Tag: Freedom of Expression

  • LIV’s Trinh Huu Long in Al Jazeera: Vietnam’s battalions of ‘cyber-armies’ silencing online dissent

    Force 47 also known as Vietnam’s cyber armies under the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) hacks anti-government websites and asserts its control over online content by spreading pro-government messages in order to stamp out any form of dissent.


    Excerpt:

    Growing marking of 96 million people

    As Vietnamese searched for more information about what happened in Dong Tam a week ago, some Facebook users reported receiving the message online: “Due to legal requirements in your country, we have restricted access to your profile on Facebook. This means that other people in your country cannot see your profile, and may not be able to interact with you over Messenger.”

    Vietnam has a population of 96 million. With more than 60 million Facebook users, it is the platform’s one of the fastest-growing markets.

    Newspaper - Vietnam
    Reporters Without Borders ranks Vietnam near the bottom of its 2019 World Press Freedom Index at 176 out of 180 countries listed [Luong Thai Linh/EPA]

    “Facebook is the main source of independent news now in Vietnam,” said Trinh Huu Long, a co-founder of Legal Initiatives for Vietnam.

    “The government has been working with Facebook to try to control content posted by dissidents and independent voices,” he added.

    Searches for protests in Hong Kong have also been affected. Many, like Anh Chi, blame the cybersecurity law for the filtered information.

    “They know people in Vietnam are active on social media, and they follow the news, especially with what’s happening in Hong Kong every day,” he said. “The government fears that one day people in Vietnam will join such protests.”


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  • LIV on Qurium Vi Tran: “We Are Trying To Help People That Want Political Pluralism In Vietnam”

    Legal Initiatives for VIETNAM co-director Vi Tran recalls why she stopped working as a lawyer in California to pursue activism for her motherland, Vietnam. Her works including as co-founders for 2 online magazines, Luật khoa and The Vietnamese- where she is an editor-in-chief, revolves around her mission that is “To speak up for those that can’t”.


    Excerpt:

    She stopped working as a lawyer in California five years ago and started volunteering with a group of human rights in Vietnam to advocate for a democratic movement in the country. Vi Tran co-founded the independent magazine Luat Khoa in 2014 and, in 2017, the newspaper The Vietnamese , where she is editor-in-chief. Her mission: “To speak up for those that can’t”.

    Vi Tran does not regret leaving her job in California and moving to Taiwan. A lot of people, including her own family, she says, don’t see things this way: “They may think that I am crazy, but there is one life to live”. Vi thinks that the Vietnamese people deserves a better regime: “I believe all Vietnamese should have their human rights respected”.

    According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, Vietnam is the 6th most censored country on the world, with 11 journalists imprisoned. Reporters Without Borders states that in Vietnam “all media follow the Communist Party’s orders”. The only source of independently-reported information is bloggers and citizen-journalists, who are being subjected to persecution and prison.

    “I admire the bloggers who went to jail to keep their faith and belief in free press and freedom of expression”, Vi says. Pham Doan Trang, Luat Khoa’s co-founder, was also detained in February 2018 and now she lives at an undisclosed location. Except for her, the writers and editors of Luat Khoa and The Vietnamese have not been persecuted. Vi assures that her team takes security very seriously: “We could relocate our colleagues if we think they face danger”.

    But Luat Khoa and The Vietnamese have suffered another types of persecution: the websites are blocked in Vietnam since December 2017, one month after the birth of The Vietnamese. Vi suspects that was “because we attempted to get more publications in English, to give international readers about Vietnam, so the government blocked us”.

    Why are Luat Khoa and The Vietnamese so uncomfortable to the government? Luat Khoa is the “Law Magazine”, it talks about law, geopolitics, human rights and so and is written in Vietnamese. It has about ten regular writers, and five part-time writers that work in The Vietnamese as well. Some of them (30%) are lawyers and 80% live in Vietnam.

    “We are trying to help people that want political pluralism in Vietnam”

    Protests in Vietnam. June 10, 2018

    The Vietnamese is different from Luat Khoa. It is written in English and it acts on the basis that information about Vietnam is rather limited, foreigners often look into things that were produced by state-owned media. Vi says: “We needed to have an English site, to share with our international friends what is going on in Vietnam and give people a better idea of our movement”. The intention is “to educate people online via a website”.

