Three Vietnamese journalists were handed lengthy jail terms after being found guilty of “spreading anti-state propaganda” by the Ho Chi Minh City People’s Court on Tuesday.
The verdict comes just weeks before a leadership transition is set to take place behind closed doors at the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) 13th national congress in the capital, Hanoi. Whoever takes the reigns will decide the one-party state’s key policies for the next five years.
The Ministry of Public Security said the journalist trio were “making, storing, spreading information, materials, items for the purpose of opposing the state” at the one-day trial.
According to the court’s verdict cited by state-run media, the three “had regularly been in contact with regime opponents.”
One of the men, high-profile writer Pham Chi Dung, 54, previously worked for the Vietnamese Department of Internal Affairs and Security.
After 20 years, Dung quit the role in December 2013, saying the “Communist Party no longer serves and represents the interests of the majority of the people.”
In 2014, he founded the Independent Journalists Association of Vietnam (IJAVN) to advocate for press freedom but the state has since declared it a criminal organization. Dung received a 15-year jail sentence.
Fellow IJAVN members, Nguyen Tuong Thuy, a 69-year-old military veteran, and younger member Le Huu Minh Tuan, were both sentenced to 11 years behind bars.
All three will serve an additional three years under house arrest following their release from jail.
Lawyer Dang Dinh Manh, who defended Dung and Tuan, told Germany’s dpa news agency that the court did not accept any of the legal arguments he presented. He described the sentences as “too harsh.”
Crackdown ahead of CPV Congress
Under the leadership of 76-year-old Nguyen Phu Trong, the CPV has intensified a crackdown on dissent ahead of its five-yearly congress due to be held later this month.
Despite openness to economic reform and social change, the CPV retains tight media censorship and tolerates little criticism.
Government officials said the journalists worked with the intent to “distort and defame the people’s administration, infringe the interests of the Communist Party of Vietnam and state,” adding that their stories were “especially dangerous activities that if not stopped could hurt national security.”
In its annual World Press Freedom Index, Reporters Without Borders ranked Vietnam 175 of 180 states.
In 2020, Vietnam imprisoned 28 journalists, making it the fourth worst country for journalist freedom behind China, Saudi Arabia and Eqypt respectively.
‘Bogus’ charges: rights group
Ahead of the trial, Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, described the charges against the journalists as “bogus.”
He challenged the CPV to “demonstrate its confidence by respecting civil and political rights, ending its tight control of the press, and allowing independent journalists to freely voice their opinions instead of silencing them with arrest and long prison sentences.”
Vu Quoc Ngu, director of the Defend the Defenders human rights group, told dpa that the three journalists had been kept incommunicado for months and denied access to legal counsel until just before the trial.
Amnesty International said that there are more than 170 prisoners of conscience currently imprisoned in Vietnam.
Emerlynne Gil, the group’s deputy regional director, told dpa the “verdict underscores the Vietnamese authorities’ utter contempt for free media,” adding that it was another blow to the Vietnamese people’s “right to access independent information.”
January 7, 2021
Vietnam jails pro-democracy journalists for ‘propaganda’
by Nhan Quyen • [Human Rights]
The ruling communist regime is cracking down on dissident voices — including former staff — ahead of its national congress party. Three writers have been sentenced to more than a decade behind bars.
Three Vietnamese journalists were handed lengthy jail terms after being found guilty of “spreading anti-state propaganda” by the Ho Chi Minh City People’s Court on Tuesday.
The verdict comes just weeks before a leadership transition is set to take place behind closed doors at the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) 13th national congress in the capital, Hanoi. Whoever takes the reigns will decide the one-party state’s key policies for the next five years.
The Ministry of Public Security said the journalist trio were “making, storing, spreading information, materials, items for the purpose of opposing the state” at the one-day trial.
According to the court’s verdict cited by state-run media, the three “had regularly been in contact with regime opponents.”
Watch video02:22
Vietnamese online journalists face censorship at home
One of the men, high-profile writer Pham Chi Dung, 54, previously worked for the Vietnamese Department of Internal Affairs and Security.
After 20 years, Dung quit the role in December 2013, saying the “Communist Party no longer serves and represents the interests of the majority of the people.”
In 2014, he founded the Independent Journalists Association of Vietnam (IJAVN) to advocate for press freedom but the state has since declared it a criminal organization. Dung received a 15-year jail sentence.
Fellow IJAVN members, Nguyen Tuong Thuy, a 69-year-old military veteran, and younger member Le Huu Minh Tuan, were both sentenced to 11 years behind bars.
All three will serve an additional three years under house arrest following their release from jail.
Lawyer Dang Dinh Manh, who defended Dung and Tuan, told Germany’s dpa news agency that the court did not accept any of the legal arguments he presented. He described the sentences as “too harsh.”
Crackdown ahead of CPV Congress
Under the leadership of 76-year-old Nguyen Phu Trong, the CPV has intensified a crackdown on dissent ahead of its five-yearly congress due to be held later this month.
Despite openness to economic reform and social change, the CPV retains tight media censorship and tolerates little criticism.
Government officials said the journalists worked with the intent to “distort and defame the people’s administration, infringe the interests of the Communist Party of Vietnam and state,” adding that their stories were “especially dangerous activities that if not stopped could hurt national security.”
In its annual World Press Freedom Index, Reporters Without Borders ranked Vietnam 175 of 180 states.
In 2020, Vietnam imprisoned 28 journalists, making it the fourth worst country for journalist freedom behind China, Saudi Arabia and Eqypt respectively.
‘Bogus’ charges: rights group
Ahead of the trial, Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, described the charges against the journalists as “bogus.”
He challenged the CPV to “demonstrate its confidence by respecting civil and political rights, ending its tight control of the press, and allowing independent journalists to freely voice their opinions instead of silencing them with arrest and long prison sentences.”
Vu Quoc Ngu, director of the Defend the Defenders human rights group, told dpa that the three journalists had been kept incommunicado for months and denied access to legal counsel until just before the trial.
Amnesty International said that there are more than 170 prisoners of conscience currently imprisoned in Vietnam.
Emerlynne Gil, the group’s deputy regional director, told dpa the “verdict underscores the Vietnamese authorities’ utter contempt for free media,” adding that it was another blow to the Vietnamese people’s “right to access independent information.”