The Martin Ennals Award committee hailed Pham Doan Trang as an “inspirational” example for activists in Vietnam.
- Title: Imprisoned Vietnamese Journalist Recognized With Human Rights Award
- Publish Date: January 20,2022
- Publisher: The Diplomat
Excerpt:
The Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang, currently at the top end of a nine year prison sentence for “anti-state” activities, has been awarded the 2022 Martin Ennals Award for Human Rights Defenders, the award committee announced yesterday.
Trang, who was garlanded along with Dr. Daouda Diallo from Burkina Faso and Bahrain’s Abdul-Hadi Al-Khawaja, was arrested in Ho Chi Minh City in October 2020, and subsequently charged under Article 117 of the Vietnamese penal code for conducting “propaganda against the State.” Last month, she was convicted and sentenced to nine years in prison.
The Martin Ennals Award, which “honors individuals and organizations that have shown exceptional commitment to defending and promoting human rights, despite the risks involved,” is due recognition for Trang’s long track record of advocacy in one-party Vietnam. As the co-founder of the dissident blog Luat Khoa Tap Chi (Journal of Law) and several other independent media outlets, Trang was for years prior to her arrest outspoken on a range of issues relating to human rights, democratic rights, and environmental protection.
Having been arrested several times before for taking part in various protests, Trang was not surprised when the authorities came for her on October 6, 2020, just hours after the conclusion of an annual human rights dialogue conference with the United States government. In a letter that she wrote in May 2019 and requested be released in the event of her detention, she told other activists to take advantage of her imprisonment to negotiate for more freedom in Vietnam, and to “advocate for the others first, then me.”
“I don’t want freedom for myself: that’s too easy,” she wrote. “I want something greater: freedom for Vietnam.”
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