March 13, 2002
His Excellency Tran Duc Luong
President, Socialist Republic of Vietnam
c/o Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Hanoi, Vietnam
Via facsimile: 011-84-4-823-1872
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is deeply concerned that writer
Tran Khue has been detained following a police search of his home. Tran
Khue is the third Vietnamese intellectual to face reprisals in the past
few months for criticizing bilateral negotiations between China and
Vietnam.
On March 8, seven police officers entered and searched Tran Khue's home in
Ho Chi Minh City. They confiscated his computer equipment and several
documents, according to CPJ sources.
On March 10, Tran Khue sent a message via cell phone to a friend
indicating that he was in danger. Since then, all means of communication
with Tran Khue have been cut, and his friends and colleagues are concerned
about his safety.
According to CPJ sources, police searched Tran Khue's house for materials
relating to an open letter that he sent to Chinese president Jiang Zemin
during Jiang's visit to Vietnam in late February. The letter, which was
distributed over the Internet, protested recent border accords between the
two countries.
(Because of your government's extraordinarily tight control over news and
information circulated within the country, CPJ classifies open letters,
pamphlets, and other forms of political speech in Vietnam as journalism.)
In recent years, China and Vietnam have signed land and sea border
agreements as part of a rapprochement following a 1979 war between the two
countries. Several dissidents have criticized the government for agreeing
to border concessions without consulting the Vietnamese people.
Tran Khue has been under tight surveillance since September 2001, when he
and other dissidents tried to legally register the "National Association
to Fight Corruption."
CPJ also calls for the release of two other dissident writers who were
detained for similar reasons around the time of President Jiang's visit to
Vietnam. On January 14, Bui Minh Quoc was put under house arrest in Dalat
and charged with "possessing anti-government literature," including his
own writings. Prior to his arrest, he had conducted extensive research on
Vietnamese territorial concessions to China, according to international
news reports.
On February 21, Le Chi Quang was detained at an Internet café and is now
being held incommunicado in B14 prison in Thanh Tri district outside
Hanoi, according to CPJ sources. He has also been an outspoken critic of
the border agreements. An essay he wrote, titled "Beware of Imperialist
China," was widely distributed on the Internet.
As a nonpartisan organization of journalists dedicated to the defense of
our colleagues worldwide, CPJ condemns your administration's efforts to
silence individuals who criticize official policies. We respectfully
remind Your Excellency that both the Vietnamese Constitution and the
United Nations International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which
Vietnam has signed, guarantee the right to freedom of expression.
We call for the immediate and unconditional release of Tran Khue, Bui Minh
Quoc, and Le Chi Quang. In addition, we respectfully urge Your Excellency
to ensure that all journalists in Vietnam are permitted to write and
publish without fear of reprisal.
Thank you for your attention to these urgent matters. We await your
response.
Sincerely,
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Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director