Vietnam Warns of 'Toxic' Web Use Ahead of Party Shakeup

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 31 December 2015 12:33 IST

Vietnam sought to discourage its internet-savvy public on Wednesday from reading Web postings that disparaged its Communist Party, warning of an increase in "toxic" activity just weeks away from its scheduled leadership shakeup.

Using its new Facebook page, the government vowed to tackle social media criticism of the party without interrupting the Internet ahead its five-yearly congress in January, and said most attacks originated from outside of the country.

Advertisement

"These pages are most distorting and talking bad about our party's leaders, government and policies," Truong Minh Tuan, the deputy minister of information and communications, wrote in the Facebook posting.

"We expect more such bad pages appearing around the congress and election."

Advertisement

Managing the Internet, especially social media, has become a tricky balancing act for a party that for 40 years has tightly controlled Vietnam but risks upsetting its public if it introduces sweeping China-style Web restrictions.

Discussion of politics remains strictly taboo and authorities have dealt harshly with online dissent, with rights groups angered by the arrests, intimidation and jailing of dozens of bloggers and activists.

Advertisement

The Internet is hugely popular and used by 49 percent of the 90-million-strong population, of which two-thirds is under the age of 30, fuelling strong smartphone sales.

A third of Vietnamese use Facebook, a figure cited by Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung last month when he issued a 1,100-word open letter appealing to the public to use the platform responsibly. Dung was the first among the party elite to advocate the use of Facebook by the government.

Advertisement

The Communist Party congress will see a new party chief and powerful politburo elected by members of its Central Committee, but the identities of potential leadership candidates remain a tightly kept secret.

Much is riding on the congress, which is closely watched by foreign governments and investors keen to get a read on a process that could determine Vietnam's foreign policy trajectory and pace and scope of its pro-business reforms.

© Thomson Reuters 2015

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Facebook, Internet, Social, Vietnam, Web
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1.  Xiaomi 18, 18 Pro and 18 Pro Max Specifications Leaked Ahead of Debut
  2. Lumio Launches 55-Inch Variants of Vision 9 (2026), Vision 7 (2026) in India
  1. UK's FCA Warns Premier League Clubs Over Unauthorised Crypto Sponsor Risks
  2. Vivo X500 Pro Max Display and Battery Details Surface Online in Early Leak; Largest Model Said to Feature 6.85-Inch Screen
  3. Google Introduces Fake Call Detection for Android Phones to Curb Call Spoofing Attacks
  4. Google Rolls Out Gemini Thinking Levels Across Platforms With 'Extended' Thinking Mode for All Users
  5. Samsung Galaxy A27 Reportedly Bags US FCC Certification Ahead of Anticipated Launch
  6. NYDFS, European Banking Authority Join Forces to Oversee, Monitor Stablecoin Activities
  7. Meta Reportedly Testing ‘Series’ Feature to Organise Instagram, Facebook Reels Into Episodic Collections
  8. Xiaomi 18 Tipped to Sport 6.4-Inch Display; Pro Models Said to Feature Dual 200-Megapixel Rear Cameras
  9. Realme P4R 5G India Launch Date Revealed Along With Design and Key Specifications
  10. Marvel's Wolverine Gets Visceral Gameplay Trailer at State of Play, Pre-Orders Now Live
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.