Ambassadors
Call for Cancer-Stricken Vietnamese Dissident’s Release
RFA
– 12/20/2013
A group
of foreign ambassadors have called on the Vietnamese government to release a
jailed dissident blogger amid concerns from his family that he is being denied
access to proper treatment while dying of cancer.
Dinh Dang Dinh, a democracy activist, is suffering from advanced stages of
stomach cancer while serving a six-year sentence for “anti-state propaganda,”
according to his family.
The letter sent Thursday to Vietnam’s foreign minister by the ambassadors of the
U.S., EU, and other foreign missions in the country urged that Dinh be freed on
humanitarian grounds “so he can spend his remaining time at home or if necessary
in a hospital,” the Associated Press said in a report.
Dinh’s daughter Dinh Phuong Thao said she hoped the letter would help secure the
release of her father or at least get him better treatment.
“We are very glad about this and we hope that things will work out,” she told
RFA’s Vietnamese Service on Friday.
“But everything still depends on the government.”
'He may not live much longer'
Dinh’s family has called repeatedly for his release, saying he has been denied
access to proper treatment while serving his sentence at the An Phuoc Prison in
southern Vietnam’s Binh Duong province.
In an open letter to Vietnam’s leaders and international organizations last
month, his wife Dang Thi Dinh said he was “in the last stages of stomach cancer
due to a lack of an immediate diagnosis and treatment.”
After a round of chemotherapy at a hospital last month, he was “sent back to
prison without any word from the doctors” while still weak from the side effects
of the treatment, Dang said, adding that a second course of treatment had later
also seriously left him frail.
Neither session was arranged in accordance with formal treatment guidelines, and
the prison has taken away Dinh’s medicine, including supplements, she said.
“We are very upset about the heartless attitude of his doctors and the
systematically merciless treatment of treatment of the government,” she said,
saying she believed he was being denied proper care because of his status as a
political prisoner.
“He may not live much longer, but for the sake of human conscience, please save
Dinh Dang Dinh,” she said.
Dissident blogger
Dinh was sentenced in August 2012 to a six-year prison term for “conducting
propaganda against the state” in his blog posts on charges rights groups say
Hanoi routinely uses to silence dissent.
A former high school chemistry teacher and army officer, Dinh, 50, had published
online articles on government corruption and on social and environmental issues,
including an environmentally sensitive bauxite mining project given to a Chinese
developer in central Vietnam.
Dinh’s wife called his sentence “a serious abuse of human rights,” saying he had
been jailed for “telling the truth” about issues of concern to Vietnam.
She said her family had submitted a petition asking that Dinh’s sentence be
suspended because of his illness based on provisions in Article 51 of Vietnam’s
penal code, but that prison authorities rejected the appeal.
“On Nov. 13, we sent another letter asking for his suspension based on Articles
61 and 62 of the penal code, but have still received no response,” she said.
The call by the Western ambassadors for Dinh’s release comes on the heels of a
visit to Hanoi by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who discussed concerns
about the country’s rights record in a meeting with his Vietnamese counterpart
Pham Binh Minh.
Kerry told reporters he had raised individual cases of abuse, but gave no
further details, according to Reuters news agency.
Reported by Thanh Truc for RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Viet Ha.
Written in English by Richard Finney.