Jailed Prominent Vietnamese Blogger Dieu Cay Freed, on Way to US: Sources
OCT. 21, 2014 – Authorities in Hanoi have freed one of Vietnam’s most
prominent jailed bloggers and dissidents, Nguyen Van Hai, and deported him
to the United States, sources said Tuesday.
Hai, who is also known by his pen name Dieu Cay, was handed a 12-year prison
sentence in September 2012 for conducting “anti-state propaganda” amid a
crackdown on bloggers in the one-party state after his online articles
slammed communist rule and highlighted alleged abuses by the authorities. He
was first arrested in 2008.
"Blogger Dieu Cay is on an airplane heading to the U.S.," a source in Hanoi
told Radio Free Asia's Vietnamese Service, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
A source dealing with the State Department said she was told that Hai was on
his way to Los Angeles. The State Department in Washington would not confirm
the news.
Straight to airport
Hai's wife Duong Thi Tan said he was taken straight from his jail to the
airport and put on a plane to the United States.
"They let him go from Hanoi airport. We are in Saigon," Tan told RFA from Ho
Chi Minh City, where she and their son are residing.
"We only got a message saying that Hai was on the way to the Noi Bai
airport. I called that number again several times, but he did not answer,"
she said. "The last message was he was on the airplane that was about to
take off. I don’t know where it was heading to."
"Hai could not call us at home," she said. "In fact, they did not let the
family know anything about his release. There was no signal or notice. They
deported him to exile, they did not release him just like what they said."
Just two months ago, Hai had refused to make an official application to the
authorities seeking his release from prison, insisting instead that they
explain the reasons for his initial arrest and demanding that he be freed
without condition.
“He said that he told them he is innocent and that his arrest was illegal,”
Tan said.
Following a visit to Vietnam in early August by U.S. Senators John McCain
and Sheldon Whitehouse, rumors had spread that Hai might be freed from jail
on Vietnam’s Independence Day on Sept. 2, Tan said.
On July 27, 2013, Hai ended a five-week-long hunger strike at Prison No. 6
in Vietnam’s northern Nghe An province after judicial authorities agreed to
investigate his complaints over abuses in prison.
Arrested in April 2008 after helping to lead anti-China protests, Hai was
sentenced in 2009 to 30 months in prison on a charge of tax evasion but was
not freed after completing his term, and was then charged with carrying out
propaganda against the state.
An appeals court upheld his sentence in December 2012, and authorities have
repeatedly transferred him from one prison to another.
Hai’s case has been adopted by the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
and raised by U.S. President Barack Obama, whose administration has called
on Hanoi to release all political prisoners in Vietnam.
These included attempts by prison officials to force him to sign a document
admitting guilt in the charges for which he was convicted, Tan said.
Paris-based press freedoms watchdog Reporters Without Borders lists Vietnam
as an “Enemy of the Internet” and the third-largest prison in the world for
netizens.
Vietnam is second only to China for the number of journalists jailed,
according to the annual prison census of the U.S.-based Committee to Protect
Journalists, which counts 16 out of 18 Vietnamese reporters currently behind
bars as bloggers.
Reported by RFA's Vietnamese Service. Written in English by Parameswaran
Ponnudurai.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/vietnam/blogger-10212014122030.html
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