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Vietnam After the Saigon Fall 1975
Overview
Many books, magazine articles, and papers have been written about the Vietnam war and
its consequences, but most are written from the perspective of an outsider looking in without
actually living in Vietnam after the fall of Saigon in 1975. Few reporters ever came back to
Vietnam to live there and describe day-to-day life in Vietnam after the war. Under the control of
Communist rulers and an embargo from the US, Vietnam was almost isolated from the western
world between 1975 and the very late eighties (one can recognize a similar pattern in North
Korea now). Western reporters were not welcome or even permitted to enter Vietnam for
reporting purposes without an agreement from government officials.
This report describes life in Vietnam after the fall of Saigon from the perspective of a
Vietnamese person who grew up in Vietnam from 1975 to the early nineties. Such descriptions
should be backed up by reliable media sources, but where one could find reliable sources if the
media is simply a tool for the government to spread propaganda? There are two contrasting
views about the media. From the US or Western point of view, the press should consist of free
expression: a voice of freedom. In Vietnam and other communist countries, the media is simply
a tool of government; the constant propaganda makes people believe that this is the way of news
and media regardless of where one lives. The events described in this report are taken from
books and the personal experiences of a woman who survived the war and lived under the new
government.
The situation in Vietnam closely parallels that of the current situation in North Korea,
and demonstrates why it is very hard to find good published reliable sources about that country:
officially, none exist. The only reliable source of information about North Korea one can find is
from the experience of the people who have survived and escaped from North Korea; reports
from its government are simply propaganda.
Introduction
Vietnam lies along the eastern coast of the Indochina peninsula in an “S” shape. It is
about 1,650 km long and is from 50 to 560 km wide. Its area is about 329,560 sq. km--slightly
larger than Mexico (CIA World Factbook). It is bordered on the north by China and the west by
Laos and Cambodia. With a population of more than 81 million, Vietnam is one of the 15 most
highly populated countries in the world. It is also one of the poorest countries in Southeast Asia
with many problems like pollution, uneven population distribution, and a very fragile economic
infrastructure.
History
Fourth millennium - 1847
According to archaeological discoveries, around the fourth millennium BC and during the
Bronze Age the first Vietnamese civilization, called Lac Viet (People of the Valley) was
established in northern Vietnam. Lac Viet reached its prime in the third century BC before it was
conquered by the Chinese ruling Han Dynasty in 207 BC (Booz 20). For the next thousand years
Vietnam was dominated by Chinese rulers, and its culture was strongly influenced by Chinese
culture. Many cultural ideals, religion, and art still remain today. However, there were a number
of uprisings during the Chinese ruling. One of the earliest and most famous rebellions was
headed by two sisters called Trung Trac and Trung Nhi around 40 AD. According to legend,
when they heard their husbands were beheaded by local Chinese officials, the two sisters rode
elephants and led a group of rebels to overthrow the officials. When the Chinese army arrived to
quell the rebellion the two sisters fought bravely but were outnumbered, finally committing
suicide by drowning themselves (Booz 21). Though there were some uprisings after that they
were not strong enough to prevent the Chinese from coming back. Until 938 AD Ngo Quyen, a
legendary military commander, used the tide of the Bach Dang River as a trap to destroy the
mighty Chinese navy. He ordered the soldiers to place sharp stakes vertically at the bottom of
the river and then lured the Chinese ships into the river during high tide. By the time the tide
went out, all the ships were immobilized and burned by torches. Ngo Quyen with his brilliant
ideas liberated Vietnam for the first time from Chinese domination (Neil 41). For the next 800
years Vietnam and China fought many battles, but the Vietnamese people maintained their
independence and begun to expand their society and extend their country boundary toward the
south. By 1802 the boundary of Vietnam acquired its current location.
