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DEMOCRACY
Freed Vietnam dissident hopeful over protests
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 12, 2011

Fresh out of prison and starting a new life in the United States, Vietnamese dissident Tran Khai Thanh Thuy is hoping that rare public protests will escalate into a threat to the communist leaders.

The 51-year-old writer said she was given just five minutes notice late last month that she would be released from prison, marking the first time in years that Vietnam has freed a prominent critic ahead of schedule.

Thuy believed that Vietnam was trying to please the United States, which repeatedly raised her case, as Hanoi seeks to build relations in the face of rising tensions at sea with historic rival China.

In another rare move, Vietnamese have taken to the streets, raising slogans against China. Authorities allowed protests for five consecutive weekends until Sunday, when they broke up the crowd and detained at least 10 people.

"The rising up of the students and youth is like a light shining in the darkness of Vietnam. They are green shoots growing out of the desert of apathy in the country," Thuy told AFP in an interview Tuesday in Washington.

"This will eventually lead to a day when the dictatorship will have to fall. The communist authorities are extremely worried about that," she said.

But while many Vietnamese routinely express dislike of China -- harking back to historical emnities -- most of the Hanoi protests drew only between a few dozen and 100 people.

Since the communist victory that reunified the country in 1975, Vietnam's small number of dissidents have never posed a serious threat to the omnipotence of the ruling party.

Another dissident still living in the country said there was a very gradual trend towards greater freedom and the "ideologies have been planted."

But he was doubtful that this year's Middle East uprisings against authoritarian regimes would trigger a similar revolt in Vietnam.

"It inspires people but it cannot lead the people," he said, asking not to be named.

Thuy, who was accompanied by her 14-year-old daughter, plans to settle in Sacramento, California, with the support of the Vietnamese community including Viet Tan, the Vietnam Reform Party, an opposition group banned by Hanoi.

She is visiting the US capital to thank lawmakers who raised her case along with Michael Posner, the assistant secretary of state handling human rights who pressed for her release on a visit to Vietnam.

Thuy, the author of numerous political essays and an editor of the dissident bulletin To Quoc (Fatherland), was initially detained during a 2007 crackdown and accused of spreading anti-government propaganda.

She was freed after nine months on medical grounds due to tuberculosis. But she was arrested again in October 2009 and later sentenced to three and a half years in prison.

Thuy and her husband, Do Ba Tan, were convicted of assault for allegedly beating two men with a motorcycle helmet, a brick and a stick during a parking dispute. The US State Department disagreed with the account and said that unknown assailants attacked the couple, not the other way around.

"They arrested me to silence me. But they didn't want to bring political charges such as opposing the government as this would lead to international pressure. So they had to create a criminal case and arranged for this assault," Thuy said.

The United States has welcomed warming relations with Vietnam, with which it fought a bitter war, but has insisted that Hanoi make improvements on human rights.

The State Department said that Vietnam arrested at least 25 activists last year and imposed wide restrictions on freedoms including of speech. Vietnam says that it is making significant progress on human rights.

Thuy said that she was degraded in prison by wearing a sign branding her as a criminal. She said she shared a 50 square-meter (60 square-yard) space with more than 80 other inmates, with only two hole-in-the-ground toilets and public showers.

Thuy voiced concern for the fate of her husband, who has several months remaining in a suspended sentence on the same assault conviction.

"I worry that any day now, police may send someone to the house to spark some altercation and if my husband raises his voice or lifts a hand, then he will immediately be arrested," she said.

But Thuy insisted that she would not be cowed.

"When I was in prison I was forbidden from holding a pen. Now that I have freedom, I plan to use my pen to write about the injustices in the Vietnamese prisons and communist system," she said.




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Rights group slams Myanmar use of convict porters
Bangkok (AFP) July 13, 2011 - Human Rights Watch on Wednesday condemned Myanmar's "brutal" use of convicts as "human pack mules" in conflicts against ethnic rebels, calling for a UN-led inquiry into alleged war crimes.

The military was forcibly recruiting prisoners to serve on the frontlines of battle as porters, where they face abuses including torture, summary execution and use as "human shields", the rights watchdog said.

"The convict porters are basically the human pack mules for the Burmese army. They have to lug this very heavy equipment through heavily mined areas," Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director of HRW, told reporters in Bangkok.

Speaking at the release of a report on the abuses in eastern Myanmar, entitled "Dead Men Walking", Pearson said she hoped such evidence of war crimes "really reinforces that there's an urgent need" for an international inquiry.

"The brutal mistreatment of convict porters on the frontlines is just one of many ongoing war crimes," she said.

"Others include deliberately attacking civilian villages and towns, extrajudicial killings, forced relocations, torture, rape and the use of child soldiers."

Myanmar -- where power was handed to a nominally civilian government in March after almost 50 years of military rule -- has been plagued by decades of civil war with armed ethnic minority rebels since independence in 1948.

The new report was based on 58 interviews with escaped convict porters used in army operations from 2010 to 2011 in the country's east, scene of one of the world's longest-running civil wars.

While Myanmar's army has a long history of using civilians as porters, so many have fled across the border to Thailand and other safe areas that the military has had to bring in the prisoners instead, Pearson explained.

The report also found the use of convict porters was "systematic practice", with orders coming from "a high level" and inmates taken from a number of prisons across the country, added David Mathieson, HRW's Myanmar specialist.

The United States said in late June that it was prepared to support a UN-backed human rights probe in Myanmar, after the country's pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi called for such an investigation.

Pearson urged the international community to push harder for a UN-led commission of inquiry, saying fighting had intensified in parts of Myanmar since November's election, despite hopes it would bring gradual improvement.





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