Vietnam: Drop Charges against Human Rights Activist
Truong Van Dung Prosecuted for Criticizing the Government
HRW | March 27, 2023
Vietnamese authorities should immediately
release land rights activist Truong Van Dung and drop all charges against him,
Human Rights Watch said today. Police in Hanoi arrested Truong Van Dung in May
2022 on charges of “conducting propaganda against the state.” A Hanoi court is
scheduled to hear his case on March 28, 2023. If convicted, he faces up to 20
years in prison.
Vietnamese authorities have convicted at
least 163 people since 2018 for exercising their rights to freedom of
expression or association under vague or overbroad laws that criminalize
protesting or criticizing the government. At least 18 others have been charged
and are awaiting trial. The authorities have brought many of these cases using
the propaganda charge, criminalized under articles 88 and 117 of Vietnam’s penal
code.
“Truong Van Dung is the latest in a long line of human rights defenders silenced
by the Vietnamese government for protesting against human rights violations and
advocating for reforms,” said Phil
Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Democratic
governments forging closer ties with Vietnam need to speak out publicly and
forcefully in his support and call on Vietnam to release all political prisoners
and take genuine steps toward reform.”
Truong Van Dung, 65, first became active in land rights advocacy in the 2000s,
campaigning against forced confiscation of his own house. In the early 2010s, he
joined other activists and began to advocate for basic rights, including freedom
of expression, association, and assembly. Between 2011 and 2018, he also
participated in numerous anti-China and pro-environment protests. He joined a
protest opposing Vietnam’s problematic 2018 law
on cybersecurity and publicly boycotted Vietnam’s national
“elections,” a process controlled by the Vietnam Communist Party which is
neither free nor fair.
He also publicly voiced support for numerous political prisoners and detainees,
including Nguyen
Thuy Hanh, Pham
Doan Trang, Can Thi Theu, Nguyen Thi Tam, Trinh Ba Tu, Trinh Ba Phuong, Le Dinh
Luong, Hoang Duc Binh, Nguyen Tuong Thuy, Pham Chi Dung, Le Huu Minh Tuan, Do
Nam Trung, and members of Hoi
Anh em Dan chu (Brotherhood for Democracy).
In December 2013, Truong Van Dung and other activists founded a humanitarian
group, Hoi Bau bi Tuong Than (Association of Gourd and Squash Mutual
Assistance), to provide financial and spiritual support for political prisoners,
land rights petitioners, and their families.
Truong Van Dung has experienced years of government harassment and intimidation,
including police interrogations, house
arrest, a travel
ban, and physical
assaults by plain-clothes
agents. In March 2014, after being attacked and injured by men in
civilian clothes, he told a reporter at Radio Free Asia: “I
will not budge. The more they act [attack] this way, the more inspired I will be
on my path, no less … I am very proud of myself. I did nothing to be ashamed of.”
After his arrest in May 2022, Truong Van Dung was held incommunicado for more
than nine months. He was allowed to meet with his lawyer for the first time in
March. His family has not been allowed to see him. Vietnam’s courts, controlled
by the ruling Communist Party of Vietnam, are not independent and hearings and
trials do not meet international standards.
“How can Truong Van Dung get a fair trial when Vietnam’s legal system isn’t
independent and the laws under which he is charged violate basic international
human rights standards – and what he has been accused of shouldn’t even be
crimes,” Robertson said.
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Vietnam, please visit:
https://www.hrw.org/asia/vietnam
For more information, please contact:
In Manila, Phil Robertson (English, Thai): +66-85-060-8406 (mobile); or robertp@hrw.org.
Twitter: @Reaproy