The National Assembly issued a resolution to delay the implementation of Penal Code 2015, along with the Criminal Procedure Code, the Law on the Organisation of Criminal Investigation Agencies, and the Law on the Implementation of Custody and Temporary Detention last Thursday.

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Article 292 recently stirred up controversy as it was stated that any services offered online or via telecommunication networks without prior permission would be deemed illegal. — Photo dantri.com.vn

 

The Penal Code No.100/2015/QH13, adopted by the National Assembly in November last year, was earlier set to take effect on July 1, 2016. But now the implementation of Article 292 under the Penal Code 2015 is also delayed.

Article 292 recently stirred up controversy as it was stated that any services offered online or via telecommunication networks without prior permission would be deemed illegal.

The local start-up community expressed great concern over that particular article, for fear of going to jail, as most start-up businesses provide applications and services online.

Fearing that start-up businesses could be harmed, a petition calling for the scrapping of Article 292 under Penal Code 2015 was sent to officials, ministers and agencies early last week.

The petition, also sent to National Assembly Chairwoman Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan and Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, collected nearly 6,000 signatures after only one week by seeking support from the business community and individuals, who signed online or at six locations in Ha Noi and Ho Chi Minh City.

"The Vietnamese start-up community could be the most harmed by the article, as computer and telecommunication networks remain a business tool for the majority of start-ups in Viet Nam in many fields, as well as being a common trend throughout the world," lawyer Tran Duc Hoang from EZLaw Firm told Viet Nam News.

The vov.vn quoted Nguyen Van Luat, deputy head of the National Assembly's Judicial Affairs Committee, on the controversial article, saying that there had only been an initial review of the Code.

The National Assembly's Standing Committee was now ordering a review of the bill on the amendments and supplements to some articles of the Penal Code 2015, and it could be sure that Article 292 would also be analysed and discussed from many different angles before being reported to the National Assembly's Standing Committee and the National Assembly.

"I think this is a good opportunity for the start-up and enterprise communities, as well as individuals, concerning information technology, to propose that the NA terminate the article," Hoang told the Viet Nam News after hearing about the delay in enforcing the penal code.

"There will be an answer at the second meeting session of the 14th National Assembly," Luat stated.

"The start-up community wishes for a simplification in administrative procedures for start-ups in Viet Nam and Article 292 will be put into consideration for improvements so that it can be more flexible for start-ups in the IT field," said Nguyen Bao Long, Marketing Executive of UP Co-working Space.

Start-up community's concerns

"Knowing about Article 292, I felt rather worried for Viet Nam's younger generation, since the young people are full of zeal, especially those in start-ups. Article 292 would be like pouring water on that "fire", which may put out the fire or make it weaker," Nguyen Dinh Quynh, CEO of Sunfresh Co. Ltd., shared with the Viet Nam News.

"My company specialises in website programming, and we also have many business projects and trade via the Internet. I know that much of the trade occurring on the Internet is not licensed. If the article comes into force, the number of online businesses will sharply decrease," he added.

"The article will have an incredible impact on the online business community, especially on start-ups in the technology field," said Long.

"Working as a start-up requires innovation and creativity, as well as performing many tests of products and services. Therefore, if the legal conditions are too strict, it will prevent creativity and business activity, which could lead to the failure of many start-ups," Long added.

Currently, Viet Nam has 267 conditional business areas. Article 292 criminalises the acts of conducting unlicensed business on the Internet, while not criminalising most similar acts of other conditional business activities, said Hoang.

"This will make investors, businesses and the start-up community think that they are being discriminated against, and that the State limits services provided on the Internet," he added.

Article 292, which includes a maximum fine of VND5 billion or a prison sentence of up to five years, is too strict and might slow the development of service businesses on the Internet in particular, as well as the information and technology sector in the country overall, he said.

According to the lawyer, Article 292 will also cause Vietnamese start-up enterprises to hesitate before developing, leaving a fertile market for foreign Internet providers, which would make the future uncertain for Vietnamese technological development and negatively impact the country's economic development.

VNS