About 50 people are beaten and detained during the burial ceremony of
ethnic Hmong Duong Van Minh.
RFA | 2021.12.27
Hundreds of Vietnamese police and others dressed in medical protective suits
raided the funeral of the ethnic Hmong founder of an unofficial religious group,
beating and arresting nearly 50 of his followers who attended the ceremony,
locals said.
Duong Van Minh, 60, died of lymphoma on Dec. 11. His family and followers
carried his body from the medical facility where he died to his home in Ngoi Sen
village in northeastern Vietnam’s Tuyen Quang province for a funeral and burial
ceremony.
After Minh’s body was taken back home, local authorities set up checkpoints in
the surrounding area to reportedly curtail the spread of the COVID-19 virus, but
in reality meant to prevent his followers from attending the funeral, locals
said.
“They set up checkpoints surrounding all of the villages where Mr. Minh’s
followers live and blocked all the paths leading to Mr. Minh’s village,” said a
resident and follower who declined to be identified for safety reasons. “When we
asked whether there were COVID-19 virus infections in the area, some mobile
police officers said no, adding that they had just been asked to block the
area.”
Authorities asked Minh’s family members to take COVID-19 tests, saying that the
driver who transported the body had tested positive for the contagious
respiratory virus. The relatives, in turn, requested taking the tests on Dec.
13, the day after the funeral, but authorities declined.
Instead, local authorities sent mobile police and staff in medical protective
clothing to disrupt the funeral on Dec. 12 to “force people to take the test,”
resulting in the violent crackdown, locals said.
“Around 300 mobile police officers and others with shields and batons came to
Mr. Minh’s house in groups, one after another,” said the first resident. “They
shouted and threatened to arrest people filming them and chased down those
holding mobile phones.”
About 35 people were arrested except for Minh’s family members and others who
remained inside the house, prompting police to break windows and demand that
they open the door, threatening them with electric batons, he said.
“Then a group of nurses came in to examine Mr. Minh’s body,” he added.
The same day, more than 100 followers of the Duong Van Minh religion named for
its founder went to see medical staff and protested what they considered a
violation of their religious founder’s body.
In response, authorities mobilized police and arrested nine more people,
followers said.
On Dec. 15, police announced the names of four followers accused of allegedly
assaulting officers on official duty via village loudspeakers and called on them
to turn themselves in. Four people were later arrested when they showed up at
the commune’s headquarters, they said.
None of those arrested have been released.
“I think the authorities treated us that badly just because of our beliefs,”
said the first resident. “The police have seen us many times, and they are very
keen on eliminating our religion and not allowing us to follow it. The police
have said that in many places.”
RFA could not reach the office of the chairman of Tuyen Quang Province People’s
Committee for comment.
It wasn’t the first time that some of the followers of the Duong Van Minh
religion had been arrested.
“Those who have been arrested had been threatened many times before,” the
resident said. “The police said those who taught our fellow villagers to
practice the religion would all be arrested, leaving no one on the loose,” he
said.
Authorities took advantage of the funeral to arrest other believers in a bid to
eradicate the unofficial religion, he added.
As of Dec. 20, authorities have informed the relatives of some of the people
arrested that their family members would be prosecuted for resisting officers on
official duty.
Founded in 1989, the Duong Van Minh religion promotes the removal of old and
costly funeral customs that require that killing of cattle for seven days and
seek to make Hmong faith customs surrounding funerals and marriages more modern
and hygienic.
Followers of the religion have come under severe repression by authorities, and
many have been charged with “abusing freedom and democratic rights” and
imprisoned. Over the years, authorities have destroyed dozens of their religious
structures used as funeral homes.
Vietnam’s state-run media has called the belief a false religion, arguing that
it leads people to create groups that are not in line with the policies of the
central government and the Communist Party of Vietnam and has accused its
followers of inciting local people to oppose those guidelines and of trying to
establish a Kingdom of Hmong.
Major General Sung Thin Co, a Hmong member of Vietnam’s national assembly, told
fellow representatives at a session on March 26 that local authorities and
police had made “a hasty decision on the Duong Van Minh religion,” causing
clashes with Hmong people.
There are roughly 8,000 ethnic Hmong practitioners of the Duong Van Minh
religion in four provinces in the northern mountainous region of Vietnam,
according to the government.
Reported by RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Anna Vu. Written in
English by Roseanne Gerin.
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