1847-1954
By late 18th century, French missionaries had extended their mission to Southeast Asia
and entered Vietnam, but they soon encountered harsh treatment from the emperors. The
relations between the missionaries and emperors were getting worse, especially during the Minh
Mang and Thieu Tri period, when practicing Christianity was punishable by death. In the same
period, aware that the British were expanding their territories in China, the French used religious
persecution as an excuse to colonize Vietnam (SarDesai 33). In 1862, after a few years of
fighting, the French took over Vietnam and divided the country into three separate provinces
called Tonking, Annam, and Cochin China. In the early 20th century, aroused by the communist
revolution in Russia and the expression of democratic ideals in Europe, nationalist sentiment
motivated the Vietnamese middle class to express their desire for freedom from foreigners. Two
of the early voices of scholars were those of Phan Boi Chau and Phan Chau Trinh. Phan Boi
Chau’s History of the Loss of Vietnam had a great impact on scholars and pupils throughout the
country (Sardesai 45). Although those early movements did not cause a revolution in Vietnam,
they built a foundation for many Vietnam nationalists and led to the creation in 1927 of Vietnam
Quoc Dan Dang, which served as a voice of the Vietnamese people--primarily against
colonialism and French authority. The French reacted by using their military power to suppress
the Vietnam Quoc Dan Dang organization three years later (Booz 29). Meanwhile, another silent
movement led by a man named Nguyen Sinh Cung--later known as Ho Chi Minh--was growing
strongly among the peasants, who were very poor and looking for anything that could improve
their lives. Ho Chi Minh, who favored Marxist ideas, took advantages of poverty, nationalism,
and resentment against French authority, and formed a communist party in 1930 initially called
the Indochina Communist Party (ICP). Despite ongoing oppression by the French authority, the
communists grew stronger every day and by the mid 1940s they formed a new organization
called the Viet Minh (Vietnam Independent League) (SarDesai 54). The disagreement between
Vietnamese nationalists and the Communist party divided the effort to free Vietnam and
weakened their chances against the French authority. A notable incident at this time was the
arrest of Phan Boi Chau, which was somehow orchestrated by Ho Chi Minh. In any case, with
the use of propaganda the ICP received strong support from the peasantry and survived the
French oppressions, and by 1944 the ICP saw World War II as an opportunity to free Vietnam
from foreigners. Ho Chi Minh ordered Vo Nguyen Giap, who later became an icon of the North
because of the famous victory in Dien Bien Phu in 1954, to form a military force. Vietnam’s first
guerilla army consisted of 34 men with a few rifles (SarDesai 55). Using guerrilla warfare
methods, they attacked small French posts and capture their weapons. By 1954 the small force
had grown into a large well trained army of six divisions with heavy artillery.
In 1945, just after the Japanese were defeated, Ho Chi Minh and the Communist party
came out of the jungle, took over Hanoi, and on September 2 declared Vietnam independent
using the famous American Declaration of Independence. The Democratic Republic of Vietnam
(DRV) was soon created. It was a victory for both the Communists and the Vietnamese
Nationalist parties, but due to differences in ideology they eventually went their separate ways.
One of the nationalists was Ngo Dinh Nhiem, an anti-communist who later became president of
the South after the 1954 Geneva Convention.
Concerned about the expansion of communism into Southeast Asia, the American
government decided to support France to gain back Vietnam. The French were desperate to keep
Vietnam as a colony but the Viet Minh were not ready to give up their independence. Fighting
broke out between the French and the Viet Minh. French military superiority forced the Viet
Minh back to the jungle, where they prepared for a major battle against the stronger French
army. During that time the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union induced
them to stop one another from expanding their territories. The US helped the French to maintain
their control in Vietnam, and the Soviet Union and Chinese supplied Viet Minh with ammunition
and weapons (Sar Desai 61). Underestimating the Viet Minh military’s will and ability, the
French tried to force them into a major battle against French air superiority and better military
strategy, which French General Henri Navarre believed would overcome the Viet Minh under Vo
Nguyen Giap. The battle at Dien Bien Phu was carefully prepared for by the Viet Minh, who
silently carried artillery and heavy machine guns on their backs or bicycles, surrounding Dien
Bien Phu with thousands of soldiers and artillery. Just before the battle US Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles suggested using nuclear weapons to destroy the Viet Minh, but the United
States refused, fearing possible retaliation from the Soviet Union that could lead to World War
III (Sar Desai 62).
By May 1954, the battle of Dien Bien Phu was over. The Viet Minh capture of Dien Bien
Phu devastated French morale and forced the French to surrender North Vietnam to the DRV.
Although this was a huge victory for the DRV and Vo Nguyen Giap, the cost was considerable.
Of 15,000 French troops 1,500 were dead, but the Viet Minh lost 8,000 out of 51,000 soldiers.
In July 21, 1951, in accordance with a Geneva agreement, Vietnam was temporarily divided into
South and North along the 17th parallel and was to be reunified by an election in 1956. The
election never took place. Concerned about the expansion of Communism, The US acted on their
doctrine of containment (Sar Desai 66) by supporting Ngo Dinh Diem, who was anti-communist,
to establish an independent state in the South. The North was then controlled by the DRV.