    According to Vi, Vietnam is “an authoritarian regime that controls every single aspect of people’s life; there is no open Internet, it is under government control, so people are wanting the information”. There are revolutionary and oppositional forces in Vietnam, people that want to see changes, that want political pluralism. “We are trying to help them”, she says.

    Because of her current health problems, Vi Tran lives in California again. But she still works for The Vietnamese: “I am so grateful to be able to bring my compatriots stories to a larger stage and advocate for their rights”, she says. And adds: “I have tremendous love for my country and my people, no matter how far away I live away from them”.

    “Government blocks us but people want to access our information and find a way”.

    Hers is a matter of pure patriotic vision: “I have seen a lot of courageous people from Vietnam keep fighting for our human rights and civil rights, and I want to join them to push our democracy forwards”. For her, living to contribute to her country is no regrets: “I will continue to advocate and fight for Vietnam’s democracy until the day I pass away”.


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  • LIV’s Trinh Huu Long in Sveriges Radio:  Han kämpar för yttrandefrihet i Vietnam

    LIV’s Trinh Huu Long in Sveriges Radio: Han kämpar för yttrandefrihet i Vietnam


    Full Article Translation in English:

    In Vietnam, the situation is difficult for bloggers and journalists. The authorities’ persecution means that journalists have to change homes all the time.

    In Southeast Asia, there is great concern about the lack of freedom of expression. In Vietnam, with communist rule, it is complicated work to get information out.

    Journalist Long Trinh from Vietnam leads the organization Legal Initiatives for Vietnam with web-based newspapers. It is a way to build a foundation for independent media with high-quality journalism.

    – We see many violations of human rights in society as a whole. Bloggers and journalists are exposed both online and in real life. Vietnam is on a par with China and North Korea, among the worst on Reporters Without Borders’ press freedom index, says Long Trinh.

    Long Trinh lives in exile and Ekot got an interview when he was visiting Sweden.

    “Communism fell in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union 30 years ago, but it survived in Vietnam and still dominates the entire political system,” he said.

    – The Vietnamese government can not control the internet as much as China can, but fake news and hatred are spread against dissent.

    Authorities are trying to shut down websites using Facebook and Google. Vulnerable journalists have to move between homes all the time, they are beaten by police and imprisoned. According to Long Trinh, it is most difficult to report on politics:

    – But there are incredibly brave people who do not give up, he emphasizes.

    His hope is that Sweden and the EU will put more pressure on Vietnam and other countries where human rights are not a matter of course.

    – Do not abandon the very democratic values ​​in Europe for quick solutions, he urges.


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  • Luat Khoa and Pham Doan Trang in Southeast Asian Press Alliance VIETNAM: The Net as the New ‘Battlefield’

    It would be almost impossible to discuss media freedom in Vietnam without first reviewing the country’s political situation over the past year. The authoritarian state created a narrow window of opportunity for non-state and independent media to grow over the years, despite state censorship.

    Title: VIETNAM: The Net as the New ‘Battlefield’
    Publish Date: May 6, 2019
    Publisher: Southeast Asian Press Alliance (SEAPA)


    Excerpt:

    What frustrates Vietnamese Facebook users the most about this phenomenon is that Facebook has refused to explain its decisions, which it considers to be final. Affected users have been unable to find out the specific “community standard” they were accused of violating, even after they had appealed their cases.

    The standards that Facebook has been using, however, appeared even more arbitrary when coupled with the operation of its unknown, undisclosed third party’s fact-checkers. For example, in March 2019, Facebook deleted four articles from the fan page of Luat Khoa online magazine for violating its “community standards”. It has yet to give further explanation for its action. The titles of these four pieces are: “US-China’s trade negotiations: America wants China to scale down its cybersecurity law” ; “Vietnam owes Cambodia an apology”; “A look at different ‘isms’”; “Donald Trump’s life story: Crisis and a father’s safety net”.

    Over 17,000 people signed an online petition initiated by Luat Khoa in July 2018, asking Facebook to provide its position on the new cybersecurity law. A summary of the signatures was gathered and sent to Mark Zuckerberg by FedEx delivery in October 2018. Yet, the company to this day remains unresponsive. Mai Khoi, a Vietnamese dissident singer, wrote on her Facebook page in January 2019 that although she had met with several people at Facebook to discuss these issues, it did not lead to any substantial progress.

