efforts of the SCPD officers and our law enforcement partners who are dedicated to bringing violent gang criminals to justice and offering closure to the victims’ families.”

    As set forth in the government’s sentencing memorandum, prior court filings, and statements during the sentencing, Alexi Saenz was the local leader of the Brentwood/Central Islip chapter of the Sailors clique of the MS-13 – one of the more powerful, violent, and well-established cliques on the East Coast of the United States.  He committed the following crimes in order to maintain and increase his membership and status within the gang and to further the mission of the MS-13:

    January 28, 2016 Murder of Michael Johnson

    On January 28, 2016, Alexi Saenz and other MS-13 members and associates were at the Jocorena Deli in Brentwood, where they saw 29-year-old Michael Johnson, and claimed to recognize him as a member of the rival Bloods street gang.  At that point, Johnson was marked as their “food” – a reference to their intention to kill him. 

    After receiving the requisite approval from the New York leader of the Sailors clique to commit this murder, Alexi Saenz contacted several other MS-13 members, informed them of the plan to kill Johnson, and instructed them to bring weapons, including a machete and a baseball bat, to a wooded area in Brentwood.  Alexi Saenz then lured Johnson to that secluded meeting location under the guise of smoking marijuana.  The MS-13 members and associates ambushed Johnson from behind – striking Johnson with the baseball bat, stabbing him with a knife, and taking turns hacking him with the machete.  They fled after hearing police sirens in the area.   

    Johnson was reported missing by family members. Less than one week after his murder, on February 2, 2016, members of the SCPD responded to a 911 call about a body found in the woods by a passerby, and recovered Johnson’s body.  An autopsy determined Johnson’s cause of death to be sharp and blunt force injuries.   

    April 29, 2016 Murder of Oscar Acosta

    In early 2016, Alexi Saenz and his fellow Sailors clique members decided to “green light,” or approve, the murder of 19-year-old Oscar Acosta because they suspected that he was associating with the rival 18th Street gang after previously aligning himself with the MS-13. The New York Sailors clique leader assigned roles as to which members would take the lead in planning and carrying out the murder. 

    On April 29, 2016, MS-13 members met Acosta in a wooded area near an elementary school in Brentwood where he had been lured under the guise of smoking marijuana.  They brutally beat Acosta with tree limbs, knocking him unconscious. They bound Acosta’s hands and feet, wrapped an article of clothing around his mouth to prevent him from making noise, and summoned other MS-13 members, including Alexi Saenz.  The MS-13 members loaded Acosta into the trunk of Alexi Saenz’s car, and drove to a more secluded area in Brentwood near the abandoned Pilgrim State Psychiatric Hospital.  At the direction of Alexi Saenz, the MS-13 members removed Acosta, who was still alive, from the trunk and carried him deeper into the woods where they took turns hacking him to death with a machete.  The murder was supervised by Alexi Saenz, as his role as the local clique leader.  The MS-13 members then buried Acosta’s body in a shallow grave.   

    Acosta’s body was discovered by law enforcement nearly five months later, on September 16, 2016, during a search for another MS-13 victim.  His cause of death was homicidal violence, including sharp and blunt force injuries to his head and torso.

    July 18, 2016 Attempted Murders of John Doe #1 and John Doe #2

    On July 18, 2016, during a Sailors clique meeting at Alexi Saenz’s house in Central Islip, the defendant instructed the group to hunt for rival gang members who had been disrespectful to the MS-13, in order to attack and kill them.

    Later that evening, other members of the MS-13, who were driving around Brentwood armed with firearms and a machete, spotted a group of men on Apple Street. Believing these men to be members of a rival gang, three MS-13 members got out of the car and attacked the group, firing rounds from two different guns, and then using a machete to hack at one of the men who had fallen to the ground.  After the attack, the group drove back to Alexi Saenz’s house, where they hid the weapons.

    Two individuals were injured as a result of this attack.  John Doe #1 was struck with a bullet, but survived.  John Doe #2 was attacked with a machete, and was permanently disfigured.

    August 10, 2016 Attempted Murders of Suspected Rival Gang Members

    In 2016, members of the MS-13 were engaged in a series of disputes with members of the Goon Squad, a rival gang in Brentwood. 

    On August 10, 2016, Alexi Saenz and another MS-13 member drove through the neighborhood around Lukens Avenue in Brentwood, and spotted several men who they believed were members of the Goon Squad. They then rallied other members of the Sailors clique to come kill the rivals. 