1954-1975
After defeating the French and taking over the North the new, young, and inexperienced
communist government had to deal with many problems. The French removal of most coal
mining machinery, the only resource for foreign exchange, resulted in famine and lack of hard
currency for importing food. Lacking knowledge and experience in managing a country’s
economy, the Communist party eagerly applied Socialist doctrine to a very fragile economic
system. By creating agrarian collectives and bringing all private business into state control, they
hoped to grant all a fair share from state distribution centers. Everything from clothes to food
were distributed directly from the government, a system that turned North Vietnam’s consumer
rate into one of the lowest in the world (SarDesai 71).
Even though they lived in very poor conditions, people were made to believe by
propaganda from communist media that there was not much difference between the western
lifestyle and their own. On the upside Hanoians overcame their hardships, continued to support
the communist party, and believed that unification would bring a much better life. On the other
hand, they were completely ignorant of the outside world. Unable to live under the new
government and hardships, nearly one million North Vietnamese, most of whom were Catholic,
migrated to the South in 1955 and 1956 (Sar Desai 70).
Although Ho Chi Minh was a ruthless leader, his preference for a simple lifestyle had
earned much respect from people in the North. By contrast, Ngo Dinh Diem and his closed
family in the South alienated themselves from the people by their harsh policy and
discrimination against the Buddhist people. This policy caused many protests, uprisings, and
coups against the Diem government. Diem was assassinated by one of his generals in 1963,
which US intelligence knew of in advance but did nothing to discourage (SarDesai 75).
According to Sheehan it was CIA who sponsored the coup (Sheehan 69) as shown in Picture 1 in
Appendix A. Leutenant Colonel Lucien Conein, who stands behind the group, served as a
liaison with generals who conspired to overthrow Diem (Sheehan)
Figure 1. CIA agent and Vietnamese generals who conspired to overthrow Diem (Sheehan)
In addition to the protests in the South, a grassroots communist group established the
National Liberation Front (NLF) or Mat Tran Dan Toc Giai Phong. Using terrorist tactics, the
NLF caused many problems for the Diem government and its US advisors. According to
SarDesai 74, even though Hanoi had many problems of its own and was reluctant to expand the
communist party to the South, the unrest in the South forced Hanoi to re-prioritize and begin to
move their people there to establish a base for future larger scale attack on Diem. That was how
the NLF was formed under the supervision of their comrades in the North.
Even after the Diem assignation in 1963 the political situation in the South was rapidly
deteriorating because guerilla warfare operations by the NLF were becoming more sophisticated.
They were gaining more advanced weapons, supplies, and resources from their communist
comrades, who were penetrating from the North to the South using a jungle passage called the
Ho Chi Minh trail. Recognizing the situation and trying to enforce its communist containment
policy, the US government under President Lyndon Johnson used the 1964 Tonking incident to
pressure the congress into pass a bill called the Tonking Resolution, which allowed the president
to use any necessary force to stop the communists from expanding. As a result, the number of
US troops in Vietnam was increased from 45,500 to 500,000 within just two years. Trying to
stop the Viet Cong (VC) from penetrating to the South, the US began to bomb strategic military
targets in North Vietnam and along the Ho Chi Minh trail. Unfortunately the North Vietnam
military had neither a large arsenal of weaponry nor weaponry manufacturers because most of
their weapons and supplies were from the Soviet Union and China, or captured from the South
and US depots (SarDesai 84). As a result, the bombing strategy did not yield significant results
other than to make the North Vietnamese determined to fight against the US and the government
of the South.
The war itself brought much pain and suffering to the civilians. Millions of people left
their villages and overpopulated Saigon because they could not live under the harassment of the
South Vietnamese and US soldiers during the day and the National Front for Liberation (NFL)
during the night. The land was destroyed and rendered useless for producing agricultural
products (SarDesai 85). Most of the US aids to South Vietnam helped to create an artificial
economy in the South because there was virtually no exporting of goods during the war. The
political turmoil turned South Vietnam into a region primarily controlled by the military.
Moreover, the majority of the funds from US taxpayers went to the pockets of corrupt generals
and non-productive businesses like services, prostitution, and interpreters.
