Actions regarding Human rights and Civil society in Vietnam during the week of June 11-17 - Dân Làm Báo

Actions regarding Human rights and Civil society in Vietnam during the week of June 11-17

The 88 Project - We are bringing you news, analysis, and actions regarding human rights and civil society in Vietnam during the week of June 11-17. The Committee to Protect Journalists has awarded imprisoned blogger Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh (Mother Mushroom) one of its International Press Freedom Awards. The news comes after a recent nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize as well.

Fallout from last weekend's mass protests over the new cyber security law, which passed in the National Assembly this week, and a draft law on special economic zones, continues, as protesters have continued to be confronted by authorities. 

In one instance, an American who participated in the protests and arrested on June 10, is now being charged for "disturbing public order." International governments and rights groups are campaigning for his release. 

Many have also spoken out against the passage of the cyber security law, which they worry threatens online freedom of expression. 

Also this week, a priest was denied the right to leave the country for a trip abroad. 

In the news, read reactions to the cyber security law and national protests, as well as an update on the lives of affected fishermen following the 2016 Formosa environmental disaster. 

In case you missed it, pro-democracy activist Nguyen Trung Linh is still being held without formal charges. 

Coming up, June 25 marks one year since professor and former political prisoner Pham Minh Hoang was deported to France, after having his Vietnamese citizenship taken away. 

Considering recent detentions of peaceful protesters and a crackdown on dissent in general, please consider donating to the Doan Ket Fund to support political prisoners and their families. 

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HUMAN RIGHTS & CIVIL SOCIETY 

Prisoners of Conscience 


Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh is one of the winners of the Committee to Protect Journalists's International Press Freedom Awards. A professor in Canada also recently nominated Quynh for the Nobel Peace Prize. Quynh, a blogger on social and environmental issues, was sentenced to 10 years in prison in June 2017. 

Activists at Risk 

The US and several international groups are working to free Will Nguyen, an American studying in Singapore, who was one of a reported several hundred arrested in protests last weekend over the new cyber security law and a draft law on special economic zones thought by many to benefit China. The mass protests, even though the majority have been peaceful, have still met with violence from authorities in many instances. Mr. Nguyen, who had been vacationing in Vietnam prior to taking part in the protest, was taken into custody with a head injury; he now faces charges of "disturbing public order." Several US lawmakers have called for his release. Human Rights Watch has demanded the Vietnamese government investigate widespread violent responses to the demonstrations and release those detained.

Protests have continued throughout the week and into the weekend, though police have tightened security measures, launching active patrols of city streets and detaining well-known activists in their homes. The vote on the proposed law on special economic zones has been postponed. However, on Tuesday, Vietnam's National Assembly passed its draft cyber security law, despite criticism from human rights groups and calls from international governments to delay the vote. The law requires service providers to store user data in-country and quickly remove content deemed to be offensive to the state, raising concerns that the law will be used to further crackdown on dissenting viewpoints. There are also concerns that the law will have negative economic impacts for Vietnam. Lawmakers claim the legislation is necessary in order to protect the country from cyber crime. Yet the General Secretary of the ruling Communist Party bluntly declared: "We need the cybersecurity law to protect this regime." The law will take effect January 1, 2019.

Both the US State Department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor and the UN Human Rights Asia Office expressed their disappointment with the passage of the law, with the latter stating that the law "contains a number of provisions that are in contrary with Viet Nam's obligations under international law."

Environmental Activism/Community at Risk 

On June 11, Father Joseph Nguyen Duy Tan was barred from leaving Vietnam to travel to Malaysia with a group of other priests. He was the only one denied the right to leave. He has been critical of the Vietnamese government online and attended a meeting with EU officials in May to discuss religious freedom issues in the country. 

NEWS & ANALYSIS 


Vietnam’s new cybersecurity law deemed ‘human rights abuse’: "Algar added that the law would only be effective if tech companies agreed to cooperate with the government when asked to relinquish users’ private data, a request she characterised as a 'human rights abuse' that she urged companies to deny. Last week, both the United States and Canada called on Vietnam to delay the passage of this legislation for fear that the law may not be in keeping with 'international trade commitments'."

The Right to Protest In Vietnam Is Not Only Legal, It’s Constitutional: "In a nutshell, the law on the practice of demonstration seems to have been strategically delayed while an allegedly unconstitutional government’s decree will act as the only official tool to round up peaceful protesters and arresting them. The nation-wide protests broke out in Vietnam last Sunday, June 10, 2018, against the proposed Special Economic Zones (SEZ) and the cybersecurity draft laws, were estimated to have had thousands of people marching."

Taiwanese and Vietnamese activists are working together to pursue justice for the victims of the Vietnam marine life disaster: "Authorities claim that almost all affected residents have been compensated; however, many of them say they have not received it or only received part of it. While fish have started to return, their numbers are fewer than before the disaster. Fishermen have been left jobless, and people are worried whether it is safe to eat the caught fish. Vietnamese from the affected region have protested, but their actions have met repression by authorities. Based on the investigation led by activists, scholars, and Vietnamese in Taiwan, 17 Vietnamese have been arrested or face arrest in relation with the Formosa disaster to varying degrees."

Vietnam protests bigger than ‘anti-China’ nationalism: "While this weekend’s protests were certainly marked by nationalist and anti-China rhetoric – as the majority of media reports noted – they were much more than mere chauvinistic gesticulations against Beijing. As well as the numerous anti-China signs at the protests, there were also placards that demanded greater democracy. Some protestors carried banners reading 'Returning Autonomy For [the] People.' Another placard stated the protest was against the National Assembly’s violation of the Constitution."

Vietnam to boot its military out of business: "In 2014, after anti-China protests erupted across the country when Beijing positioned an oil drilling platform in contested waters, another petition was sent to the Party’s leadership that again called for the military to be divested from the Party, which some saw as soft-pedaling on China for aid and investment. Petition 20, signed by some senior military officials, also requested the Party to stop using the armed forces as its enforcer, as was witnessed that year when the army was ordered to put down local protests. 'We need to immediately end the mobilization of this force against the people, such as for land evictions and dispersing peaceful rallies,' the petition stated. That petition, too, was stringently rejected by the Party hierarchy." 






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