Vietnamese Police Release Ethnic Cham After Four-Day Interrogation
Of two friends also arrested for unknown reasons, one remains in custody.
RFA | 2021-04-13
Police in Vietnam have released an ethnic Cham poet after detaining him for four
days for investigation, he revealed on social media.
Prior to his April 10 release, Nguyen Quoc Huy, who goes by the pen name Dong
Chuong Tu, had been missing since April 7, after police in Thuan Bac district in
the country’s southern coastal Binh Thuan province asked him to come to the
station for a meeting while he was in the area for a visit.
“On Tuesday [April 6,] Dong Chuong Tu visited his hometown in Ma Lam to handle
some business. Then he met some friends there that he hadn’t seen in a long
time,” a friend of Tu, who requested anonymity for security reasons, told RFA’s
Vietnamese Service on April 9.
“On April 7, he was ‘invited’ to have a meeting with the police. I don’t know
whether he was actually invited or if they took him in, but he texted a friend
saying he was detained in the Ma Lam police station,” Tu’s friend said.
Another of Tu’s friends told RFA that Tu often writes poems and media articles
and was involved with charitable causes, such as advocating for assistance to
help Ma Lam’s poor, including helping to provide a new public library for the
town.
RFA contacted the Ma Lam police station on April 9, but the officer who picked
up the phone there denied having any knowledge of Tu’s case, while an officer at
the provincial-level police department said his department was unaware of
local-level cases.
Following his release, Tu wrote that evening on Facebook that he had returned
home safe and sound, and he thanked the Cham community for their support. In a
later post, he said that he had signed police documents to secure a quicker
release including affidavits that verified his travels abroad since 2019, his
correspondence with international media, and the status of his self-nomination
for a National Assembly seat, his support of the Cham ethnic minority community
in a land dispute in Ninh Thuan province, as well as acknowledgement that his
passport had been confiscated.
Candidacy
Writing on social media, Tu had expressed his hopes to represent fellow members
of Vietnam’s ethnic Cham minority in the country’s National Assembly.
He first declared his candidacy in a June 2020 Facebook post, writing, “Though I
know that I’ll be eliminated in the very first rounds, I still decided to
nominate myself, as I see most of the National Assembly members who come from my
ethnicity are there only for show, but actually do nothing.”
“They are like bonsai trees,” Tu wrote.
He then updated his quest for candidacy in a cryptic February 2021 Facebook
post.
“Binh Thuan province has only seven seats, of which three area already reserved
for representatives from the central authorities in Hanoi. How can I manage to
get one of the remaining four? To be safe and sound, I’ll quit the game, my dear
Cham fellows,” he wrote.
The nomination of candidates for election to Vietnam’s National Assembly is a
political process tightly controlled by the country’s ruling Communist Party,
which carefully vets named candidates for Party approval.
RFA was unable to confirm whether Tu has formally submitted his application for
candidacy in the election scheduled for May 23.
Friends detained
During the time that Tu was in custody for interrogation, Binh Thuan police
arrested two of his friends, Tran Duc Tin and Nguyen Van Son Trung.
Tin was attending a training class in Ho Chi Minh City on the afternoon of April
10 when police took him in. He was released Monday.
Police arrested Trung April 9 in Binh Thuan. He remains in custody and his
family has not received any information about his case.
“My husband was arrested April 9. They called him to come outside, so I don’t
know where the arrest happened,” Trung’s wife, Ms. Hien told RFA.
“I only heard from my neighbors that the police had searched for him at home.
Before he left, my husband asked the kids to tell me that he was going to eat
out at a restaurant. But I don’t know if he really went to the restaurant or
somewhere else,” Hien said.
“I don’t know when my husband was arrested. After I came home at around 5 p.m.
and heard the story from my neighbors, I called my husband to ask where he was.
He only said he was taking care of business outside. His friends told me that he
had been arrested at 6 p.m.,” she said.
According to Hien, several men dressed in plainclothes visited her home the next
day and identified themselves as policemen. They asked Trung’s mother to go to
the station to give her son some advice, but she refused.
After the men left, Trung’s family received a phone call from Trung, who only
said he was in temporary detention at the Binh Thuan police station.
RFA was unable to confirm why Tin and Trung were arrested, but one of Mr.
Trung’s friends told RFA that both men were members of a chat group that
discussed Tu’s candidacy for a seat in the National Assembly.
In one of Tu’s Facebook posts, he apologized to Nguyen Van Son Trung and his
wife for texting Trung while he was in police custody.
Trung’s detention goes against Vietnamese law, which stipulates that police
cannot temporarily detain anyone without a temporary detention warrant unless
they provide in writing a specific reason to the person in detention and their
family.
Temporary detention should also not last more than 12 hours unless “absolutely
necessary” and must not last longer than 24 hours, Vietnamese law says.
During the past three months, police have arrested two other self-nominated
assembly candidates from Hanoi, Tran Quoc Khanh and Le Trong Hung, for
“disseminating anti-State materials,” even though the central government has
openly discussed an initiative to “open doors wider for self-nominated
candidates”.
Reported by RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Chau Vu. Written in English
by Eugene Whong.
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