Underestimating the strength of the South Vietnamese military and the US troops, Hanoi
and the NLF opened a major assault of the entire country during the New Year in 1968; the Tet
Offensive. The result was a failure for both President Lyndon Johnson and the Viet Cong. The
attack forced Johnson to withdraw a bid for a second term, but more than 40,000 Viet Cong
soldiers were killed and none of Saigon was captured.
In addition to mounting political pressure by the antiwar movement in the US, the
number of dead or wounded soldiers was increasing daily and modern weaponry and warfare
strategies seemed not to be very effective against the opponents’ guerilla warfare tactics. By
1969 the US decided to begin to withdraw American troops from Vietnam but continue to
support the South Vietnam government and build a strong South Vietnamese military. The
Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN), or Quan luc Viet Nam Cong Hoa, reached more than
one million troops (SarDesai 87). In 1973, to weaken communist power and try to force Hanoi
into an agreement to divide the country into two independent states in the upcoming Geneva
Convention, the US began a “surgical bombing” campaign targeting major cities in the North
like Hanoi and Haiphong. After twelve days and nights of bombing, most of Hanoi and all of
Haiphong was destroyed but the communists survived the attack. According to SarDesai 93, the
failure of the US in Vietnam during the Vietnam War was primarily their incorrect diagnosis of
the situation. On the part of the North, the motivation for the conflict was not so much to
advance communism as it was to bring down the harsh and corrupt governments of Ngo Dinh
Diem, then Ky and Thieu. Even though SarDesai does not mention the communist role in his
book, there was evidence indicating that the communists and the NFL played a major role in
convincing and recruiting many Buddhist monks and students to join the fight against the South
Vietnam government and the US by using propaganda. Furthermore, the involvement of the US
military fueled the sentiments for nationalism and anti-colonialism. The author also concluded
that a possible solution for Vietnam was not a military one but socioeconomic reform.
The cost of Vietnam War was very high. It cost the US about $150 billion and 57,000
lives, and the US dropped eight million tons of bombs on Vietnam between 1965 and 1973, four
times the amount of bombs used in World War II. Ten million tons of Agent Orange destroyed
the forest and its soil (SarDesai 95). According to a United Nations report on Vietnam issued in
1976, the entire North Vietnamese infrastructure was destroyed during the war. The casualties of
both North and South were roughly estimated at two million people (SarDesai 95), although the
Vietnamese government never released the actual number of dead and injured.
1975-present
A few days after capturing Saigon, and even before restructuring the nation after a
decade of war, the new government immediately ordered everyone who worked for the South
Vietnam government and military to report to local governments. Most people thought they
were simply to report to the government and return to their family, but most of them never
returned home or were even allowed to write a letter to their family or relatives about their fate
or their whereabouts for the next three years. This type of information was never published or
available to foreign reporters, which is why none of the books about Vietnam mentions the
disappearance of the people who used to work for the former government. The edict clearly
violated the Geneva Convention for prisoners of war, but to the new government this was simply
a way to reeducate and rehabilitate those who worked for the South, as it was described briefly
by Dr. SarDesai on page 98. According to SheeHan, nearly 100,000 citizens, including soldiers
and officials of the former government, were imprisoned for years. The number of years in
prison was determined by rank and behavior. A husband of a woman that we will mention in
this report was detained in a reeducation camp in a remote area of Hanoi called Ha Nam Ninh for
eight years. He did not know he was released until they told him so. Picture 2 shows one of the
official superficial re-educated camps, which is available to public and foreign reporters. The
real re-educated camps are backbreaking hard labor prisons, which are in either deep forests or
mountains.
Picture 2. Reeducated camp (Sheehan)
The war was finally over, but the difficulty was just beginning for the new and
inexperienced government. As mentioned in the aforementioned section, the infrastructure of the
North was destroyed and its economy simply did not exist due to the bombing from 1965 to
1972. Meanwhile the economy of the South, heavily dependent on US assistance during the war,
was devastated when the US withdrew from Vietnam. The service sector nearly collapsed and
the GDP increase of about 1 percent was overwhelmed by the population increase, which was
about 3 percent. By 1975 the economic bubble in South Vietnam was burst; most of its hard
currency left with the fleeing bankers and population (SarDesai 97-98, Sheehan 14-15).