    The MS-13 members divided into two vehicles, and drove towards the house where the suspected Goon Squad members had been spotted. Alexi Saenz’s car kept watch for the police, while two other MS-13 members, each bearing a gun, approached the group of suspected rivals and fired numerous shots in their direction.  No one was hit, although a stray bullet entered a neighbor’s house and struck the headboard of a bed in which the neighbor was sleeping.

    September 5, 2016 Murder of Marcus Bohannon

    On September 4, 2016, during a Sailors clique meeting at Alexi Saenz’s house in Central Islip, the defendant and other MS-13 members went out hunting for rival gang members to kill.

    The MS-13 members separated into several cars and drove around Central Islip and Brentwood, until Alexi Saenz’s group spotted 27-year old Marcus Bohannon walking along Lowell Avenue in Central Islip in the early morning hours of September 5.  Suspecting that Bohannon was a member of the rival Bloods gang, two MS-13 members, carrying firearms, got out of the vehicle, approached him, and started shooting.  Alexi Saenz then drove them away.  Bohannon was struck nine times, including in his head, neck, and chest, and died from his wounds.

    September 12, 2016 Arson

    During the summer of 2016, Sailors clique members of the MS-13 engaged in regular altercations with local gang members based in a neighborhood on Freeman Avenue in Brentwood.

    On September 12, 2016, MS-13 members retaliated by setting fire to a car parked in the driveway of one of the houses in that rival gang neighborhood.  Alexi Saenz directed other gang members to purchase gasoline and carry out the arson, while he drove around watching for police presence.  The other MS-13 gang members drove to that house, where they poured gasoline on a car parked in the driveway, and set it on fire.  The car exploded, and set another parked car on fire.   

    September 13, 2016 Murders of Kayla Cuevas and Nisa Mickens

    On September 13, 2016, Sailors clique members brutally murdered 15-year-old Nisa Mickens and 16-year-old Kayla Cuevas, both students at Brentwood High School.

    In the months leading up to the murders, Cuevas was involved in a series of disputes with members and associates of the MS-13.  Approximately one week before the murders, these disputes escalated when Cuevas and several friends were involved in an altercation with MS-13 members at Brentwood High School.  After that incident, the MS-13 members vowed to seek revenge against Cuevas.

    On the evening of September 13, 2016, Alexi Saenz and other members of the Sailors clique of the MS-13 were driving in separate cars around Brentwood in search of rival gang members to attack and kill.  One group of MS-13 members spotted Cuevas and Mickens walking down residential Stahley Street.  Recognizing Cuevas, they called Alexi Saenz and were granted permission to kill the girls. Several MS-13 members then chased down and attacked both Cuevas and Mickens, wielding baseball bats and a machete, striking each of the girls numerous times in their heads and bodies, while Alexi Saenz’s car drove around watching for police.  After the murders, the group retreated to Alexi Saenz’s home in Central Islip, where they changed clothes and hid the weapons.   

    Mickens, whose body was discovered later that evening on Stahley Street, not far from Cuevas’s home, sustained significant sharp force trauma to her face and blunt force trauma to her head.  Cuevas, whose body was discovered the following day behind a house adjacent to where Mickens’s body was found, sustained significant blunt force trauma to her head and body and multiple lacerations.

    October 10, 2016 Murder of Javier Castillo

    In October 2016, the MS-13 targeted 15-year-old Javier Castillo because he was believed to be a member of the 18th Street gang, one of MS-13’s principal rivals. 

    On October 10, 2016, several members of the Sailors clique convinced Castillo, who lived in Central Islip, to drive with them to Freeport – approximately 30 miles away – to smoke marijuana.  Once there, they met Alexi Saenz and other Sailors clique members.  The group then lured Castillo to an isolated marsh area in Cow Meadow Park, where they attacked him, taking turns hacking him to death with a machete. 

    Afterwards, the MS-13 members dug a hole and buried Castillo’s body, which was not recovered until one year later, in late October 2017.  Castillo was determined to have suffered multiple sharp force injuries to his head, neck, torso, and extremities.

    October 13, 2016 Murder of Dewann Stacks

    On the evening of October 13, 2016, Alexi Saenz and other members of the Sailors clique of MS-13 were driving around Central Islip and Brentwood in search of rival gang members to attack and kill.

