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Thứ Bảy, 21 tháng 1, 2012

Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Co-Chairmen Call for Immediate and Unconditional Release of all Prisoners of Conscience in Vietnam




                         Chủ tịch luân phiên ASEAN, Thủ tướng Nguyễn Tấn Dũng


                         As the rotating presidency of ASEAN,
                         Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has called
                         Myanmar to hold fair elections, there is
                         participation of many parties. Source chinhphu.vn



               THE TRUTH - JUSTICE - LOVE


Dominhtuyen
Recently, poor human rights situation in Vietnam heating up when series of International Human Rights organizations have condemned acts of serious human rights violations of Vietnam's communist government and require the Hanoi authorities stop the suppression of religious service, arrest and detain illegally components patriotic expression of free speech rights peacefully. In addition, the International Human Rights Organizations Tom Lantos, the predecessor of the Human Rights Caucus organization based in the United States has also voiced the authorities asked Vietnam to release immediately and unconditionally to with other prisoners of conscience in Vietnam.


Policies hostile to the religious elements together with the unlawful arrest spread of the dissidents, religious activists, bloggers and people street demonstrations to show love against the Chinese invasion of Vietnam's main island is the center and is the leading concern of the international human rights organizations, the U.S. lawmakers and many other countries around the world . Along with the accusations and harsh criticism, these governments said have imposed more sanctions and sanctions against Vietnam and want Hanoi government strict observance and full implementation of all commitments Links International on Civil and Political Rights, which Vietnam has joined and signed since 1982.


It ironically, in the press release after the end of the 16th summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations called ASEAN held in Hanoi in April 2010, with capacity as the Chair rotating ASEAN, HE Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has strongly urged Myanmar to hold a fair election with the participation of several political parties. What makes you the head of state to speak like this in Vietnam while still maintaining a dictatorship and political parties have never accepted the idea of ​​a pluralistic, multi-party through the process free elections with the participation of many political components, as aspirations of the people always wanted so long. See the document:


http://www.org/vietnamese / Prime Minister of Vietnam, Nguyen Tan Dung urged Burma to organize fair election with the participation of many parties..html


Why thought all only for freedom and democracy in other native country  without thinking about the aspirations and desire for freedom, democratic legitimacy of the people in his country? Why Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung called only for free election with the participation of many different parties in Burma, while still opposed to a multi-party state in Vietnam? Is it just empty nature statements of a  head of state? and he himself will face with how to answer to his people about the above statement? Maybe not as a head of state and head of the executive branch in Vietnam have no face, so should not care about their wholesale area for domestic and international public opinion?. Numerous questions remain questions without satisfactory answers ......




Newsletter




Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Co-Chairmen Call for Immediate and Unconditional Release of all Prisoners of Conscience in Vietnam

Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Co-Chairmen Call for Immediate and Unconditional Release of all Prisoners of Conscience in Vietnam
VRNs (Jan 20th, 2012) – Washington DC, USA – While condemning all violations of freedom of expression in Vietnam, they voiced particular concern over the recent detention of 17 social activists of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer (Dong Chua Cuu The) and the Presbyterian Church, as well as the arrest and sentencing of Vietnamese Buddhist dissidents Nguyen Van Lia and Tran Hoai An and Roman Catholic priest and democracy activist Father Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly.  Wolf and McGovern also strongly criticized the continued detention of lawyer activist Cu Huy Ha Vu, land rights activist Bui Thi Minh Hang and citizen bloggers Nguyen Van Hai (also known as Dieu Cay) and Paulus Le Son, among many others.