    Intimidation offline continues

    Journalist Pham Doan Trang can barely claim even cold comfort, however, for facing “only” increased intimidation and threats from the government during this past year. The actions of the government against her seem to be connected to her publication of her books. To date, Trang has written and published three books on the topics of politics, policymaking, and criminal procedures.


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  • Pham Doan Trang in CIVICUS: Despite International Scrutiny, Vietnam Continues To Conduct Surveillance, Harass And Jail Activists

    Pham Doan Trang, co-founder and co-editor for The Vietnamese Magazine and Luat Khoa narrates her ordeal as she is constantly harassed by the government. According to Civicus, Vietnam “presented a grossly inaccurate picture of its human rights record” and the repression in the country has been severe.


    Excerpt:

    In January 2019, Vietnam’s human rights record was reviewed at the UN Human Rights Council. In July 2018, CIVICUS together with Civil Society Forum, Human Rights Foundation (HRF), VOICE and VOICE Vietnam had made a submission to the Council assessing the civic space situation in the country. The government received 291 recommendations during the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) with at least 37 recommendation related to civic space.

    According to civil society, Vietnam “presented a grossly inaccurate picture of its human rights record” at the UPR and that the repression in the country has been severe. According to The 88 Project, there was an increase in the number of activists arrested and tried in 2018. 103 people were arrested for their peaceful political activities, up from 43 in 2017. As of December 2018, there were 210 political prisoners serving sentences in Vietnam. 2018 also saw intensified harassment of peaceful protesters as well as daily surveillance, travel restrictions, and physical assaults of activists.

    Harassment and intimidation of activist

    Outrageous #Vietnam government harassment & rights abuse continue against journalist Pham Doan Trang. #Hanoi again criminalizing critical thought and expression, showing why it’s among the worst dictatorships in #ASEAN. @hrw @MOFAVietNam @PressDept_MoFA https://t.co/KmmL9bBJaS pic.twitter.com/a0ZAfznLwr March 19, 2019

    On 18th March 2019, activist and journalist Pham Doan Trang reported that the secret police was undertaking surveillance of her home. Pham is a member of the Vietnamese Magazine editorial board and a founding member of our Vietnamese site, Luat Khoa online magazine.

    According to Pham, since the Tet celebration in February 2019, the secret police began to monitor the home of her mother in Hanoi. Pham believes that the police were waiting for her to go back and visit her family during the celebration so that they could arrest her.

    However, because she did not go back to Hanoi, the secret police subsequently used different methods to locate her whereabouts. Hackers have also attempted to gain access to Pham’s Facebook on numerous occasions.

    As previously documented, in February 2018, Pham Doan Trang went into hiding after she was interrogated by security officials for over ten hours. She was questioned about a textbook she recently published as well as her news articles and blog posts on topics ranging from the environment, freedom of religion and online civil society. In November 2017 she was detained after meeting with the EU delegation in Vietnam.


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  • Pham Doan Trang in SouthEast Asian Press Alliance:  Prominent blogger detained anew

    Pham Doan Trang in SouthEast Asian Press Alliance: Prominent blogger detained anew

    Blogger and author Pham Doan Trang has gone missing for a couple of hours. It was later revealed that she was held up by the police for 9 hours. She is now under house arrest after being interrogated for publishing the book Politics for All.


    Excerpt:

    Vietnamese blogger and activist Pham Doan Trang was detained for nine hours by police in Hanoi on 8 March 2018.

    During that day, Doan Trang’s friends reported seeing a lot of police in civilian clothes around her area. There was no word of her whereabouts until late evening. According to The 88 Project, “She’s now back to the place where she was staying and remains under tight surveillance.”

    Her detention comes as the world marked the International Women’s Day.

    Doan Trang was also taken into custody last 24 February 2018 for 10 hours by security officers from the Ministry of Public Security. Based on news reports, Vietnamese authorities forcefully took her without an arrest warrant and was interrogated for publishing the book “Chính trị bình dân (Politics for the Masses).”

    She was also arrested in November 2017 after meeting the European Union Delegation to discuss human rights issues in Vietnam.

    In an interview with Asia Times, she said: “I don’t know why they hate me and my book so much. After all, it’s just a textbook.” The book discusses basic political concepts of democracy in Vietnamese language.

    “The problem for us is that a communist police state like Vietnam dislikes its people to broaden their political awareness and their participation in macro affairs,” she said.

