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Radomir
Tylecote, 15th February 2007
Recent
religious repression
In December
2006, immediately after a wedding in Gia Lai province, police took
an entire group at a wedding ceremony for interrogation in
particular, during Christmas 2006, provincial authorities prevented
many Protestant house congregations from celebrations. On December
21 Mr. A Luong of Buon Me Thuot was seriously beaten by security
police stationed outside the house of Pastor Nguyen Cong Chinh.
Numerous
Mennonite congregations in the provinces of Plei Mo and
Gia Lai, as well as H're house churches in Quang Ngai, Lao Cai and
Ha Giang provinces in northern
Vietnam, were harassed and
prohibited from organizing Christmas events, an immediate resumption
of direct repression of freedom of belief following the APEC summit
in November.
Attacks on democracy activists
Also in December
2006, the communist government continued its campaign of harassment
and house-detention of many democracy advocates, and summoned them
for interrogation.
On December 1st, the Ministry of Public
Security is reported to have searched Mr. Tran Quoc Hien's residence
illegally, without a warrant.
On December 10th, International Human Rights Day, the
secret service summoned for interrogation democracy activists lawyer
Nguyen Van Dai (recent recipient of the Hellman-Hammett prize from
Human Rights Watch), writer Hoang Tien, Miss Tran Khai Thanh Thuy,
engineer Do Nam Hai and journalist Nguyen Khac Toan, under the
accusation that they were forbidden from participating in an online
human rights seminar that day. They also prevented other advocates
from attending the wedding of the sister of the activist and lawyer
Miss Le Thi Cong Nhan and jammed her incoming telephone calls.
Nguyen Van Dai was taken in for interrogation on December 9th
and 10th.
In the afternoon of December 13, Ms. Duong Thi Xuan, secretary of
Dan Chu Tu Do (Freedom and Democracy) Magazine, after visiting
activists Hoang Minh Chinh and Le Hong Ngoc was stopped by a group
of seven people who forcibly took her to the Tran Hung Dao police
station, where she was searched for any documents she might have
exchanged with Mr Chinh. Police threatened her husband on December
15th that she would be arrested if she kept on seeing Mr.
Chinh.
On December 15th, Mr Nguyen Phuong Anh was stopped by
police, and his car, papers and 4.5m dong in cash were taken. He was
then beaten around the head by police.
On December 19, Le Thi Cong Nhan and her mother, Mrs. Tran Thi Le,
were summoned for interrogation by Secret Service A42 branch.
On December 26, on the flight to
Bangkok
to spend her year-end vacation and visit her friends, Cong Nhan was
stopped and denied exit by the Noi Bai Airport Security by order of
the Ministry of Public Security. On December 27, Cong Nhan was
interrogated again by A42 branch regarding her flight to
Bangkok.
On December 12,
2006
and January 1,
2007, secret service agents forced activists including
Nguyen Van Dai to attend a ‘working session’, thus preventing them
from gathering for New Year.
In 2007
From February 3rd
to 8th 2007, the Vietnamese government continued to carry
out an organized campaign against activists including Nguyen Van
Dai, Le Thi Cong Nhan and Pham Van Troi. The authorities carried out
interrogations of attorneys Nguyen Van Dai and Le Thi Cong Nhan
during the week of February 3 to 8.
The government
appears to be using that tactic of denouncing human rights activists
brining them before kangaroo courts before their neighbourhoods. On
February 5 they used this type of kangaroo court in the
neighborhoods of engineer and activist Bach Ngoc Duong and Nguyen
Van Dai. The government mobilized a reported 200 people, between the
ages of 60 to 80, at the People’s Committee of Bach Khoa ward in a
People’s Court tactics.
In a ‘Conference
of the People’ Mr. Dai was accused of being a traitor and ‘selling
out his country’. During the two and a half hour ordeal, Dai was not
allowed to utter a single word in his defence. Nguyen Van Dai was
found guilty on two counts, and informed his legal license would be
revoked, office closed and a criminal prosecution taken up against
him. Under pressure to sign the affidavit, he declared: ‘You all can
kill me, but I will never sign it’. The authorities conceded.
Summary
of recent violations:
The government continued to violate Articles 58, 68, 69,
70, 71, and 73 of the Vietnamese Constitution of 1992, with regard
to the protection of the citizen's properties, the freedom of
movement, freedom of assembly, freedom of religion, the
inviolability of one's body, and the inviolability of one's
domicile. It also acted in violation of Articles 7, 9, 12, 17, 18
and 21 of the United Nations International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights with reference to the inviolability of one's body,
the right to liberty of movement, the inviolability of one's home,
the right to freedom of belief and religion, and the right of
assembly.
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