VIETNAM: Government clamps down on the online press
RSF.Internet
12 January 2005
Reporters Without Borders has condemned a government assault on press freedom,
led by politburo ideologue Nguyen Khoa Diem, who has decided to reign in the
official press, particularly new websites.
In just three weeks, three websites - Tuoi Tre, Tintucvietnam.com
and Vnexpress.net - have been banned or brought to book.
The worldwide press freedom organisation also deplored legal action against
Nguyen Thi Lan Anh, a journalist on the daily Tuoi Tre. "The Vietnamese
authorities view the media as propaganda vehicles," it said. "With less than a
year to go to the next Communist Party Congress, they particularly fear
websites, even official ones, since they are a sounding board for popular
discontent."
"We need to
support this young generation of journalists who want to report on the news as
it is and not be used as mouthpieces for the regime," it said.
Nguyen Thi Lan Anh was charged on 5 January 2005, with posting two briefs
quoting a note from the Health Minister classified as a "state secret". In it
the minister called for an investigation into the abnormally high prices set by
pharmaceutical business Zuellig Pharma VN. Tuoi Tre (Youth), one of
Vietnam's rare investigative publications, has been targeted by the government
for several years.
Vietnamese Prime Minister, Pham Van khai, on 8 November 2004, called for
disciplinary steps to be taken against online press agency Vnexpress.net,
run by Internet provider FTP - a state-owned company. It followed a demand for
intervention by the Ministry of Culture and Information over "erroneous"
articles published by the agency. The offending articles reported on government
purchase of 78 Mercedes for the Europe-Asia (ASEM), in October 2004. It
unleashed a wave of readers' letter denouncing the import of luxury vehicles.
Vnexpress posted some of the reactions, which appeared to particularly
provoke the government's ire. The editor and the journalists involved in the
story were reportedly subjected to disciplinary action.
The website Tintucvietnam.com (Vietnam News) was closed around 10 January
on the order of the Ministry of Culture and Information. The site chiefly dealt
with cultural and economic stories. As in the case of Vnexpress, it was
posting readers' letters that was believed to have prompted the ban.
This clampdown on the media has been orchestrated by Nguyen Khoa Diem, head of
the party central committee's ideology and culture commission. In recent months
he has publicly insisted on several occasions on the need to bring into line a
press, which he said, chased after sensationalism and profit rather than
confining itself to putting out government ideology.