However, Saigon still was left with an infrastructure that could be used for rebuilding the
economy by promoting business enterprise and capital ventures with foreigners. Confronting the
daunting task of rebuilding the country from scratch, the leadership of the new government was
divided into two opposing ideologies. One group believed in socialism and eagerly wanted to
transform South Vietnam into a socialist nation like the North despite its living standard, which
was among the lowest in Southeast Asia. The other group was more moderate and wanted to
allow private business incentives. (The differences in ideology among the members of the
communist politburo are described briefly by Sheehan, pp. 78-79.) Unfortunately the majority of
the Communist Party believed in Marxist doctrine and South Vietnam’s economic policy was
transformed from capitalist to socialist in 1976 (SarDesai 96, Sheenan 15). Although the author
did not offer an explanation, one can be deduced from the fact that most of the members of the
Communist Party were poorly informed. They simply believed that winning the war against the
United States and rebuilding the country were equivalent, and that socialism was the natural path
of human evolution (this belief, from Marxist doctrine, had been taught in schools and
universities after 1975). Skipping capitalism and advancing directly to socialism would place
Vietnam in advance of the US and Western countries, which were still in the capitalism phase.
The long-term goal was to transition to socialism in three stages. The first stage took
place from 1975 to 1980. In this period, the government reorganized and redistributed the
population to resume their agricultural activities. The second five-year plan started in 1980 and
will be ended in 2005 when Vietnam will become a social industrialist country (SarDesai 100).
Finally, the third stage would complete the transition to socialism.
The new economic policy has two aims: one is to allow limited private business and the
other is to redistribute the population to the countryside to rebuild agriculture (SarDesai 98).
Under the first policy, people receive food rations from government subsidized agencies every
week. However, the allowance provided by the government is simply not enough for a family.
As a result, this policy created a black market for almost everything as shown in Picture 3. Most
people are involved one way or another in the black market, even though they can be imprisoned.
The following paragraph is a true story, and it happened to someone that is close to the author of
this report. A woman with four children had her husband, who had worked for the former
government, held by the government without any information about his whereabouts. To feed
her family she secretly ran a private business selling construction materials, which had been her
occupation before the fall of Saigon in 1975. When she was caught she was imprisoned for four
months in 1976 for illegally selling cement. After bribing someone in the system she was
released and continued to do the same thing.
Picture 3. Black market in Saigon after the Fall of 1975 (Sheehan)
The second policy, was called Hoi Huong (“returning to grandparent’s land”), and King
Te Moi (New Economic Zone-NEZ). The goal was to migrate people out of the city to fallow
land in the Mekong Delta, which was under cultivation, and to areas near the Cambodia border
(SarDesai 96, 101). Half the population of Saigon-Cholon city and most of the people from
Haiphong, whose city was totally destroyed during the war (SarDesai 101), were to be relocated
as shown in Picture 4. However, when the plan was fully implemented in 1977 and 1978 it was
a disaster due to many factors. Communication between the central government in Hanoi and
the local officials in the South were not well coordinated. Lacking information about the
situation in the South, the central government blindly ordered the local government to execute
the relocation plans without knowing that it would create disruptions in the lives of millions of
people living in the Saigon area.
Picture 4. King te moi
In selecting who would move to the NEZ, local officials discriminated against the
families and relatives of soldiers and employees of the former South Vietnam government, and
forced them to destroy their own houses and move out of the city. This happened to the same
person mentioned in the previous section; she was forced to destroy her one-story house and
move to the countryside. The order was clear that if she did not relocate, she and her family
would never see her husband again. If she did not destroy her house by herself, the local
government would do it and she would be charged a demolition fee. She finally destroyed her
house, her children dropped out of school, and in 1978 they moved to Go Cong, a village where
her grandparents lived about 30 miles from Saigon.
According to the plan the government was to provide enough necessary equipment and
grain supplies to last six months (SarDesai 101), but the plan was simply promises. Unable to
cope with the difficulties of growing food with the limited supplies from the government, most
people left the NEZ and added to the homeless population of the already crowded Saigon in 1979
and 1980. They lived in makeshift tents either inside buildings or in houses that had been
abandoned, usually after previous fires (those areas were on Tran Quoc Toan or Ba Thanh Hai
street), or along the sidewalks of Hoa Hao street.
The short-term solution for the currency crisis was to standardize the monetary system
throughout the country. All banking and private financial institutions were abolished. By 1976,
all money had to be exchanged for a new currency at a ratio of 500 to 1 issued by the National
Bank of Vietnam. There was also a limit of how much money could be exchanged, the amount
being based on the number of individuals or family members (SarDesai 99).
