IFEX
Reporters Without Borders is relieved to learn that two netizens who had
spent several years in prison - Vi Duc Hoi and Nguyen Tien Trung - were
released on 11 and 12 April 2014 respectively although they are now
assigned to a form of house arrest.
Arrested in October 2010, Hoi was sentenced in 2011
to five years in prison on a charge of anti-government propaganda under
article 88 of the 1999 penal code for writing articles critical of the
state. A former Communist Party official who ran a training centre in
the northern province of Lang Son, he is now due to spend three years
under house arrest.
He reportedly rejected the conditions originally imposed for his
release from prison, namely abstention from any political activity aimed
at promoting democracy and from writing articles expressing his views.
The official reason for softening the terms of his release has not been
given.
Trung was arrested in July 2009 on charges of anti-government propaganda and "subverting the people's administration," and was sentenced to seven years in prison
under article 79 of the penal code. He should have been released from
prison in January 2015 in order to begin a period of house arrest.
"While the release of these two netizens from prison is good news,
only their full freedom would be satisfactory," said Benjamin Ismaïl,
the head of the Reporters Without Borders press freedom index. "Above
all, we call on the authorities to release the 31 netizens who remain in
prison in violation of their fundamental rights.
"The government should take account of all the recommendations made
when the UN Human Rights Council examined the situation of human rights
in Vietnam in February, and should repeal all of the legislative
articles that are systematically used to jail independent news
providers."
Two other bloggers have been freed in recent weeks.
Dinh Dang Dinh, who was jailed in 2011 for launching a petition against
a bauxite mine project, was released on 21 March but died on 3 April of
stomach cancer, which was not treated while he was in prison.
Cu Huy Ha Vu was released on condition that he agree to go into
exile and immediately flew to the United States. He was sentenced in
2011 to seven years in prison on a charge of anti-government propaganda
after trying to bring a legal action against Prime Minister Nguyen Tan
Dung in connection with a bauxite mining project.
Vietnam is ranked 174th out of 180 countries in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index. It is also classified as an Enemy of the Internet because of its crackdown on bloggers and cyber-dissidents.