Tag: Pham Doan Trang

  • LIV’s Trinh Huu Long and Pham Doan Trang in Radio Free Asia: Vietnamese Blogger Pham Doan Trang Receives Award For Work to Improve Journalistic Freedom

    Author and journalist  Pham Doan Trang, co-founder of Luật Khoa and The Vietnamese, in her video message during the 2019 Press Freedom Prize ceremony in Berlin, said that she will continue her passion for truth and commitment to change… hoping for a democratic Vietnam.  

    Legal Initiatives for VIETNAM co-founder Trinh Huu Long confirmed that the prominent journalist, now a Prize for Impact honoree, has suffered severe injuries in her arms and legs after being beaten by the police in August 2018.


    Excerpt:  

    Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has awarded its 2019 Press Freedom Prize to three female journalists, including prominent Vietnamese blogger Pham Doan Trang, who authored a book on political engagement that angered authorities in Hanoi.

    Trang, who has vowed to remain in Vietnam until the country becomes a democracy, was awarded RSF’s Prize for Impact in absentia for her work which “has led to concrete improvements in journalistic freedom, independence and pluralism, or to an increase in awareness of these matters.”

    In a video Trang recorded that was played during the award ceremony in Berlin, Germany, on Thursday, the author of Politics for Everyone said that while Vietnam’s Constitution contains language which, among other things, guarantees the protection of human rights such as freedom of speech, “it doesn’t mean anything.”

    “We have all the human rights guaranteed by the Constitution, but you know, in fact, ‘all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than the others,’” Trang said, referencing George Orwell’s political satire Animal Farm.

    “The more-equal-than-others ