Vietnam
Detains Three Activist Bloggers Who Met With EU Delegation
RFA -
11/17/2017
Authorities in
Vietnam’s capital Hanoi briefly detained three activist bloggers shortly after
they met with representatives of the European Union to discuss the situation of
human rights in their country, according to one of the trio.
Police detained Pham Doan Trang, Nguyen Quang A, and former prisoner of
conscience Bui Thi Minh Hang around noon on Nov. 16 as they left a meeting with
the EU officials, though A and Hang were freed several hours later, Hang told
RFA’s Vietnamese Service on Friday.
“When we were leaving the building, Trang and I were going to go buy something
for lunch, but all of a sudden about 20 [police] rushed us and took me into a
car to separate us,” said the blogger, who was released from prison in February
after serving a three-year prison sentence on charges of “causing public
disorder.”
“It was Trang who they really wanted to take, because she’s been contributing so
much to our movement. The security officials are very angry at her.”
According to a statement issued Friday by the Luat Khoa Tap Chi [Journal of Law]
blog, which was cofounded by Trang, police eventually returned her to her home
around midnight that evening and placed her under guard. A number of Trang’s
personal belongings, including her cellphone and laptop, were confiscated, the
statement said.
Luat Khoa Tap Chi condemned Trang’s detention, during which she was held
incommunicado, calling the act a “violation of Vietnamese and international
law.”
Trang was also placed Trang in an “extremely dangerous situation” because she is
currently undergoing medical treatment for a leg injury, the statement said.
Hang told RFA that Thursday’s meeting was held in preparation for an annual
human rights dialogue between the EU and Vietnam set for next month, and that
Trang had provided the EU delegation with updated reports on the human rights
situation in Vietnam, the Formosa toxic waste spill that destroyed the
livelihoods of coastal residents last year, and the state of religious freedom
in the country.
“They always want to talk with activists in the country before this dialogue,”
she said.
“They have been preparing a document to discuss in the meeting and they want to
consult activists to get various perspectives. [The document] covers issues such
as detentions, the role of lawyers, the state of the country’s prisons, and land
and religion laws.”
Nguyen Chi Tuyen, a fourth activist who attended the meeting with EU officials,
posted a message on his Facebook account Friday confirming that he had returned
home safely after the discussion.
Ongoing crackdown
Activists are routinely harassed by authorities for meeting with foreign
delegations in one-party Communist Vietnam, where dissent is not tolerated.
Trang was prevented from attending a meeting to discuss human rights with
then-U.S. President Barack Obama when he visited Hanoi in May 2016, though she
was not detained.
Last week, police in Hanoi called two members of the online Brotherhood for
Democracy advocacy group to their offices this week to answer questions
concerning their activities, but the two men refused to go, saying they had done
nothing to break the law.
The summons came amid a months-long crackdown by authorities on dissident
writers and bloggers, and just two days before U.S. President Donald Trump and
other world leaders arrived in Vietnam for top-level regional meetings.
All media is state-controlled in Vietnam and rights groups have identified
Article 79—working to “overthrow the People’s government”—as among a set of
vague provisions that authorities have used to detain dozens of writers and
bloggers in recent years.
Activist bloggers Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh, arrested in October 2016, and Tran Thi
Nga, arrested in January of this year, have been sentenced to prison terms of 10
and nine years respectively.
Vietnam is currently holding at least 84 prisoners of conscience, the highest
number in any country in Southeast Asia, according to rights group Amnesty
International.
Reported by RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Emily Peyman. Written in
English by Joshua Lipes.