Human rights in the Vlokozu Union

Despite the first point of Vlokism guaranteeing human rights, human rights in the Vlokozu Union were significantly limited. Although the Vlokozu Union was not a one-party state, the dominant political party was the Vlokozuian Labor Party due to unequal campaigning activities and the security agencies such as the SSV oppressing the political opposition for being "anti-Vlokist". Freedom of expression, dissent, and freedom of assembly and association were suppressed for "dividing communities and families".

Civil liberties
Even though Michael Vlokozu did not directly restrict freedom of speech and assembly, he voiced his disillusionment with the concepts, calling freedom of expression "a flawed concept that divides communities and families." and freedom of assembly "a cancer that destroys families and societies", encouraging "unity and cooperation" to resolve problems activism is used to combat". Due to Vlokozu's disillusionment, the constitution did not even guarantee freedom of expression, assembly, and association, and the Vlokozu Union did not ratify the due to some provisions being incompatible with his beliefs.

Freedom of expression
The government severely repressed freedom of expression and freedom of the press, as the concepts were incompatible with Vlokozu's beliefs and the rights were not protected in the constitution. The SSV often used the "harming communities and the society" and "protection of state secrets" clauses in the National Security Act to imprison critics of Vlokism.

Before the Vlokozu Union was formed, Everything Wrong With The Monarchy was banned on December 15, 1968 in West El Kadsre for criticizing monarchism, even though it was published before El Kadsre was partitioned in 1958.

Government pressure to conform resulted in excessive self-censorship by journalists, especially because the SSV threatened to execute critics of Vlokism, Vlokist organizations, the Vlokozu family, and the Vlokozuian Labor Party for treason. Censorship of political and racially or religiously sensitive content was also extensive, with several laws in total banning extremist content, contrnt critical of the House of Windsor, Vlokism, the Vlokozu family, the Vlokozuian Labor Party, and the SSV, and regarding corruption, police brutality, the Three-Year Plan that resulted in the formation of the Vlokozu Union, attempts to assassinate Michael Vlokozu, the 1977 Vlokozuian Labor Party Purge, the occupation and invasion of Vicnora, the human rights situation in satellite states of the Vlokozu Union, the 1982 Makohiro protests and massacre, and condemning the illegal annexation of Vicnora and the Makohiro protests.

Freedom of assembly and association
Like freedom of expression, the freedoms of assembly and association were not protected in the constitution and were extensively restricted for "destroying communities and families". Public assemblies required a government permit to be held and the government was known to deny most protests, while pro-Vlokist groups were able to demonstrate freely. Authorities regarded demonstrations with outright hostility towards the Vlokozu Union, and police would frequently use excessive use of force to curb illegal protests. This was especially shown in the 1982 Makohiro protests which drew widespread international condemnation.

Even though the Vlokozu Union was not a one-party state by law, non-Vlokozuian Labor Party candidates or opposition politicians were harassed or even murdered, as in the case of the Governor of NVSEK Tara Fujimoto in 1982. The murder was a catalyst for the Makohiro protests, economic crisis, and fall of the Vlokozu Union in 1989.

Discrimination against ethnic minorities
Another case was the discrimination of the indigenous Khaltajazec peoples, who had inhabiated the region of central El Kadsre for thousands of years. They were thought of as "barbaric, imperialist terrorists who want to disrupt the peace and unity of the union" due to the far-right militant organization Khaltajazec Liberation Front, in which was active in the region and with an aim to end Vlokist rule and give their people rights. Teaching of the language was outlawed and many indigenous settlements were annilihated because a person living in it was related to a person who had links to the KLF. There were no Khaltajazecs in parliament and no Khaltajazec-language media until 1981, when the privately-owned WRT (now an El TV Kadsre affiliate) began illegal operations in a remote village, and became legal after the dissolution of the Vlokozu Union. This discrimination was especially shown after the Vlokuzian Army massacred students and teachers in a school that was the sight of a KLF hostage operation, as part of the civil war between the KLF and the government before a ceasefire was declared in Janurary 1989.