USCIRF
Urges U.S. Government to Speak Out about Human Rights Defender, Name Vietnam CPC
April
5, 2011
The
U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) urges the U.S.
government to speak out publicly on behalf of jailed human rights defender Cu
Huy Ha Vu, who was found guilty and sentenced to seven years under vague
national security laws for his activities defending victims of land confiscation
and abuse of power, including representing the Catholic villagers of Con Dau.
“Cu Huy Ha Vu’s arrest is part of a disturbing trend in Vietnam where the
defenders of the vulnerable are attacked as threats to national security,” said
Leonard Leo, USCIRF chair. “The Obama Administration cannot continue to
advance Vietnam’s security and economic interests without seeking concrete
improvements on U.S. interests in religious freedom and the rule of law. It’s
past time for the Administration to re-designate Vietnam as a Country of
Particular Concern (CPC).”
Cu Huy Ha Vu is a well known human rights defender who has sued the Vietnamese
government to protect cultural heritage sites and publicly criticized officials
for corruption and persecution of dissidents. In October 2010, his law firm
took on the case of the Catholic villagers of Con Dau, near Da Nang. Residents
of this village faced government-organized harassment, detention, torture, and
arrest for refusing to sell or vacate land—including a long-standing religious
burial site that has been in their village for 135 years—to create an
eco-tourist resort. Cu Huy Ha Vu was arrested soon after speaking out publicly
about their case. USCIRF testified at the August 2010 Tom Lantos Human Rights
Commission hearing on efforts by the Vietnamese government to obtain the
property of Con Dau residents and about general religious freedom conditions in
Vietnam. A copy of this testimony can be found at www.uscirf.gov.
Cu Huy Ha Vu is the latest in a long list of human rights advocates in Vietnam
who have faced government persecution for representing vulnerable communities,
including religious groups and individuals. Among the advocates who have been
arrested and harassed for representing religious communities or advocating for
greater religious freedom including Le Cong Dinh, Nguyen Van Dai, Le Thi Cong
Nhan, Le Tran Luat, Le Quoc Quan, and Fr. Nguyen Van Ly.
“Vietnam has been called the United States’ new best friend in Asia, but it
continues to trample on individual freedoms and the rule of law with impunity,”
said Mr. Leo. “Re-designating Vietnam as a CPC is not only the right thing to
do, it will advance the United States’ strategic interests as well, producing
tangible religious freedom improvements on the ground without hindering other
bilateral interests. Most importantly, it will clearly signal that the United
States sides with those in Vietnam who peacefully seek greater freedoms and
rights.”
USCIRF is an independent, bipartisan U.S. federal government commission. USCIRF
Commissioners are appointed by the President and the leadership of both
political parties in the Senate and the House of Representatives. USCIRF’s
principal responsibilities are to review the facts and circumstances of
violations of religious freedom internationally and to make policy
recommendations to the President, the Secretary of State and Congress.
To interview a USCIRF Commissioner, contact Tom Carter, Communications Director
at
tcarter@uscirf.gov or (202) 523-3257