Vietnamese Blogger Nguyen Tuong Thuy Arrested For Holding ‘Anti-State’ Documents
May 23, 2020 - Police in the Vietnamese capital Hanoi arrested RFA blogger Nguyen Tuong
Thuy Saturday, accusing him of “making, storing, and disseminating documents and materials
for anti-state purposes,” his wife told RFA.
Nguyen, 70, was vice chairman of the Vietnam Independent Journalists Association and is
the third member of the group arrested in the past year.
His wife, Pham Thi Lan, confirmed the arrest in a brief telephone interview with RFA’s
Vietnamese Service. She said police escorted him to Ho Chi Minh City from Hanoi, where he
and his wife live.
Details of his arrest were not immediately available.
RFA called police investigator Tran Hoang Hiep, whose name is on Thuy’s warrant, for
comment on the case, but he asked for proof the reporter was actually from RFA and then
hung up the phone.
Nguyen, a 22-year military veteran, had been summoned by Hanoi police three times in
connection with the arrest on Nov. 21, 2019 of Pham Chi Dung, the chairman of the Vietnam
Independent Journalists Association. He is accused of propagandizing against the state.
On May 21, 2019, police also arrested another member of the association, dissident writer
Pham Thanh, on the same charges laid against Nguyen on Saturday -- " making, storing,
disseminating documents and materials for anti-State purposes" under Article 117, of
the Penal Code of Vietnam.
Nguyen, who has written weblog commentaries on civil rights and freedom of speech for
RFA’s Vietnamese Service for six years, visited the United States in 2014 to testify
before the House of Representatives on media freedom problems in Vietnam.
He told RFA at the time that he was “interested in the development of social media in
Vietnamese society. In Vietnam nowadays, freedom of press is restricted and the government
only recognizes state media.”
In March, a court sentenced RFA Vietnamese blogger Truong Duy Nhat to to 10 years for
“abusing his position and authority” in a decades-old land-fraud case that drew
international condemnation because the writer had been abducted, apparently by Vietnamese
agents, in Thailand.
Prior to his disappearance, Truong Duy Nhat had been a weekly contributor to RFA’s
Vietnamese Service. He had earlier been jailed in Vietnam from 2013 to 2015 for his
writings criticizing Vietnam’s government.
Vietnam, whose ruling Communist Party controls all media and tolerates no dissent, ranks
175th of 180 countries on the 2020 RSF’s World Press Freedom Index.
According to the NGO Defend the Defenders, Hanoi has arrested at least 29 activists,
including 19 bloggers, for writing posts online, and is currently detaining 238 prisoners
of conscience. New York-based Human Rights Watch has said that authorities held 138
political prisoners as of October 2019.
The country has been consistently rated “not free” in the areas of internet and press
freedom by Freedom House, a U.S.-based watchdog group.
Dissent is not tolerated in the communist nation, and authorities routinely use a set of
vague provisions in the penal code to detain dozens of writers and bloggers.
Reported by RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Viet Ha. Written in English by Paul
Eckert.
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