Another drastic measure performed by the government was to balance out the differences
in living conditions between the North and the South. SarDesai briefly described those events on
page 102. The plan was to confiscate most houses or buildings, including all the furniture,
owned by private business people. The houses of families having relatives who worked for the
former government were inspected, and any item or extra houses that could be considered
luxurious would be confiscated. The local government then distributed the houses to military
and government officials, including themselves, and took items like household appliances or
equipment back to the North for use in government facilities or the houses of government
employees. Some of the confiscated houses are on the Tran Qui Cap and Ba Thanh Hai streets
or along the Thanh Da River and are still owned by people working for the government. A house
of the woman we mentioned earlier in this report was also inspected. An old gas stove made in
1970 was confiscated because it was considered a luxurious item.
In foreign relationships, in 1976 the new Vietnamese government launched several anti-
capitalist and anti-western measures. They refused to pay all the debts owed by the former South
Vietnam government during the war, demonstrating their belief in self reliance. However, the
government continued to receive large amount of aid from the Soviet Union until the collapse of
communist in Europe in early 1990 (SarDesai 103). During that time the Soviet Union was a
major contributor to almost every Vietnamese economic development plan, from transportation
and communication to energy. In return, Vietnam granted the Soviet Union rights to drill oil
offshore of Vung Tau Beach (SarDesai 104). Russian became a second language to be taught in
schools and colleges instead of English and French. To repay the loans, Vietnam sent over
100,000 workers to the Soviet Union for several years (SarDesai 104). In the same way, to repay
their deficit with Eastern Europe Vietnam sent several thousands workers to countries like
Poland and East Germany (SarDesai 104).
Aggravating the very fragile economy, corruption in different levels of the government,
and food shortages, Vietnam, with help from the Soviet Union, entered into a war against the Pol
Pot regime backed by China in the South and another war against the Chinese in the North
during 1978 to 1980. Every man between the ages of sixteen and thirty five (SarDesai 137)
would be drafted into the army if he were not in college, which was very difficult to get into
because of the lack of colleges and universities and the one-in-ten acceptance rate.
In this particular area, the government discriminated against applicants whose parents
worked for the former government of the South and who were still in reeducation camps by
implementing a four level scoring system. The first level includes any children of fallen
communist soldiers, the second level includes children whose parent had fought for North
Vietnam during the war or had been working for their government, the third level is for
applicants whose family was not involved with the former South Vietnam government, and the
fourth level is for children whose parents had been South Vietnamese soldiers or worked for that
government and were still in prison. The level system was not abolished until 1987. However,
many were able to evade the draft by bribery or by leaving the country.
Within three years from 1978 to 1981, the number of people leaving Vietnam by boat or
across the border into Thailand, Laos, and China were over a million. According to SarDesai
136, approximately 1.5 million Vietnamese left the country by different means during 1975 to
1990 and at least half of those are presumed dead by drowning, sickness, and pirates. Even
though the risk was very high people were willing to take the chance because of the uncertainties
of living in Vietnam during 1978 to 1980. Among these were the high unemployment rate, wars
in both North and South Vietnam, every male between sixteen and thirty five eligible to be
drafted, and the resentment against the government for disrupting lives by moving people to the
NEZ without enough support (SarDesai 137). The majority of the boat people were Vietnamese
Chinese. Most of them acutely felt the oppression of the government when it announced a policy
to abolish private trade in 1978 (SarDesai 137). Most of the boat people tried to escape the
country to avoid the police, because if they were caught they would be jailed for an indefinite
period. However, interestingly, in 1979 some Vietnamese officials arranged a so-called “official
return” to China by providing a boat for any Vietnamese Chinese who were willing to pay in
gold the equivalent of $5000 (SarDesai 136). Picture 5 shows one of the boat people
Picture 5. Boat people (Sheehan)
In early 1980 the economy was nearly crippled and the government concluded that its
plan was not successful. Blamed for the failure was the boycott by the Chinese and the US.
Another target of blame was sabotage by the loyalists of the former government and the lack of
knowledge by Hanoi about the socioeconomic structure in the South (SarDesai 103, Sheenan
15). The government decided to change its strategy. A new policy called doi moi, or
reconstruction, allows very small private businesses, but still with government control of most
major businesses and manufacturers.
From 1980 to early 1990, Vietnam was one of the poorest countries in the world, with a
per capita income below the subsistence level. As an example of the cost of living in Vietnam in
1998, a teacher’s monthly salary was about 600,000 to 1,000,000 Vietnamese dong ($40.00 to
$70.00 US). A breakfast could cost the equivalent of $0.70 to $3.50. An electric bill was about
$7.00 to $14.00. Most electronic appliance prices were the same or slightly higher than US
prices. With that salary most of government officials and businesses had to accept bribes or be
corrupted in order to survive, and it happened literally in every level of the government.
Kickbacks in businesses became a way of life, and those practices still occurred daily in
Vietnam. According to Sheenan in page 17 and SarDesai in page 80, inflation was out of control
at 600 to 700 percent per year. Money was rapidly becoming virtually worthless. The state
stores were empty. Shortages of water and electric were common in big cities like Saigon, where
power outages were scheduled three days a week to last either a whole day or a whole night.
During summer when the temperature was about 38 or 40 degrees C (around 90 to 100
Fahrenheit) people usually slept outside their houses and along the sidewalk. Water pressure
typically was reasonable at night, but during the day faucets barely trickled. Therefore, most of
houses were equipped with some kind of bucket for storing water. Most people did not own a
color television set until early 1990 and did not own a refrigerator until the mid 90s. Literature
in Vietnam was very limited because it was illegal to possess any Western romantic novels or
Chinese supernatural stories similar to the Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon movie. Official
literature was that written by communist poets and writers like To Huu and Ho Chi Minh, but
every thing else had to be obtained in the black market.
The central areas of Hanoi and the countryside were far worst than Saigon. Hanoi had
one of the densest populations on earth; about 520 persons per acre. Most buildings in Hanoi
were built in early 1990 and their plumbing systems no longer worked (SheeHan . 26). As a
result, people had to use public restrooms, which consisted of several toilets made out of wood.
Each was a hollow box with a hole on top. Its bottom was a removable wooden box. The waste
was used as fertilizer. To collect water for personal use, people had to carry small buckets and
collect water from public water fountains, which dripped out little during the day. To avoid
standing in a long line, some people woke up early just to collect water. Living space was also a
major problem because most Hanoians were packed into very small living quarters. For
instance, when the Australian embassy requested a bigger building for their staff in Hanoi they
discovered that the two story house they planned to take over had been a home for 127 people.
According government regulation, every person was entitled to 21.5 square feet, or about 1/20
the size of a small studio apartment in the United States (SheeHan N. 26).
Vietnam had, and still has, no welfare system supporting elderly or less fortunate people.
A few were lucky enough to have a family to care for them. Some found housing built by a non-
profit organization and were cared for by voluntary nuns. Others were not fortunate and became
homeless and beggars. The medical care system in Vietnam was free and accessible to everyone,
but most of the hospitals were built in early 1970 or before, and lack of medicine and adequate
equipment (Sheehan 30-32). Most of the good doctors in the South fled the country in 1975.
The number of doctors available after the Saigon Fall in 1975 were not adequate to support the
number of patients, and new graduates were not as skilled as the former doctors due to lack of
qualified instructors in university, lack of medical equipment, prejudice against the children of
former soldiers, and favoritism to the children of fallen comrades.
Lack of education and ignorance by governmental officials have created many social
problems such as discrimination against off-springs of American solders and Vietnamese
women, called con lai. These Amerasian children were bullied, teased in public places or
schools. Most of them were forced to drop out from schools and became beggars or underage
laborers as shown in Picture 6.
Picture 6. Con lai (Sheehan)
Although the Three-year War against the Pol Pot in the South and Chinese in the North
was over in 1981 its consequence lasted much longer. Most land mines in Cambodia did not kill
Vietnamese soldiers but rather left them with amputated limbs. Those handicapped soldiers
received no special treatment from the government except for living quarters and a small
severance pay. Some of the war veterans felt betrayed, depressed, and frustrated and became
what were called “desperate robbers”. They carried live grenades and guns, stopped buses or
cars in daylight, and asked for money. If passengers did not do exactly what they asked, they
threaten to explode the grenades and kill everyone including themselves. This problem persisted
for years before government was able to subdue it in the early nineties.
