Christians
Issue Call to Prayer for Detained Vietnam Believers
christianpost.com
Saturday, Jan. 29, 2005
Posted: 3:04:23PM EST
The
Vietnam Mennonite Church yesterday issued a call to prayer and fasting from Feb.
1 to Feb. 3 in support of the two detained Mennonite church leaders whose
appeals will be heard on Wednesday Feb. 2, 2005.
The Vietnam Mennonite Church
yesterday issued a call to prayer and fasting from Feb. 1 to Feb. 3 in support
of the two detained Mennonite church leaders whose appeals will be heard by the
People’s Supreme Court in Ho Chi Minh City on Wednesday Feb. 2, 2005.
“The international community
must shine the light of truth and justice on this case at this pivotal moment of
appeal,” said Tina Lambert, Advocacy Director of Christian Solidarity Worldwide.
“A failure by the Court to grant the appeal will be a damning indictment not
only on Vietnam’s respect for human rights and religious freedom but on the
legal system itself.’
Reverend Nguyen Hong Quang and evangelist Pham Ngoc Thach of the Vietnamese
Mennonite Church, two men among the six Mennonites detained in a series of
arrests from Mar. 2 2004 onwards, were convicted for “inciting people to
obstruct officials from carrying out their duties” after a half-day trial at the
Ho Chi Minh City’s People’s Court on Nov. 12.
However, according to Christian Solidarity Worldwide, a U.K.-based human rights
charity working on behalf of persecuted Christians, “the evidence of torture,
confiscation of human rights documents, religious persecution and a
state-sponsored smear campaign reveal a much darker motive behind the
convictions.”
"Co-defendants Nguyen Thanh Nhan and Nguyen Hieu Nghia, who were released in
December, have testified of brutal torture against the group, which repeatedly
left them unconscious,” CSW reported. “One is now partially paralyzed and the
other has conditions which may be life threatening.”
CSW said Nhan’s description of the reaction of fellow prisoners supports this
assessment. “The prisoners in the cells talked with each other wondering what
kind of crime the person had committed to deserve such brutal treatment,” CSW
reported Nhan as saying. “It must have been very bad! How would they know that
we had been arrested only because we carry the two words “Tin Lanh” (meaning
Gospel or Christian)? How painful, how bitter!”
Meanwhile, Le Thi Hong Lien, the sole woman among the "Mennonite Six," has
reportedly suffered a complete mental and physical breakdown due to the torture
and abuse that she has endured whilst in prison. Her father, Le Quang Du,
reported, after a recent visit, that Le’s right eye was heavily swollen and
filled with pus. Two police officers informed him that his daughter had
completely lost her mind, constantly urinating and defecating while fully
clothed, wherever she happened to be.
"We are deeply saddened by the horrific human cost in this abhorrent campaign
against the Vietnam Mennonite Church,” Lambert said. “The depth of brutality
exposed by the treatment of the prisoners reveals a very dark side to the
motivations of the Vietnamese authorities.”
CSW reports that yesterday’s call by the Vietnam Mennonite Church has been
addressed to Mennonite bodies and evangelical Christians around the world. It
requests specific prayer for strength and endurance for the prisoners,
especially Ms Lien, for Christians to remain faithful under pressure and
persecution, and for justice to prevail at the hearing on Feb. 2. The proposed
time of prayer and fasting begins from 7:30 a.m. on Feb. 1 to 5:00 p.m. on Feb.
3 in support of the imprisoned Mennonites.
Meanwhile, CSW reports that appeals have been denied to both Nguyen Van Phuong,
scheduled for release on Mar. 2, and to Le, who has been declared unfit to stand
trial. Phuong is to serve the remainder of his sentence in Bo Vu Prison, Binh
Phuoc Province.
Kenneth Chan
kenneth@christianpost.com