Government dishonours war veterans and South Vietnamese



War veterans are outraged at a Federal Government requirement that the Dandenong RSL never fly the flag of former ally South Vietnam or else be punished by losing a $40,000 grant. Former Diggers and the Vietnamese community were stunned when their application for funds to maintain the state's main Vietnam War memorial was met with a demand that the red-and-yellow flag many fought under be taken down.

They believe the clause in a letter from Veterans' Affairs Minister Bruce Billson stemmed from persistent pressure by the Vietnamese Embassy in Canberra, which opposes any recognition of its defeated southern foe. The head of the committee in charge of the spectacular memorial, John Wells, said the minister could "stick his grant wherever he likes". "We're not playing any politics: this flag is historical fact," he said. South Vietnamese army veteran Andy Nguyen and memorial committee member Phong Nguyen labelled the letter "a deep insult".

Mr Billson's letter linked the grant to the 2006 budget allocation for the 40th anniversary commemoration of the Battle of Long Tan on August 18. "Payment of this grant is contingent on you agreeing not to fly the flag of the former South Vietnam," the minister wrote. Mr Billson said it was policy that only the official flags of nations recognised by Australians should be flown. "Therefore, the flying of flags of former regimes, or countries not recognised by Australia, in conjunction with the Australian national flag would not be appropriate," he wrote.

The letter follows pressure from the Vietnamese Embassy on the City of Greater Dandenong to prevent the flag being flown when the $400,000 memorial was officially opened last year -- 30 years after the war ended on April 30, 1975. The memorial committee was forced to compromise by not showing the flag until Governor-General Michael Jeffery -- a decorated Vietnam veteran -- had left after unveiling the monument.

Mr Billson has sent similar letters, also containing the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade advice, to committees planning monuments in Adelaide and Brisbane. Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer wrote to Dandenong council in 2004 expressing the same view.

Mr Wells said the flag was now a historical symbol, but all four Victoria Crosses from Vietnam were won by Australians fighting under it. It did not fly alongside the Australian flag but beside those of five other Vietnam War allies. He said Treasurer Peter Costello was aware of the flag issue but had advised Mr Wells not to worry when conferring tax deductibility on the project. Mr Wells, a Vietnam veteran and former secretary of the Dandenong RSL, said: "To say we should hide a symbol like that flag, which means so much to Vietnamese Australians and Australian veterans, for the sake of trade makes me very sad."

Source

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