Khmer Circle:
How ironic that Communist states such as Vietnam set the highest standards ['dreams'] for their populations to aspire to, with the stars as their chosen symbols of those aspirations. The gold star etched on the Vietnamese collective mind and on the country's national flag, however, does not mean that the masses are at liberty to dream of whatever they desire but that their dreams must also be subject to prior approval of the ruling Communist Party itself whose pervasive and regulating influence and presence are just as ubiquitous and stifling as the flags themselves.
Anyone acquainted with Vietnamese history will probably point to this state-approved 'dream' as having been in motion long before the birth of today's Communist party along with its dictatorial rule and, that the dream of which we speak has been an enduring constant in Vietnam's history but more ominously - as manifested by what have been concretely gained on the grounds - remains very much a work in progress: the dream of infinite expansion of territory or living space. Anyone who doubts this assertion should only have a quick look at the country's maps and their evolutions in recent years and decades...
Dissident Vietnamese blogger Pham Doan Trang is shown in an image provided by the website danlambao.
danlambao.com
UPDATED at 9:45 A.M. EDT on 2020-10-07
Pham Doan Trang was arrested at an apartment in Ho Chi Minh City on Tuesday night and charged under article 117 of the Vietnamese Penal Code, accused of “making, storing, distributing or disseminating information, documents and items against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam," To An Xo, a spokesman of the Ministry of Public Security, said. Trang, described by state media as a blogger who used to work for various publications in Vietnam, was transferred to Hanoi.
Fellow activist Pham Thanh Nghien confirmed the arrest in brief remarks to RFA.
“Journalist Pham Doan Trang was arrested at 11:30 pm on October 6 at her apartment in Ho Chi Minh City," she said
If convicted, she could face up to 20 years in prison, Amnesty said, warning that she faced serious danger in official custody.
“Pham Dan Trang faces an imminent risk of torture and other-ill treatment at the hands of the Vietnamese authorities. She must be immediately and unconditionally released,” said Amnesty International’s Deputy Regional Director for Campaigns, Ming Yu Hah, in a statement.
“The arrest of Pham Doan Trang is reprehensible. She is a leading figure in the struggle for human rights in Viet Nam. She has inspired countless young activists to speak up for a more just, inclusive, and free Vietnam,” said Hah.
Human Rights Watch noted that her arrest occurred “just a few hours after the annual human rights dialogue between the United States and Vietnam” and that she was immediately charged.
“Vietnam’s scorched earth response to political dissent is on display for all to see with the arrest of prominent blogger and author Pham Doan Trang,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of Human Rights Watch.
“Every day she spends behind bars is a grave injustice that violates Vietnam’s international human rights commitments and brings dishonor to the government,” he said in a statement.
“Governments around the world and the UN must prioritize her case, speak out loudly and consistently on her behalf, and demand her immediate and unconditional release,” added Robertson.
Following Trang’s arrest, her friends posted a message they said was written by her in advance, that read: “Nobody wants to go to jail, but if prison is the place for those who fight for freedom, and if it is the place to carry out set goals, then we should go to prison”.
HRW noted that last month Trang had published the 3rd edition of a report of a violent clash at Dong Tam commune outside Hanoi in January. The publication of the first edition of that report one week after the incident led to the arrest in June three out of five authors of the report, Can Thi Theu and her sons Trinh Ba Phuong and Trinh Ba Tu. They were also charged with for anti-state propaganda.
Amid a spate of arrests and abuse of independent journalists this year in Vietnam, Trang told RFA in May that toleration of dissent was deteriorating and likely to get worse in the run-up to the ruling party congress next January.
“Freedom has always been restricted, but nowadays it seems to be narrower, and there’s more and more violence,” she said at the time. “From now until the party congress, the scope of freedom can be tightened more and more, and the suppression will increase.”
Trang, who released a well-regarded book titled Politics for Everyone, was awarded the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) 2019 Press Freedom Prize. She founded the online legal magazine Luat Khoa and edits another web-based rights journal called thevietnamese.
In August 2018, Trang was among at least four activists who were attacked after policemen stormed into a cafe and broke up dissident singer Nguyen Tin’s “Memory of Saigon” show.
She was then taken by police to an unknown road outside the city and “beaten further to the point of disfiguring her face,” friends said at the time.
In those attacks, Trang suffered multiple bruises, nausea, and dizziness and was later diagnosed with a concussion. Friends who tried to visit her in the hospital were harassed and beaten, the New York-based HRW said at the time.
“Despite suffering years of systemic government harassment, including severe physical attacks, she has remained faithful to her principles of peaceful advocacy for human rights and democracy,” said Robertson of HRW.
“Her thoughtful approach to reforms, and demands for people’s real participation in their governance, are messages the Vietnam government should listen to and respect, not repress,” he added.
Vietnamese police routinely investigate postings on Facebook and other online media that authorities claim “slander or offend the prestige” of Vietnamese government leaders, including Communist Party members and provincial officials.
Vietnam’s already low tolerance of dissent has deteriorated sharply this year with a spate of arrests of independent journalists and publishers, as well as Facebook personalities. And activists say things are likely to get worse as authorities stifle critics in the run-up to the ruling Communist Party congress in January.
Estimates of the number of prisoners of conscience now held in Vietnam’s jails vary widely. HRW says that authorities held 138 political prisoners as of October 2019, while Defend the Defenders has suggested that at least 240 are in detention, with 36 convicted last year alone.
“Pham Doan Trang’s arrest is the latest stage in the headlong pursuit of ever-greater repression by the Vietnamese Communist Party’s current leadership,” said Daniel Bastard, the head of Reporters Without Borders Asia-Pacific desk. “Her only crime has been to provide her fellow citizens with independently-reported information and to help them to fully exercise their rights under Vietnam’s constitution."
Reported by RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Huy Le. Written in English by Paul Eckert.
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