Thugs Attack Vietnamese Anti-China Activist on Hanoi Street
RFA
– 05/11/2015
An
activist in Vietnam who has spoken out extensively against Chinese aggression in
the South China Sea was brutally beaten by thugs in the capital Hanoi on Monday,
in the latest attack against public campaigners in the one-party communist
nation, where dissent is not tolerated.
Activist Nguyen Chi Tuyen, who has participated in several anti-China rallies
expressing anger over Beijing’s claims to the disputed Paracel islands, told
RFA’s Vietnamese Service he was attacked in the morning after driving his son to
elementary school around three kilometers (two miles) from his home.
“On the way home, along the road I usually take, a group of thugs stopped me
from both in front and behind [my vehicle] and they beat me,” Tuyen said.
“I couldn’t see what they were using to strike me, but I am sure that they
didn’t only use their hands and feet. They struck me about my head and face.”
Tuyen said he received first aid at a medical center near his home, but his
friends decided to take him to the French-Vietnamese Hospital, where he was
given a CT scan to determine whether he had suffered a brain injury.
“The doctors there told me that I was lucky because my brain was not damaged;
only the soft parts were injured. My forehead, eyes, cheeks, nose and ears are
swollen. I was given six stitches on my head. Those were the main injuries,” he
said.
“The doctors allowed me to go home and said that if I experienced any abnormal
symptoms in the next 24 hours, I should be hospitalized; if not, I should just
take a prescription they gave me.”
Blogger beaten
Tuyen, who has also campaigned to commemorate Vietnamese soldiers who died
during Vietnam’s brief border war with China in 1979 and to promote
environmental causes such as recycling, is the latest outspoken activist to be
beaten by thugs on a Hanoi street in weeks.
At the end of April, prominent blogger Trinh Anh Tuan was savagely attacked with
bricks by a trio of plainclothes policemen he said were among a group of men who
have been observing his home for the past month.
Tuan, who operates a website calling for transparency from local officials with
regards to a controversial tree removal plan in the city, said he had been
harassed by plainclothes authorities before in March 2014, though “the injuries
were not as severe as this time.”
He was also among 50 people detained and beaten by police on May 15 last year
after taking part in an anti-China protest sparked by territorial tensions in
the South China Sea.
Reported by RFA’s Vietnamese Service. Translated by Gia Minh. Written
in English by Joshua Lipes.