    She wrote a Facebook post on 26 February 2018: “I am fighting any kind of dictatorship, and because the communist state in Vietnam now is a totalitarian regime, I have been and will be fighting to end it.”

    Doan Trang worked for online newspaper VnExpress, Pháp luật Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh (The Law in Ho Chi Minh city newspaper), and VietnamNet. She was detained in 2009, beaten in 2015, taken in 2016, and again detained in 2017 for her activism. She continues to write on her personal blog and contribute for Vietnam Right Now, an independent news website.


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  • LIV’s Trinh Huu Long in Asean Economist: Vietnam completes online clampdown

    Vietnam political activists and dissidents who use Facebook to express their discontentment are now being arrested.  Artist Do Nguyen Mai Khoi blames the Facebook for its inability to protect freedom of expression. Legal Initiatives for VIETNAM co-founder Trinh Huu Long fills in why dissident activists and artists are having a tough time making a living in Vietnam.


    Excerpt:

    Legislation requiring internet companies operating in Vietnam to remove content the one-party state regards as “toxic” has come into effect, in a move critics have called “totalitarian” information control.

    The Hanoi government has clearly decided it is happy to bolster its grip on power at the expense of the freedom with which the internet is normally associated. But it remains to be seen if the heavy-handed approach will stifle investment in Vietnam’s large tech sector and stamp out the innovation that breeds best away from the censors.

    Vietnam’s cybersecurity law has received criticism from Washington, the European Union and rights activists, who say it copies Chinese online censorship.

    Facebook, Google and other tech firms will also have to hand over user data requested by the authorities, open offices inside the Communist state and store user data.

    There are already numerous case studies showing how tech giants will trade users’ privacy rights for market access.

    Political activists and dissidents who regularly use Facebook to discuss and share material on issues such as human rights and democracy now risk being arrested and charged with spreading anti-state propaganda.

    Dissident artist Do Nguyen Mai Khoi blamed the internet giants rather than Vietnam’s communist authorities.

    “Facebook doesn’t show what it’s doing to protect freedom of expression. It has recently locked activists out of their accounts and deleted their posts,” the 35-year-old singer-songwriter said. “YouTube has even removed my song, We Want, and now it can’t be viewed inside Vietnam,” she added.

    Ten years ago Mai’s hit song, Vietnam, won her accolades.

    But then Mai stopped submitting her lyrics to Vietnam’s censors and her performances were effectively banned as the police made it clear she had been blacklisted.

    “The police intervened in Mai Khoi’s concerts many times. They make it very hard for her to live and to make a living in Vietnam,” said Long Trinh of Legal Initiatives for Vietnam, a magazine focussing on Vietnamese political and legal issues. “The government is very worried about her activities.”

    The Communist authorities will no doubt see sacrificing the career of a pop star as a small price to pay to retain a solid grip on power.


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  • LIV’s Vi Tran and Pham Doan Trang in Al Jazeera: Digital dictatorship in Vietnam seeks to silence dissidents

    LIV’s Vi Tran and Pham Doan Trang in Al Jazeera: Digital dictatorship in Vietnam seeks to silence dissidents

    The Cybersecurity Law will take effect on January 1, 2019.  Blogger Pham Doan Trang, one of Vietnam’s prolific writers and a known government critic, shares her experiences on repression and authority harassment.  With the new law, activists like Doan Trang fear the government will attempt to silence the voices of the people who are using Facebook as their platform to voice their opinions.  

    Reporters Without Borders’ 2018 World Press Freedom Index ranks Vietnam 175 out of 180 countries – one point ahead of China.

    Title: Digital dictatorship in Vietnam seeks to silence dissidents
    Publish Date: November 15, 2018
    Publisher: Al Jazeera


    Excerpt:

    Activists fear new cyber law will allow authorities to crack down harshly on those promoting freedom of expression.

    Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam – Pham Doan Trang strums softly on an acoustic guitar. She’s performing the Vietnamese folk song Water Ferns Drift Clouds Float Far. It’s a song permitted by Vietnam’s government. The authorities keep a close eye on any public performance.

    Trang, 39, now suffers when she plays the song. Not because of its moving lyrics or melody but because she can barely strum the chords. Last August, Trang was arrested along with 50 others at a concert in a Ho Chi Minh City teashop.

