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Vietnam update, This year has seen a sharp and alarming
increase in repression by the Vietnamese government. With the
growing democratic movement Bloc 8406 now a year old, the
communist regime has cracked down on the movement’s organisers,
sentencing leading figures, including those interviewed in On 24th February, a number of security policemen removed Father Nguyen Van Ly, one of the founders of Bloc 8406, from his home in Hue to Ben Cui, around 20 miles away, to isolate Father Ly from the democracy movement in general. Father Ly was accused of gathering support for an independent political party, the National Progressive Party. Shortly afterwards, Fr Ly, Nguyen Van Dai, and fellow human rights lawyer Le Thi Cong Nhan were charged with ‘defaming the government’ and ‘disseminating slanderous and libellous information against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam’. Conviction on this charge carries a sentence of 3 to 12 years, with 20-years for ‘particularly serious crimes’. On 29th March Father Ly was sentenced to eight years in prison for distributing ‘material harmful to the state’. On 10th May other activists Le Nguyen Sang, a doctor and leader of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), was sentenced to five years incarceration, while journalist Huynh Nguyen Dao and lawyer Nguyen Bac Truyen, were sentenced to three and four years. They were sentenced for ‘conducting propaganda’, setting up a party, communicating online with an activist abroad, and distributing leaflets critical of the government. The trial lasted approximately four hours. On 11th May, Nguyen Van Dai and Le Thi Cong Nhan were sentenced to five and four years respectively, followed by four year and three year periods of probation. Their convictions were the subject of House Resolution 243 in the United States Congress, which calls for their immediate and unconditional release.
As Nguyen Van Dai and Le Thi Cong Nhan are among the
best-known lawyers in
Radomir Tylecote, CPHRC The following questions on the
recent human rights abuses in
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Universe Column for May 6th 2007 A court in
the central city of For more
than 30 years Fr.Van Ly has been a well known champion of
democratic and pluralist values. The priest is accused of being
a founding member of Bloc 8406, a pro-democracy movement
launched last April. He is also a member of the Progression
Party of Vietnam. That is a crime in a country where only one
party – the Communist Party – is allowed to exist. He is also
charged with having communicated with pro-democracy activists
living in other countries. At the time
of his arrest last month, Fr. Van Ly had already spent 14 of the
past 24 years in prison and he had been under house arrest since
February. Two men
and two women who have been working with Fr. Van Ly were jailed
with him. In March two human rights lawyers, Nguyen Van Dai and
Le Thi Cong Nhan were also arrested, charged with distributing
material "dangerous to the State". In other words, literature
challenging the Communist hegemony. The
photographs of Fr.Van Ly being gagged and dragged from the court
have reminded the world that Fr.Van Ly's
show- trial made a mockery of any concept of justice. In what
was a kangaroo-court, with no pretence of impartiality of
fairness, the trail lasted a single day. Fr. Van Ly was brought
before the court in handcuffs. He bravely refused to recognise
the right of the Communist judges to try him. Refusing to stand
up before the court he denounced the Vietnamese Communist Party.
With police officers covering his mouth, he was physically
dragged from the courts and kept in a room where with video link
while the Star Chamber court proceeded with his trail.
Fr. Van Ly and the four other co-defendants were not
represented by lawyers, and were removed from the courtroom at
one point, with the priest shouting " But, sadly,
the jungle is not a new experience for this brave man. After his
earlier arrest, in May 2001, he was forced to stand trial
without a defence lawyer or public audience. He was sentenced to
15 years in solitary confinement followed by five years on
probation. That time he
was arrested at An Truyen church, Phu An commune, in central
Thua Thien-Hue province, for his alleged 'failure to abide by
the decisions on his probation issued by authorized State
agencies.,' . Although
Father Van Ly has always peacefully campaigned for improved
religious freedom in In a written
testimony submitted to the US Commission on International
Religious Freedom in February 2001, he called on the Communist
Government to make significant improvements to religious
freedom. He called on officials to allow the churches to appoint
their own priests, to stop listing a person's religious
affiliation on their ID card, to return confiscated property and
to release those held for their religious beliefs. He had urged
the Congress to postpone the ratification of a bilateral trade
agreement while religious persecution persisted. When I
travelled to During my
visit to Quang Vinh
denied that religious persecution occurs in When I asked
him where Fr.Van Ly bought his guns and weapons he replied that
"they had sticks and knives, not guns." The reality
is that a group of about 35 frightened parishioners had gathered
for sanctuary in his church. The church was surrounded by 600
armed security officers and as Father Van Ly prepared to say
Mass he was arrested. Although Quang Vinh told me that I could
not visit Fr.Van Ly, he did promise to place our plea for
clemency before the Prime Minister; and he was subsequently
released. It shows that pressure can make a difference. If you want
to help Fr.Van Ly why not write to the Vietnamese Ambassador, 12 |
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Scene from Vietnam , the new member of WTO and the newest trading partner of the U.S. Father Nguyen van Ly's day in court. ![]() |
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