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Sunday 8 January 2012 by Human Rights Watch
4 January 2012
Bui Thi Minh Hang Sent to ‘Education Center’ for 2 Years
(New York) – Vietnamese authorities should immediately release the
activist Bui Thi Minh Hang and stop harassing her for protesting
peacefully, Human Rights Watch said today. On November 28, 2011,
authorities sent her to Thanh Ha Education Center in Binh Xuyen
district, Vinh Phuc province, for 24 months of administrative detention.
Police arrested Bui Thi Minh Hang, 47, on November 27 outside Notre
Dame Cathedral in Ho Chi Minh City for allegedly “causing public
disorder.” She was conducting a silent protest against the arrests of
peaceful protesters in Hanoi earlier that morning. The next day the
police ordered her detained without trial at the “education center.”
“There is no justification for the Vietnamese authorities to pack off a
peaceful protester to what is effectively a forced labor camp,” said Phil Robertson,
deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Detaining Bui Thi Minh
Hang without trial shows a disturbing disregard for her human rights and
guarantees for freedom of expression contained in Vietnam’s own
constitution.”
Bui Thi Minh Hang is a land rights activist who recently emerged as a
prominent critic of the Chinese government. She participated in Sunday
protests against Chinese territorial claims on the Spratly and Paracel
islands that took place in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City between June and
August.
The Hanoi Municipal People’s Committee ordered Bui Thi Minh Hang’s
24-month administrative detention under Ordinance 44 on Handling of
Administrative Violations. She had no opportunity to contest the
decision in a court.
Article 25 of the ordinance gives officials extremely broad authority
to lock people up on arbitrary, ill-defined grounds. Anyone can be sent
to an “education center” if it is determined that they have “committed
acts of infringing upon the properties of domestic or foreign
organizations, the properties, health, honor and/or dignity of citizens
or foreigners, breaking social order and safety regularly but not to the
extent of being examined for penal liability.”
Bui Thi Minh Hang’s lawyer, Ha Huy Son, has challenged the detention
through a complaint to Chairman Nguyen The Thao of the Hanoi Municipal
People’s Committee, saying that the arrest and order were illegal. There
has been no response to the complaint.
“Ordinance 44 allows police and local authorities to skip the courts to
punish people they don’t like,” Robertson said. “It’s a dangerous
ordinance that makes a mockery of the Vietnamese government’s claim to
respect the rule of law, and it should be repealed.”
In their decision on Bui Thi Minh Hang, the Hanoi Municipal People’s
Committee also cited Decree 76, which provides guidance for sending
people to “education centers.” Article 30 of the decree states that
those who are sent to “education centers” must “work eight hours per
day” and must “fulfill the assigned quota.”
Article 26 of the decree allows the center director to decide
arbitrarily whether the term should be extended if “the person who has
completed his or her term does not really make progress.” If a detainee
does not fulfill the assigned work quota or runs afoul of center
officials, he or she may be disciplined for not “making progress” and
arbitrarily held for another period of “management and education.”
Vietnam has previously cracked down on activists publicly critical of
the Chinese government. In 2008, nine days before the Beijing Olympic
torch traveled to Ho Chi Minh City, authorities arrested the activist
Nguyen Van Hai (pen name Dieu Cay), who has blogged critically about
China’s claims over the Spratly and Paracel islands as well as other
issues. He was later sentenced to 30 months in prison on a trumped-up
tax evasion charge and has been held incommunicado since October 20,
2010, the day of his scheduled release.
In November 2011, Vietnam sentenced Vu Duc Trung and Le Van Thanh to
five years in prison for broadcasting a Falun Gong radio program into
China. Falun Gong is banned in China but not in Vietnam.
Prior to her most recent arrest, Bui Thi Minh Hang had been detained at
least four times in five months for participating in protests. She was
arrested on October 16 while walking with friends around the Hoan Kiem
lake in Hanoi and wearing a conical hat with the letters HS-TS-VN, which
are Vietnamese acronyms for “Spratly – Paracel – Vietnam.” Several
people in civilian clothes seized her hat and destroyed it. When she
called for help from the police, they arrested her.
Police held her from October 16 to19, during which time she went on a
hunger strike. She was also detained briefly on August 2 for standing
outside the court and peacefully supporting Dr. Cu Huy Ha Vu, who was
appealing his conviction for “conducting propaganda against the State.”
The Spratly and Paracel islands are claimed by China, Vietnam, and
other countries. The Vietnamese government has a long history of
arbitrarily arresting and detaining people who speak out on what are
deemed sensitive foreign policy issues.
“Detaining people for expressing their views on relations with
neighboring countries is as much a rights violation as detaining them
for talking about problems at home,” Robertson said. “The right to free
speech includes speaking out on matters both domestic and
international.”