PRESS RELEASE

Co-Chairman: Frank R. Wolf 
Co-Chairman: James P. McGovern
January 19, 2012
For Immediate Release
Contact: Kalinda Stephenson or Jordan Tama (202-225-3599)
Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Co-Chairmen Call for Immediate and Unconditional Release of all Prisoners of Conscience in Vietnam
Co-Chairmen condemn detention of Vietnamese Buddhist and Christian social activists, human rights lawyers, citizen journalists and bloggers
Washington – Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission Co-Chairmen Frank R. Wolf (R-VA) and James P. McGovern (D-MA) today called for the immediate and unconditional release of all prisoners of conscience in Vietnam.
While condemning all violations of freedom of expression in Vietnam, they voiced particular concern over the recent detention of 17 social activists of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer (Dong Chua Cuu The) and the Presbyterian Church, as well as the arrest and sentencing of Vietnamese Buddhist dissidents Nguyen Van Lia and Tran Hoai An and Roman Catholic priest and democracy activist Father Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly.  Wolf and McGovern also strongly criticized the continued detention of lawyer activist Cu Huy Ha Vu, land rights activist Bui Thi Minh Hang and citizen bloggers Nguyen Van Hai (also known as Dieu Cay) and Paulus Le Son, among many others.
“The government of Vietnam should cease its repression of the Vietnamese people and immediately and unconditionally release all political prisoners,” said Congressman Wolf.  “Freedom of religion and conscience are universal human rights which must be respected in all countries.”
“There is no excuse for Vietnam to target its citizens who are exercising their political and religious rights in a peaceful manner,” said Congressman McGovern.  “The message is simple: Release all prisoners of conscience and allow the free expression of religion and thought.”
In March 2007, Father Ly was arrested for pro-democracy activities including having issued a manifesto calling for peaceful struggle to establish human rights and democracy in Vietnam.   After a temporary medical parole, Father Ly was sent back to prison on July 25, 2011, to serve an additional five years behind bars followed by five years house arrest.
Nguyen Van Lia and Tran Hoai An, both members of the Hoa Hao Buddhist sect, were sentenced to five and three years imprisonment, respectively, in December 2011 for “abusing democratic freedoms to infringe upon the interests of the state.”  Nguyen Van Lia, aged 72, and Tran Hoai An had briefed foreign diplomats about restrictions on religious freedom and other human rights violations, and met with the U.S. Commission on Religious Freedom (USCIRF) when delegates visited Vietnam in May of 2009. Nguyen Van Lia is reportedly in poor health.
The social activists belonging to the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer and the Presbyterian Church have been detained without access to family members or legal counsel.  Following the first arrests on July 30, 2011, and most recently around Christmas, their detention has been largely unacknowledged by the Vietnamese government.
Bui Thi Minh Hang, a Vietnamese land rights activist who is critical of the Chinese government, was arrested November 27, 2011 outside Notre Dame Cathedral in Ho Chi Minh City for conducting a silent protest against the arrests of peaceful protesters in Hanoi earlier that morning.  On November 28, 2011, she was ordered detained without trial for 24 months in the Thanh Ha Education Center in Binh Xuyen district in the Vinh Phuc province.
Cu Huy Ha Vu, a well-known legal scholar, human rights defender and environmental activist, was sentenced to seven years in prison in April 2011 for “conducting propaganda” against the state.  His sentence was upheld on appeal in August 2011.   He had twice submitted criminal complaints against the prime minister, once in an attempt to stop a controversial bauxite mining project and the other time for challenging the legality of a ban on class-action complaints.
Internet blogger Nguyen Van (Hoang) Hai (also known as Dieu Cay) co-founded the independent Free Vietnamese Journalists’ Club in 2007 and wrote articles critical of China’s foreign policies with regard to Vietnam.  He had publicly criticized government policies before his arrest in April 2008 and spoke out for human rights in Vietnam on his blog.  He was to have been released in October 2010, but is still being held in indefinite detention on politically motivated charges of tax fraud and has been denied access to his family and legal counsel.  In July 2011, his wife went again to the prison where he was last detained to try to see him and was reportedly told by a security official that he has “lost his arm.”
Writer Paulus Le Son, an active contributor to prominent citizen journalist sites including Vietnam Redemptorist News, was arrested in Hanoi in August 2011.  The day before he was abducted by police, he tried to attend the hearing of Cu Huy Ha Vu’s appeal against his seven year sentence.  On his blog, Son wrote about religious issues and social and political events in Vietnam including anti-Chinese demonstrations and the increase in police violence.
The Vietnamese Government’s actions violate the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Vietnam is a party. The Covenant says that “no one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention” (Article 9) and that “everyone shall have the right to freedom of expression” (Article 19).
The mission of the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission is to promote and advocate human rights in a nonpartisan manner both inside and outside of Congress.


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