Vietnam Prisoner Release Imperative
By John E. Carey /
Honglien Do
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published September 24,
2006
The Congressional Human Rights
Caucus met to discuss "Human Rights in Vietnam" last week on Capitol Hill.
Co-chaired by California Reps. Loretta Sanchez and Zoe Lofgren, Democrats, and
Edward Royce, Republican, the caucus meets periodically with knowledgeable
representatives of the Vietnamese-American community and others active in
human-rights issues for the Vietnamese people.
Vietnam seeks entry into the
World Trade Organization (WTO). Vietnam is also seeking U.S. congressional
approval for Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR). President Bush is expected
to travel to Vietnam in November for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
Conference. Yet Vietnam continues to act contrary to its own self-interest by
jailing political antagonists for "crimes" such as posting democratically themed
essays on the Internet.
Two such prisoners are Cong
Thanh Do (no relation to the co-author) and Thuong N. "Cuc" Foshee, and there
are others. Cong Thanh Do used the Internet to spread "democratic" messages, a
crime in Vietnam. Mr. Do, who is from San Jose, Calif., was released by the
Vietnamese government on Thursday. His activities, taken for granted by all
Americans, came to the attention of the government of Vietnam, which insists on
regulating all media and information, including the Internet and e-mail. The
Washington Times Web site, for example, is not available to readers in Vietnam.
The Washington Times is too "seditionist."
While the U.S. cannot
appropriately intervene and tell another nation it insists on an American-style
freedom of speech, American members of Congress, House and Senate, can insist on
the release of Americans wrongly held in jails in Vietnam.
Thuong N. "Cuc" Foshee,
according to her family, "was detained by the Vietnamese government and has been
in a detention center in HCMC [Ho Chi Minh City; formerly, as many Vietnamese
still say, Saigon] ever since. She has not been charged with any crime, has been
denied bail, has been denied a visit with an attorney, her prescription
medication has been withheld and she has been denied adequate dental and medical
care."
Mrs. Foshee has not been
charged, though held since Sept. 8, 2005. She was also known for her Internet
postings of democratically inspired documents from her home in California. Both
she and Mr. Do went to Vietnam to visit elderly relatives.
When Vietnam's current leaders
came to power in June of this year, we responded with a Commentary article in
The Washington Times on America's Independence Day, July Fourth: "Recently, more
enlightened thinking has made Vietnam an emerging economic force.... The news of
the new leadership gives great promise." Now is the time for that new leadership
to live up to its great promise.
Vietnam has released
imprisoned persons guilty of similar "crimes." Earlier this month Vietnam
released prominent dissident and pro-democracy activist Pham Hong Son. He was
originally sentenced to five years in prison. His crime? He translated articles
from the U.S. State Department Web site for an online journal. The articles were
titled "What is democracy?"
Vietnam's government
manipulates the international community by feigning partial respect for human
rights. Vietnam has been releasing thousands of prisoners to convince the U.S.
government to approve Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) and the world to
support their accession to the World Trade Organization.
Scott Johnson of the
Montagnard Foundation, a group that fosters understanding of the indigenous
Vietnamese tribal peoples wrote, "The recent announcement by the Vietnamese
government that they will release 'some' dissidents in a general amnesty reminds
me of a conversation I had with a former U.S. State Department official about
his dealings with the Soviets during the Cold War. 'Throw them a dissident' was
what he said, and he described how the Soviets would play the stalling game by
keeping Western diplomatic pressure at bay for a time."
According to Vo Van Ai of the
Buddhist Information service in Paris, there are only four prisoners of
conscience out of the 5,313 recently released by the government of Vietnam and
he describes this "piecemeal amnesty" as a "propaganda exercise."
Scott Johnson and Vo Van Ai
tell us what is obvious to most international observers: Vietnam's recent
prisoner release effort is window-dressing designed to thrill the shallowest
students of human rights. This is an effort to please U.S. representatives and
senators without getting to the real heart of the issue: that Vietnam continues
to hold political prisoners, indigenous Montagnards and others -- many without
charges and without rights.
While we applaud Vietnam's
freeing those formerly incarcerated, we urge Vietnam to free the remaining
prisoners.
A letter from Reporters
Without Borders on Sept. 6, stated in part, "Five people are currently
imprisoned in Vietnam for having expressed democratic views on the Internet.
Contrary to the claims of the Vietnamese authorities, none of them is a
terrorist, criminal or spy. These [people] have been punished for using the
Internet to publicly express their disagreement with the political line of the
sole party. They are nonviolent democrats."
We urge members of the U.S.
House of Representatives and Senate not to move forward on permanent normal
trade status (PNTR) for Vietnam until release and safety of these prisoners is
secured. Before Vietnam can be considered an equal partner in world trade and
economic activity, it must face modern realities.
While we welcome the
prisoners recently released by the government of Vietnam, we urge Vietnam to now
release those still held: prisoners such as Thuong N. "Cuc" Foshee.
John E. Carey is former president of International Defense Consultants
Inc. Honglien Do escaped from Communist Vietnam after serving time in detention.