Even though Vietnam has changed a lot from the mid 90s to the present, its road to a
better future is still very rough and difficult to achieve. More private business and foreign
investment are encouraged, but business laws in Vietnam are not mature and ready for free
enterprise and global business. Corruption and bad business practices such as kickbacks are still
major problems. Without living in Vietnam in the late nineties it is very difficult to report
accurately the situation in Vietnam. Therefore, this report includes Appendix A, containing
images and short comments depicting life in Vietnam from the late 1990s to the present.
There is much more information to convey about Vietnam but space restricts this report
to a broad view of certain aspects. Readers are encourage to read the references and articles
about Vietnam for a better understanding
Works Cited
Booz, Elisabeth & Sarah Jessup. Vietnam. Passport books, Lincolnwood: NTC Publishing
Group, 1992.
CIA World Fact Book. http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/vm.html. Retrieved on
February 29, 2004
Lamb, David. Vietnam Now. New York: Perseus Books Group, 2002.
Sheehan, Neil. After the War Was Over: Hanoi and Saigon. New York: Random House, 1991.
Sardesai, D. R. Vietnam: The Struggle for National Identity. Boulder: Westview Press, 1992.
Annotated Bibliography
Booz, Elisabeth & Sarah Jessup. Vietnam. Passport books, Lincolnwood: NTC Publishing
Group, 1992.
This book is an excellent resource or guide for anyone who wants to travel to Vietnam or
wishes to learn more about the history and culture of Vietnam. This book first summarizes
Vietnam history from its first civilization to 1989. It then describes each province in detail with
colorful pictures, which helps the travelers to make a better decision on where they want to visit.
Sheehan, Neil. After the War Was 0ver: Hanoi and Saigon. New York: Random House, 1991.
Written by a reporter who was in Vietnam during the Vietnam War writing articles and
correspondence, this book is an excellent choice for anyone wants to know what happened to
Vietnam during and after the Vietnam War from 1965 to early 1990. Sheehan returned to
Vietnam 14 years after the war to see what happened since the war ended in 1975. Although he
did not live in Vietnam from 1975 to 1989, Sheehan depicts quite accurately the situation in
Vietnam after the war. The book is arranged in geographical order, starting in the North and
ending in Saigon, which is now called Ho Chi Minh City named after the late Communist leader.
His report about living conditions in Vietnam is very interesting and colorful. However, most of
his interviews with the people were arranged in advanced by communist officials and seem to
take on a communist bias. It would be very interesting if he could somehow gather spontaneous
interviews with different people without being supervised by government officials.
Sardesai, D. R. Vietnam The Struggle for National Identity. Boulder: Westview Press, 1992
This is another good book about Vietnam War. It is a concise but clear depiction
of Vietnam economics, politics, religion, and the psychology of Vietnamese people throughout
the war. Unlike other history books, Sardesai’s book pictures the economic situation in both
South and North as affected by the war, and presents some interesting thoughts about how US
aid partially helped aggravate the war in Vietnam by creating an artificial economy in the South
with much prostitution and corruption in the high ranking military. However, most of the events
happening after the 1975 were from the Far Eastern Economic Review, whose information was
based on published documents from the Vietnamese government or from interviews. The book
describes Vietnamese economic plans and situations before and after implementation, but does
not reveal how the government executed those plans in detail.
Madrigal, W. Bittersweet Orange. Retrieved on May 2005 from
http://archive.salon.com/travel/wlust/2000/04/27/vietnam/index.html
This short essay written by a young graduate who came to Vietnam in ninety with a hope
to do a graduate research of family planning in Vietnam. Though disappointedly discovering the
red tape and bureaucracy of Vietnamese system is not possible to accomplish such goals, the
young graduate learned much more about life in Vietnam while she was there. She depicts life in
Hanoi through an interesting story between she and a Vietnamese guy. It is interesting essay to
read because it describes certain parts of life in Hanoi in ninety and also reflects the differences
between Western and Asian cultures through a sort of funny story between the two persons.
Appendix A
This picture comprises several images taken by Vietnamese reporter Hai Doan. The
images illustrate some of the problems in the city or “te nan xa hoi”. The title is “365 Days Have
Gone.” The two images in the top left of the picture describe the problem of poor coordination
and irresponsibility among government agencies (no one was responsible for fixing the roads).
The third image on the top right of the picture shows how people abuse public places and use
them to operate their businesses. The image in the middle of the picture was taken during rush
hour. The image at the bottom of the picture reveals a drug operation in daylight at a city park.
Figure 1. Images of Saigon in 2001