The high price of freedom in Vietnam
The
high price of freedom in Vietnam
By: Press Freedom
Taken From: DW
Vietnamese
blogger Nguyen Van Hai is known by his pseudonym Dieu Cay. He was released from
prison in late October and flown to the US almost immediately; Nguyen wasn't
even given the opportunity to say goodbye to his family.
In 2008, he
was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment after being accused of "propaganda
against the state," a charge which Nguyen has always refuted.
Nguyen, a
former soldier, founded the "Independent Journalists' Club" in 2007,
which became a headache for Vietnamese authorities. He criticized the
prevalence of rampant corruption in the country and the attitude of the
communist government in the territorial conflict with China.
Nguyen
believed that the government was busy filling its pockets and it needed to
liberate itself from its big and influential neighbor.
In Vietnam,
many suffer the same fate as Nguyen. Reporters Without Borders (RWB) describes
the situation regarding freedom of opinion and expression, and freedom of the
press in Vietnam as very serious.
In RWB's
yearly index on press freedom, Vietnam is placed at 174, after Iran, in the
list of 180 countries. China is at 175. According to RWB, around 26 Vietnamese
online activists and citizen journalists like blogger Le Thi Phuong Anh of
Vietnam's "Brotherhood for Democracy," an online network that
campaigns for the democratization of Vietnam, are still in prison.
Le Thi has
been in jail since May 2014 in the southern Vietnamese province of Dong Nai.
She doesn't even know exactly what she has been charged with.
On November
22, during his state visit to the country, German economy minister Sigmar
Gabriel met with human rights activists in Vietnam. The popular blogger
"Mother Mushroom" and the brother of lawyer and political prisoner Le
Quoc Quan were also part of the delegation which met Gabriel.
In a DW
interview, blogger Nguyen Van Hai analyzed the current situation in Vietnam
from his exile in the US.
DW: You
spent more than six years of your life in prison. For the last month, you have
been free and living in the US. How does it feel?
I was in
jail for six years, six months and two days. My release was unexpected. It is
difficult to express in words all that I felt when I entered the US. After the
plane took off, I was moved when I looked at the country which is shaped like an
"S" (On a map, Vietnam looks like an S).
I knew that
I needed to carry on with my struggle, so that I could return some day. My
family and friends still live in Vietnam. They all have to live in a society
where human rights are not respected.
Freedom is
the dominant feeling. It is my lifelong dream, to finally have free access to
the Internet, to call someone up without the fear that someone else could be
listening to your conversation. On the street I don't have communist security
officers following me.
When and
how did you find out about your travel to the US?
In
September, a representative of the US State Department informed me that they
were discussing my case with Vietnamese officials. I did not, however, know of
any concrete dates then.
You have
organized anti-China protests regarding the territorial conflict. You have also
criticized the government because of its corrupt practices. Do you see yourself
as a patriot, a political activist or as an opposition member?
As a
Vietnamese citizen I expressed my opinion together with my friends in order to
protect the territorial integrity of my country. We demand that the government
respect the interests of our country.
The
interests of the people should take priority over the interests of individual
groups. Every citizen of every country would react in the exact same manner as
I did. I am a citizen, who takes responsibility for his country and for
himself.
When you
reached the US, you were greeted by people who were waving the South Vietnamese
flag. There has been no South Vietnam for the past 40 years - the country was
based on a market economy, but it was not a democratic state. What would you
say about the welcome you received?
I was born
in North Vietnam and I also grew up there. I have never lived in South Vietnam
and that is why I do not want to comment on whether South Vietnam was a
democracy or a state based upon rule of law. But when I went there in 1971, I
saw some differences from the regime in the north.
There was
freedom. Private newspapers were allowed to be published. South Vietnam had a
more dynamic and prosperous economy. Citizens could trade freely. People could
strike and express their opinion. Everything was different from what we had
learned and heard in the North. What kind of a constitutional state was North
Vietnam at the time? How can the North speak about rights and laws? Even today
in Vietnam, only the law of the communist party is valid.
At the
airport in Los Angeles, I was warmly welcomed the way I would have been by a family
welcoming a member returning after a long time. For me, it doesn't matter which
flags my countrymen welcome me with.
What
matters, is that they received me warmly. The flag is a symbol. In a democratic
society, I need to respect the thoughts and symbols of other human beings.
Do you have
plans for the future?
In the
future, I will keep doing the same as before. We started the struggle for human
rights and freedom of expression in Vietnam and I will not stop doing that.
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