Vietnam frees
political prisoner days before Barack Obama visit
Catholic priest Nguyen Van Ly has spent most of the past two
decades in detention due to his relentless pursuit of democracy and religious
freedom
Catholic priest Nguyen Van Ly, lower center, is seen on
close-circuit TV in a courtroom in Vietnam’s central province of Thua Thien Hue
in 2007. Photograph: Tran Van Minh/AP
Vietnam has freed one of its longest-serving political
prisoners, just a few days before a visit by Barack Obama in which human rights
is expected to be a key talking point.
Nguyen Van Ly, a Catholic priest who has spent most of the past
two decades in detention due to his relentless pursuit of democracy and
religious freedom, was released from a prison in central Hue province after his
fourth stint behind bars.
“They released him in a special amnesty by Vietnam’s president
before the Obama trip,” Catholic priest Phan Van Loi told Reuters by phone.
The communist country’s state-controlled media has made no mention
of Ly’s release, which comes as Obama weighs whether to lift an arms embargo on
Vietnam, a decision Washington has long said would
hinge on human rights progress.
Loi said that he met Ly after his release and that although he
appeared weak, he was in high spirits.
The US embassy in Hanoi welcomed the release of Ly but said other
dissidents should be freed too.
“We call on the government to release unconditionally all
prisoners of conscience and allow all Vietnamese to express their political
views peacefully without fear of retribution,” an embassy spokesman said.
During Ly’s long periods of incarceration, sometimes in solitary
confinement, he suffered numerous health problems, including strokes and
partial paralysis.
Ly’s release on Friday was three months before the end of an
eight-year prison sentence for “anti-state propaganda”, which comes under a
section of the criminal code that rights groups say is vaguely worded and used
to punish outspoken critics.
The priest has been on the receiving end of some of the country’s
harshest verdicts, stemming from his opposition to the political monopoly of
the Communist party. He set up a pro-democracy movement and was behind several
banned publications.
Human rights is a thorny issue for Vietnam that has created
dilemmas for western governments keen to engage with one of Asia’s
fastest-growing economies but alarmed by the arrests, harassment and jailing of
its detractors.
Vietnam is keen to see the arms embargo removed, to give it better
bargaining power in defence procurements and access to advanced United States
technology, in what experts say is to counter China’s maritime assertiveness.
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Catholic priest Nguyen Van Ly has spent most of the past two
decades in detention due to his relentless pursuit of democracy and religious
freedom
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Aperçu par Yahoo
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