Wednesday, August 10, 2011

French-Vietnamese blogger on trial in Vietnam

Aug 10, 2011
French-Vietnamese lecturer and blogger Pham Minh Hoang went on trial Wednesday in Ho Chi Minh City, facing up to 15 years' jail on a subversion charge in the country's latest high-profile rights case

A French-Vietnamese lecturer and blogger went on trial Wednesday in Ho Chi Minh City, facing up to 15 years' jail on a subversion charge in the country's latest high-profile rights case.

France's foreign ministry has voiced "serious concern" about the case of Pham Minh Hoang, 56, who holds dual nationality and has been in custody for a year.

An official from Ho Chi Minh City People's Court confirmed the hearing had begun.

Hoang was charged with "carrying out activities aimed at overthrowing the people's administration", an accusation which has been used against other dissidents.

Plainclothes and uniformed security officers were seen on the streets outside the French colonial-era courthouse where the trial was being held.

One policeman tried to stop an AFP photographer from taking pictures of officers armed with clubs.

The case is being heard two weeks after Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung was named to a second term after consolidating his power, which activists fear heralds a tougher climate for dissidents in the one-party communist state.

"Vietnam is increasingly the target of criticism for its human rights violations," the Reporters Without Borders campaign group said in a letter to Dung last week.

It called on him to stop "political arrests" and said Hoang is being tried for acts that are guaranteed under Vietnam's constitution and international covenants on rights.

In a letter distributed by the US-based opposition group Viet Tan, Hoang's wife proclaimed his innocence. She said he only raised concerns about "ordinary issues" including education, health, social injustices and a controversial Chinese-backed bauxite mine in Vietnam.

He blogged under the pseudonym Phan Kien Quoc.

Between 2002 and May 2010, Hoang allegedly wrote 29 articles "distorting the state's policies and activities," the regime's official English-language newspaper Vietnam News has reported, citing police.

Hoang is also accused of belonging to the Viet Tan "terrorist organisation", it said.

Viet Tan, the Vietnam Reform Party, describes itself as non-violent and pro-democracy but is banned in Vietnam.

Foreign diplomats, including one from France, were seen arriving to monitor the trial. An AFP reporter was also granted access.

The hearing is unlikely to last more than one day.

Hoang went to France in 1973 but returned after 27 years to settle in Vietnam, where he worked as a mathematics lecturer at the Polytechnic University of Ho Chi Minh City, his wife has said.

Last week an appeal court in Vietnam upheld a seven-year jail term against French-trained legal expert Cu Huy Ha Vu, who had twice tried to sue the prime minister.

Days earlier Vietnam returned to prison another prominent dissident, Nguyen Van Ly, a Catholic priest with a brain tumour. His re-incarceration sparked a chorus of international criticism.

No comments: