A roundtable discussion was also held to discuss the acceleration the convention’s entry into force and effective implementation.
The events gathered representatives from UN agencies along with nearly 90 ambassadors, heads of missions, and experts.
In his opening remarks, Ambassador Do Hung Viet, Permanent Representative of Viet Nam to the UN, affirmed that the signing ceremony and high-level conference of the Ha Noi Convention was successful in every respect.
He attributed this achievement to host Viet Nam’s close coordination with UN bodies, and the active participation of 119 countries as well as international organisations. The fact that 72 UN member states signed the convention in Ha Noi demonstrated strong global commitment to and support for the first international legal instrument on cooperation in combating cybercrime.
He stressed that the successful signing ceremony was only the beginning. Countries must continue encouraging wider signatures, ensure swift ratification by signatories, and prepare the necessary national, regional and global conditions for effective implementation once the convention enters into force.
Upholding the “Ha Noi Spirit”, Viet Nam will remain an active partner, working closely with all countries, UN bodies, and international organisations to promote broad participation and full and substantive enforcement, the diplomat emphasised.
Speaking at the roundtable, representatives from the UNODC and the UN Office of Legal Affairs commended Viet Nam’s proactive and constructive role throughout the negotiation process and its extensive contributions over the past year, which helped deliver a historic signing ceremony – the largest in almost a decade.
They affirmed that UN bodies will continue supporting member states with ratification and implementation through initiatives that strengthen law-enforcement cooperation, especially in experience sharing, technical assistance, capacity building, and technology transfer for developing countries.
Ambassadors, heads of missions, and cybercrime experts from various regions appreciated Viet Nam’s leading role in initiating and hosting the signing ceremony and high-level meeting in Ha Noi. They perceived that Viet Nam's substantive contributions reflect the country's strong commitment to multilateralism and global efforts against cybercrime challenges.
Many viewed the Ha Noi Convention as a historic milestone in global cooperation against cybercrime. The strong turnout at the signing ceremony, they noted, provided favourable momentum to translate commitments into action, foster global cooperation and build a safer cyberspace for all.
Adopted on December 24, 2024, the Ha Noi Convention is the UN’s first binding global legal framework on preventing, investigating, and addressing cybercrime. It covers the criminalisation of cyberattacks, protection of critical information infrastructure, mechanisms for data and electronic-evidence sharing, extradition, mutual legal assistance, and technical cooperation. The convention also underscores the need to balance cybersecurity with human rights, privacy, and national sovereignty. It opened for signature in Ha Noi on October 25, 2025 and will enter into force once 40 states have ratified it.
This marks the first time a location in Viet Nam has been associated with a global multilateral treaty in a field of major international concern. The designation reflects the country’s rising global standing and active role in promoting multilateralism, contributing to the shaping of global digital governance frameworks, the safeguarding of cybersecurity and national sovereignty on cyberspace, and the advancement of its digital-transformation strategy for a prosperous future.