    That night, they spotted 34-year-old Dewann Stacks and, believing him to be a rival gang member, Alexi Saenz authorized his murder.  While Alexi Saenz drove around watching for police presence, another group of MS-13 members, armed with two machetes and a baseball bat, drove over to attack Stacks.  Three armed MS-13 members got out of the car, and beat and hacked Stacks to death on American Boulevard, a residential street in Brentwood.  Stacks sustained severe sharp and blunt force trauma to his face and head, leaving his body nearly unrecognizable.

    January 30, 2017 Murder of Esteban Alvarado-Bonilla

    On the morning of January 30, 2017, Alexi Saenz and other members of the Sailors clique of MS-13 spotted 29-year-old Esteban Alvarado-Bonilla inside El Campesino Deli in Central Islip.  Since Alvarado-Bonilla was wearing a football jersey bearing the number “18,” the MS-13 concluded that he was a member of a rival gang and plotted to kill him.

    Several other MS-13 members obtained a mask and another vehicle that would be used to commit the murder.  Alexi Saenz provided the clique’s 9-millimeter handgun for use in the murder.

    At approximately 10:30 a.m., a masked MS-13 member entered the deli, approached Alvarado-Bonilla from behind, and shot him multiple times, killing him.  One of the bullets pierced through Alvarado-Bonilla’s head and struck the chest of a female employee of the deli, who was standing directly in front of him.  The deli employee survived the gunshot wound.   

    Narcotics Trafficking Conspiracy

    For a year and a half, from approximately April 2016 through March 2017, in order to finance the illegal operations of the Sailors clique, Alexi Saenz obtained wholesale quantities of cocaine and marijuana, which he distributed to other Sailors clique members and associates for street-level sales in Brentwood and its surrounding areas.  After the sales, the profits were turned over to Alexi Saenz, for use in, among other things, purchasing firearms for use by clique members, wiring money to MS-13 leaders in El Salvador, and buying additional narcotics for further distribution.     

                                       *          *          *          *

    Today’s sentencing is the latest achievement in a series of federal prosecutions by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York targeting members of the MS-13, a violent, transnational criminal organization.  The MS-13’s leadership is based in El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, and Mexico, but the gang has thousands of members across the United States.  With numerous branches, or “cliques,” the MS-13 is the most violent criminal organization on Long Island.  Since 2003, hundreds of MS-13 members, including dozens of clique leaders, have been convicted on federal felony charges in the Eastern District of New York. A majority of those MS-13 members have been convicted on federal racketeering charges for participating in murders, attempted murders, and assaults.  Since 2010, this Office has obtained indictments charging MS-13 members with carrying out more than 75 murders in the Eastern District of New York, resulting in the convictions of dozens of MS-13 leaders and members in connection with those murders.  These prosecutions are the product of investigations led by the FBI’s Long Island Gang Task Force, which is comprised of agents and officers of the FBI, SCPD, Nassau County Police Department, Nassau County Sheriff’s Department, Suffolk County Probation Office, Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office, the New York State Police, the Hempstead Police Department, the Rockville Centre Police Department, and the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision.

    The case is part of Operation Take Back America, a Department of Justice initiative aimed at eradicating transnational criminal organizations, combating violent crime, and restoring the rule of law.

    This prosecution is also part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) investigation.  OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level drug traffickers, money launderers, gangs, and transnational criminal organizations that threaten the United States by using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach that leverages the strengths of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies against criminal networks.

    The government’s case is being handled by the Criminal Section of the Office’s Long Island Division.  Assistant United States Attorneys John J. Durham, Paul G. Scotti, Justina L. Geraci, and Megan E. Farrell are in charge of the prosecution, with the assistance of Paralegal Specialist Kerryanne Ucci and Automated Litigation Specialist Michael Compitello.

    The Defendant:

    ALEXI SAENZ (also known as “Blasty” and “Plaky”)
    Age: 30
    El Divisadero, Morazán, El Salvador; and Central Islip, New York

    E.D.N.Y. Docket No. 16-CR-403 (S-8) (GRB)

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Ohio Man Sentenced to Half a Century in Federal Prison for Sexual Exploitation of Children

    Source: US FBI

    CLEVELAND – Christopher M. Callaway, 41, of West Farmington, Ohio, has been sentenced to 50 years in prison by U.S. District Judge Patricia A. Gaughan, after he pleaded guilty in March to six counts of sexually exploiting children, receipt and distribution of minors engaged in sexually explicit content, and possession of child pornography, also known as child sexual abuse material (CSAM).  He was also ordered pay $40,000 to the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act. Judge Gaughan imposed the sentence July 1.

