A commentary by Toronto-based Geopolitical Monitor, titled “U.N. Cybercrime Pact Hopes to Curb Rise of Transnational Criminal Networks”, underscored the event’s significance. Author James Borton noted that Hanoi’s selection as the host city is a clear signal of Vietnam’s rising international standing. Official commentary frames the event as a milestone in Vietnam’s 48-year partnership with the U.N., and a concrete step in its ambition to shape global digital-governance frameworks.
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Vietnamese Minister of Public Security Luong Tam Quang signs the Hanoi Convention. |
"For Vietnam, playing host is a prestige-project: a signal of rising diplomatic heft and domestic ambition in digital transformation. But the choice brings high international expectations, placing on Hanoi the responsibility to lead and promote a global cyberspace that is open and equitable, while maintaining a careful balance with national security requirements," he wrote.
The article also cited the U.N. as saying that the Hanoi Convention is the world’s first global treaty on cybercrime, establishing a shared legal foundation to accelerate and foster global cooperation in investigating, prosecuting, and preventing online offenses. Losses to the global economy from illegal online activity are estimated at around 8 trillion USD in 2023, rising to a forecast 10.5 trillion USD by 2025.
The signing ceremony, co-chaired by U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres and Vietnamese State President Luong Cuong, drew high-ranking officials from about 110 countries, alongside representatives from international organizations, financial institutions, and cybersecurity experts. The treaty won praise for fully embedding human rights safeguards and adhering to international law.
The treaty aims to deliver a multilateral, legal framework for international cooperation: harmonized definitions of offenses, shared investigative tools, electronic evidence transfer, 24/7 contact points. It consists of nine chapters and 71 articles and is being celebrated as the first major crime treaty of its kind in more than two decades.
Once at least 40 nations sign on, the treaty will finally give states a shared playbook to chase criminals who know no borders.
According to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), which led the negotiations, the Hanoi Convention targets a wide spectrum of cybercrimes, from online fraud, ransomware extortion, to illicit data trafficking, and online hate incitement. The treaty also encourages countries to enable legitimate cybersecurity research, fostering technological innovation and the development of secure and sustainable information systems.
The U.N. expects the Hanoi Convention to establish a transparent and effective mechanism for cross-border cooperation, bolstering trust in data sharing, investigations, and cyber incident response. Experts view Convention as a global framework for cooperation in the digital age, which reflects the global community’s shared resolve to build a safe, trustworthy, and humane cyberspace.
Source: VNA