    “They raided the concert. They said the singer was singing unpermitted songs,” Trang said.

    “They have a law that stipulates that every songwriter must register to perform and disseminate a song. That means if you compose a song and perform it somewhere without asking for permission, you are doing something illegal.”

    Witnesses watched as police physically assaulted Trang who was seated in the audience. While in police custody, she sustained injuries to both hands. Many weeks later, bruises still cover her knuckles.

    She was never charged with a crime but had her passport, phone and laptop confiscated.

    It was not the first time Trang was arrested or assaulted. In 2015, she was participating in a protest against the felling of trees in the capital, Hanoi. Police descended on protesters and both her knees were broken.

    This has left her with a debilitating limp.

    “Since I became an activist, I [have been] attacked, physically attacked, many times by the police. Now I am disabled,” Trang said, looking down at her hands, knees and mobility aid by her side.

    “Once you learn about freedom, it’s very hard for you to stop.”

    Communist mindset

    Trang is one of Vietnam’s most prolific dissident writers. Her most recent book Politics for the Masses got her briefly detained earlier this year. It’s a political primer for pro-democracy activists.

    “Many people say this book can give me a prison sentence of 20 years. This book may give me a death sentence. It’s a logical deduction,” Trang said. “I don’t know what is their strategy or plan. I mean [a] status on Facebook may attract several likes, not hundreds or thousands, but people are still given 20 years [in prison]. I can’t understand the mindset of communists.”

    Facebook overthrow?

    From Facebook down to the Streets is a 2016 samizdat book by Pham Doan Trang. It raised the attention of Vietnamese authorities as it documented the country’s nascent environmental movement.

    Trang is extremely careful with her online activity. She knows any comment she posts to Facebook could be used to prosecute her and send her to prison like many of her peers.

    Vietnam’s government has stated it employs a 10,000-strong cyber “task force” to monitor activists.

    “What are they thinking? Do they actually think that people writing on Facebook can overthrow the administration?” Trang asked.

    Since last June, nationwide protests against Vietnam’s proposed Special Economic Zones and cybersecurity law have caught Hanoi off guard. Hundreds were arrested.

    “Vietnamese Facebook users are close to 60 million,” said Vi Tran, co-director of Legal Initiatives for Vietnam. “Many large protests [against the government] around the country have started on Facebook.”

    Inside Vietnam, historically information flowed from the top down via state-run media, but with the rise of blogging and social media platforms now the news flows horizontally with bloggers and journalists writing and sharing news independently.

    Reporters Without Borders’ 2018 World Press Freedom Index ranks Vietnam 175 out of 180 countries – one point ahead of China. Freedom House says Vietnam is not free.

    A song for freedom

    The law will come into effect on January 1, 2019. Tech giants Facebook and Google have been given one year from this date to comply. Human Rights Watch has called it disastrous for freedom of expression in Vietnam.

    Vietnamese civil society groups are concerned Facebook has begun to block or shut down accounts requested by the authorities. This move could silence many dissidents currently using the platform to share independent news and opinions.

    “I just feel worried for other people. I’m so familiar with violent suppression and political repression,” Trang said. “But for other people, it’s a real danger because now they can be arrested and given lengthy prison terms for a post.”

    Trang is extremely worried about the deteriorating human rights situation in Vietnam. But she’s optimistic about the peaceful, non-violent, methods used by her compatriots to express their dissatisfaction with the regime in Hanoi.


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  • LIV’s Vi Tran in ASEAN Learning Center:  US protester released from detention in Vietnam after trial

    LIV’s Vi Tran in ASEAN Learning Center: US protester released from detention in Vietnam after trial

    Human rights lawyer and Legal Initiatives for VIETNAM co-director Vi Tran, said the right to demonstrate is guaranteed in Vietnam’s constitution. But with the recent convictions of William Nguyen and other individuals for “illegally protesting” show how the law has been inconsistently implemented.


    Full Article:

    Vi Tran, a human rights lawyer based in Taiwan who focuses on Vietnamese law, said in an email she was “beyond happy to see Will released” but suspected Vietnamese people facing the same charge would not be treated the same way.

    It was wrong, she said, to say Nguyen and other demonstrators had been taking part in “illegal protests”, as state media outlets have done.

    “No law in Vietnam has yet defined [or] regulated ‘protest’ or ‘demonstration’, except that the right to demonstrate is guaranteed in our constitution,” she said.