    According to court documents, Callaway groomed victims from 2015 to 2022 and targeted vulnerable girls who ranged in age from 10 to 17 years old. He targeted his victims on social media and initiated contact with them through messaging apps such as KIK, Snapchat, or Facebook. Specifically, he sought out so called “daddy-daughter” online groups where older men communicated with underage girls.

    Callaway groomed his victims by telling them that he loved them and by sending them food, clothing, money, and gift cards. Once victims trusted him, he manipulated them into sending nude images or videos of themselves performing sexual acts. Callaway also sent victims sex toys, lingerie, and other items which he directed them to use so he could produce pornography to distribute online. Additionally, the defendant sent his victims sexually explicit photos and videos of himself.

    In total, federal investigators found that Callaway produced CSAM of more than 40 minors with 21 identified in the case. Most of the victims were from outside the state of Ohio and one from New Zealand. Callaway traveled to Virginia and Florida to rape victims and record the crimes as he committed them. He also traveled to the minors and brought a few to live with him in Ohio.

    During a search warrant execution of Callaway’s residence, federal agents seized electronic devices containing more than 20,000 images and videos of CSAM.

    The investigation preceding the indictment was conducted by the FBI Cleveland Division in conjunction with the Ohio Attorney General’s Office Bureau of Criminal Investigation.

    This case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Jennifer J. King for the Northern District of Ohio.

    This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse. The initiative is led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices throughout the country and marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information, about Project Safe Childhood, visit justice.gov/PSC.

    To report child exploitation, please visit cybertipline.org, or call 1-800-843-5678, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Guatemalan National Unlawfully Residing in Oregon Faces Federal Charges for Traveling to Washington to Sexually Abuse a Minor

    Source: US FBI

    EUGENE, Ore.—A suspected child abuser is facing federal charges today for enticing and sexually abusing a minor in Oregon and Washington.

    Leonias Juber Ramos-Garcia, 25, a Guatemalan national unlawfully residing in Culver, Oregon, has been charged by criminal complaint with coercion and enticement of a minor to engage in unlawful sexual activity and travel with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct.

    According to court documents, in 2024, Ramos-Garcia met the minor at a business in Jefferson County, Oregon. In February 2025, undeterred by the minor’s age, Ramos-Garcia gave the minor a note which contained cash and professed his affection for the minor.

    In March 2025, Ramos-Garcia is alleged to have engaged in sexually explicit communication with the minor and, despite the victim’s reluctance, Ramos-Garcia persuaded the minor to engage in illicit sexual conduct at a hotel in Central Oregon. In April 2025, Ramos-Garcia traveled from Oregon to Washington and took the victim to a second hotel where he again sexually abused the minor.

    Ramos-Garcia was arrested Tuesday in Culver, Oregon, and made his first appearance in federal court today before a U.S. Magistrate Judge. He was ordered detained pending further court proceedings.

    The case was investigated by Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), the FBI, and the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, with assistance from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations, and the Madras Police Department. It is being prosecuted by William M. McLaren, Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Oregon.

    A criminal complaint is only an accusation of a crime, and a defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

    Anyone who has information about the physical or online exploitation of children are encouraged to contact HSI at (866) 347-2423 or submit a tip online at report.cybertip.org.

    Federal law defines child pornography as any visual depiction of sexually explicit conduct involving a minor. It is important to remember child sexual abuse material depicts actual crimes being committed against children. Not only do these images and videos document the victims’ exploitation and abuse, but when shared across the internet, re-victimize and re-traumatize the child victims each time their abuse is viewed. To learn more, please visit the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children at www.missingkids.org.

    This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.justice.gov/psc.

    This case is part of Operation Take Back America a nationwide initiative that marshals the full resources of the Department of Justice to repel the invasion of illegal immigration, achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations (TCOs), and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime.

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 9, 2025
←Previous Page
1 … 87 88 89 90 91 … 1,005
Next Page→
NewzIntel.com

NewzIntel.com

MIL Open Source Intelligence

  • Blog
  • About
  • FAQs
  • Authors
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Patterns
  • Themes

Twenty Twenty-Five

Designed with WordPress