Jailed Vietnamese human rights defender Tran Thi Nga has received beatings and death threats from a cellmate assigned to her by authorities, her husband told RFA’s Vietnamese Service on Monday after writing a petition to law enforcement officials.
Noted in Vietnam for her online activism, Nga, 40, was sentenced in July 2017 to nine years in prison for spreading “propaganda against the state” under Article 88 of Vietnam’s penal code, a provision frequently used to silence dissident bloggers and other activists. Her appeal was rejected in December.
“On August 17, Nga called me and told me that she has been beaten and threatened to be killed. I decided to write a petition to authorities,” Nga’s husband, Phan Van Phong, told RFA.
Phong sent his petition to Gia Trung prison, the ministry of police, the supreme people’s procurator, Gia Lai province judicial authorities, and international organizations, he said.
Nga, who is allowed to talk to her family by telephone five minutes a month from Gia Trung prison in Gia Lai Province, had called home on July 26 and told her husband that she was placed in a cell with another prisoner, whose surname is Hai and is nicknamed Hai Ho.
Former prisoner of conscience Bui Thi Minh Hang, who served time at Gia Trung prison, told RFA that she knows Hai after sharing a cell with her.
“She is famous for being very aggressive and violent. They made me stay with her (and) she had threatened to kill me,” Hang told RFA.
“When I was there they (prison authorities) let other prisoners threaten me and attack me. I had to go on hunger strike for two months to protest,” she said.
“They (authorities) know everything and give other prisoners a signal to do such things because they are in charge of arranging our cellmates,” added Hang.
Amnesty International urged the Vietnamese community to “call and write to the Gia Trung prison urging them to ensure Tran Thi Nga’s safety.”
Meanwhile, in Nghe An province, Tran Huynh Duy Thuc, 52, started a hunger strike on Aug. 14 to protest police pressure on him to plead guilty in exchange for amnesty.
He was jailed in 2010 for 16 years for writing online articles criticizing the government under Article 79 of Vietnam’s penal code and is serving at Prison No. 6 in Nghe An province.
“(We) visited him at prison and was told that he has been on hunger strike for five days and he would continue until august 23. He said he would continue his hunger strike after that if his demands are not addressed,” Tran Huynh Duy Tan, Thuc’s brother, told RFA that he and Thuc’s wife visited Thuc in prison on August 18.
Thuc told his family that he’d rather stay in prison than plead guilty, he said.
“He’d rather stay in there until the end of his sentence. He said he is innocent,” said Tan.
Tan also told RFA that about two months ago the prison brought in a new manager, who created more difficulties for Thuc. He is now not allowed to write as many letters to his family as before, and his petitions to authorities have been limited in frequency.
“They had failed in pressuring Thuc to plead guilty, so they are resorting to their usual trick, which is to create more difficulties for him in prison,” activist Le Cong Dinh wrote on social media.
Tan said the family is worried about Thuc’s health because he looked very tired.
“He said that he would conduct a 10-day hunger strike, but his health got worse. We are very worried about his decision. We want him to stop the hunger strike soon to protect his health and his life,” the brother added.
August 22, 2018
Treatment of Jailed Vietnam Dissidents Draws Petition, Hunger Strike
by Nhan Quyen • [Human Rights]
Jailed Vietnamese human rights defender Tran Thi Nga has received beatings and death threats from a cellmate assigned to her by authorities, her husband told RFA’s Vietnamese Service on Monday after writing a petition to law enforcement officials.
Noted in Vietnam for her online activism, Nga, 40, was sentenced in July 2017 to nine years in prison for spreading “propaganda against the state” under Article 88 of Vietnam’s penal code, a provision frequently used to silence dissident bloggers and other activists. Her appeal was rejected in December.
“On August 17, Nga called me and told me that she has been beaten and threatened to be killed. I decided to write a petition to authorities,” Nga’s husband, Phan Van Phong, told RFA.
Phong sent his petition to Gia Trung prison, the ministry of police, the supreme people’s procurator, Gia Lai province judicial authorities, and international organizations, he said.
Nga, who is allowed to talk to her family by telephone five minutes a month from Gia Trung prison in Gia Lai Province, had called home on July 26 and told her husband that she was placed in a cell with another prisoner, whose surname is Hai and is nicknamed Hai Ho.
Former prisoner of conscience Bui Thi Minh Hang, who served time at Gia Trung prison, told RFA that she knows Hai after sharing a cell with her.
“She is famous for being very aggressive and violent. They made me stay with her (and) she had threatened to kill me,” Hang told RFA.
“When I was there they (prison authorities) let other prisoners threaten me and attack me. I had to go on hunger strike for two months to protest,” she said.
“They (authorities) know everything and give other prisoners a signal to do such things because they are in charge of arranging our cellmates,” added Hang.
Amnesty International urged the Vietnamese community to “call and write to the Gia Trung prison urging them to ensure Tran Thi Nga’s safety.”
Meanwhile, in Nghe An province, Tran Huynh Duy Thuc, 52, started a hunger strike on Aug. 14 to protest police pressure on him to plead guilty in exchange for amnesty.
He was jailed in 2010 for 16 years for writing online articles criticizing the government under Article 79 of Vietnam’s penal code and is serving at Prison No. 6 in Nghe An province.
“(We) visited him at prison and was told that he has been on hunger strike for five days and he would continue until august 23. He said he would continue his hunger strike after that if his demands are not addressed,” Tran Huynh Duy Tan, Thuc’s brother, told RFA that he and Thuc’s wife visited Thuc in prison on August 18.
Thuc told his family that he’d rather stay in prison than plead guilty, he said.
“He’d rather stay in there until the end of his sentence. He said he is innocent,” said Tan.
Tan also told RFA that about two months ago the prison brought in a new manager, who created more difficulties for Thuc. He is now not allowed to write as many letters to his family as before, and his petitions to authorities have been limited in frequency.
“They had failed in pressuring Thuc to plead guilty, so they are resorting to their usual trick, which is to create more difficulties for him in prison,” activist Le Cong Dinh wrote on social media.
Tan said the family is worried about Thuc’s health because he looked very tired.
“He said that he would conduct a 10-day hunger strike, but his health got worse. We are very worried about his decision. We want him to stop the hunger strike soon to protect his health and his life,” the brother added.