    “I think the verdict again shows how the law in Vietnam is arbitrarily implemented. Recently, Vietnam sentenced six individuals on the same charge to up to 30 months in prison, and there are still 20 Vietnamese nationals … awaiting their fate for participating in the same 10 June protest. I suspect none of them would receive the same leniency the court has shown to Will.”

    Legal analysts had been unsure of how the court would rule and the outcome was the best for which Nguyen and his family could have hoped. Local media explained that though Nguyen was convicted, he was released since it was his first offense and he had shown repentance in a nationally televised confession.

    The trial took place at the main courthouse in central Ho Chi Minh City. Outside the colonial-era building, police guarded intersections and shooed away passersby.

    The US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, visited Hanoi before the trial and raised the case with his Vietnamese counterparts. He made no public comment.

    The California congressman Jimmy Gomez led the crafting of an 18 July letter in which 19 members of Congress called for Pompeo to secure Nguyen’s freedom.

    In a statement following the trial, Gomez said: “I take great comfort in knowing that my constituent, William Nguyen, will soon be reunited with his family after his harrowing ordeal in Vietnam. The sheer determination and resolve exhibited by the Nguyen family during this traumatic experience was nothing short of inspiring.”

    In an email, an official from the US state department said: “We are pleased that the case of US citizen William Nguyen has been resolved. Mr Nguyen has been released from custody and is with his family. We have no higher priority than the safety and security of US citizens abroad.”


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  • Pham Doan Trang in Radio Free Asia: Vietnam Detains Three Activist Bloggers Who Met With EU Delegation

    Police detained Pham Doan Trang, Nguyen Quang A, and former prisoner of conscience Bui Thi Minh Hang after the trio had met with EU representatives in preparation for an annual human rights dialogue between the EU and Vietnam.

    Luat Khoa Tap Chi condemned Trang’s detention, calling the act a “violation of Vietnamese and international law.”

    Title: Vietnam Detains Three Activist Bloggers Who Met With EU Delegation
    Publish Date: November 17, 2017
    Publisher: Radio Free Asia (RFA)


    Excerpt:

    Authorities in Vietnam’s capital Hanoi briefly detained three activist bloggers shortly after they met with representatives of the European Union to discuss the situation of human rights in their country, according to one of the trio.

    Police detained Pham Doan Trang, Nguyen Quang A, and former prisoner of conscience Bui Thi Minh Hang around noon on Nov. 16 as they left a meeting with the EU officials, though A and Hang were freed several hours later, Hang told RFA’s Vietnamese Service on Friday.

    “When we were leaving the building, Trang and I were going to go buy something for lunch, but all of a sudden about 20 [police] rushed us and took me into a car to separate us,” said the blogger, who was released from prison in February after serving a three-year prison sentence on charges of “causing public disorder.”

    “It was Trang who they really wanted to take, because she’s been contributing so much to our movement. The security officials are very angry at her.”

    According to a statement issued Friday by the Luat Khoa Tap Chi [Journal of Law] blog, which was cofounded by Trang, police eventually returned her to her home around midnight that evening and placed her under guard. A number of Trang’s personal belongings, including her cellphone and laptop, were confiscated, the statement said.

    Luat Khoa Tap Chi condemned Trang’s detention, during which she was held incommunicado, calling the act a “violation of Vietnamese and international law.”

    Trang was also placed Trang in an “extremely dangerous situation” because she is currently undergoing medical treatment for a leg injury, the statement said.

    Hang told RFA that Thursday’s meeting was held in preparation for an annual human rights dialogue between the EU and Vietnam set for next month, and that Trang had provided the EU delegation with updated reports on the human rights situation in Vietnam, the Formosa toxic waste spill that destroyed the livelihoods of coastal residents last year, and the state of religious freedom in the country.

    “They always want to talk with activists in the country before this dialogue,” she said.

    Ongoing crackdown

    Activists are routinely harassed by authorities for meeting with foreign delegations in one-party Communist Vietnam, where dissent is not tolerated.

    Trang was prevented from attending a meeting to discuss human rights with then-U.S. President Barack Obama when he visited Hanoi in May 2016, though she was not detained.

    Vietnam is currently holding at least 84 prisoners of conscience, the highest number in any country in Southeast Asia, according to rights group Amnesty International.


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