Vietnam: 13 years in prison for physician who posted democracy article on website



18 June 2003
International Secretariat
Asia-Pacific Desk

Reporters Without Borders voiced outage at the action of a Hanoi court 
today in convicting a cyber-dissident of "spying" and sentencing him to 13 
years in prison followed by three years of house arrest. The dissident, 
pharmacist Pham Hong Son, was detained in March 2002 after translating an 
article about democracy into Vietnamese and posting on the Internet.

The organisation described the sentence as exceptionally heavy and said it 
was the outcome of a summary trial lasting just a few hours preceded by 
nearly 15 months of abusive detention.

"By convicting Dr. Pham Hong Son, the authorities have violated the 
Vietnamese laws and constitution, which guarantee freedom of expression and 
opinion," Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Robert Ménard said, 
accusing the authorities of using the charges of "spying" and endangering 
"national security" to systematically crush all dissent.

Ménard called on President Tran Duc Luong to intervene with the judicial 
authorities to obtain a review of his trial and his release. He said 
Reporters Without Borders would also alert the international organisations 
to which Vietnam belongs, including ASEAN and the International 
Organisation of French-Speaking Countries, about the case.

Police surrounding the Hanoi people's court today prevented journalists 
from attending Dr. Pham's trial, which last less than half a day. A group 
of six diplomats from the embassies of the United States, Canada, Australia 
and several EU countries, who had registered their request to attend, were 
also barred from the courtroom.

The indictment, dated 10 April 2003, accused Dr. Pham of contacting 
dissidents in Vietnam and abroad, endorsing the views of these dissidents 
and "becoming a supporter of the action plan to use press freedom and 
democracy to defend pluralism and the multiparty system."  The article on 
democracy for which he was arrested ­ which he took from the website of the 
US embassy in Vietnam ­ was described as an "anti-party and anti-government 
document" One of the diplomats waiting outside the courtroom described the 
sentence as "abnormally harsh."

A physician and marketing director of a pharmaceutical company, Dr. Pham 
has been held in a prison near the capital since his arrest on 27 March 
2002. Little is known about the conditions in which he has been held. For 
the first four months after his arrest, it was not known where he was,  and 
neither his family or his lawyer were allowed to visit him.

Prior to translating and posting the US embassy article, Dr. Pham had 
written and posted several other articles in favour of democracy and human 
rights on Vietnamese discussion forums.

Five cyber-dissents are currently detained in Vietnam. Two of them were 
sentenced during the last two months of 2002 to prison terms of four and 12 
years. Another is under house arrest.

-- 
Vincent Brossel
Asia - Pacific Desk
Reporters Sans Frontières
5 rue Geoffroy Marie
75009 Paris
33 1 44 83 84 70
33 1 45 23 11 51 (fax)
asia@rsf.org
www.rsf.org


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