july 14000 + people arriving by boat, page-65

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    Vietnam heading backwards when it comes to free speech

    http://www.crikey.com.au/2012/09/28/vietnam-heading-backwards-when-it-comes-to-free-speech/?wpmp_switcher=mobile

    On September 24, 2012?—? exactly 30 years to the day after Vietnam became a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights?—?three Vietnamese bloggers were convicted and sentenced to lengthy jail terms for “conducting propaganda against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam” after a short trial that lasted only a few hours.

    “Their crimes were especially serious with clear intention against the state,” Ho Chi Minh City People’s Court president Nguyen Phi Long said, adding that “they must be seriously punished”: ”They abused the popularity of the internet to post articles which undermined and blackened (Vietnam’s) leaders, criticising the (Communist) party (and) destroying people’s trust in the state.”

    The decision stands in stark contrast to Vietnam’s avowed interest in pursuing a seat on the UN Human Rights Council for 2014-2016. In light of the government’s official stance that it is actively involved in protecting human rights, it’s worth examining what these bloggers actually did to warrant sentences (in two of the cases) of a decade or more in prison.

    All three bloggers were founding members of the Club for Free Journalists, which was founded in September 2007 to promote freedom of the press, freedom of expression and human rights.

    High-profile blogger Nguyen Van Hai, 60, who blogs as Dieu Clay (Peasant’s Pipe), was sentenced to 12 years in prison, with an additional five years of house arrest upon release. In 2009, he was awarded the prestigious Hellman Hammett award for writers who have shown commitment to free expression and courage in the face of political persecution. He used his blog to call for democracy and an end to corruption in Vietnam. He also reported on protests held against China and a call to boycott the Beijing Olympic torch relay when it passed through Ho Chi Minh City in 2008.

    That same year he was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison on trumped-up tax evasion charges. When his prison term finished in October 2010, prison authorities refused to release him and he has remained in prison until his trial and sentencing this week. In 2007 Nguyen wrote on his blog: ”Vietnam does not have the rule of law; it only has the rule of the party. The law was compromised to protect police officers and party members who abuse power.”

    Former police officer and Communist Party member turned dissident, Ta Phong Tan, 44, was sentenced to 10 years in prison, also with an additional five years of house arrest upon release. She was awarded the Hellman Hammett award in 2011 for her work as a freelance journalist and blogger. Since 2006 she wrote regularly for the website of the BBC’s Vietnamese service, which led to her Communist Party membership being revoked. In November 2006 she started her blog Cong ly & Su that (Truth & Justice), which contains more than 700 articles about the mistreatment of children, official corruption, unfair taxation of poor people and the widespread abuse of power by the police in Vietnam.

    In 2010 she wrote on her blog: ”An article I posted on my blog which retold a dream I had (‘Last night I dreamt of meeting the old Marx’) was accused of ‘distortion.’ This Vietnamese state even controls people’s dreams. The people only have the rights to dream as they are told.”

    Phan Thanh Hai, 43, was the only blogger to plead guilty. He received a four-year sentence, with an additional three years of house arrest upon release. He was also awarded the Hellman Hammet award in 2011. He blogged under the name Anhbasg, or Anh Ba Sai Gon, about the need for government transparency, freedom of expression and freedom of association.
 
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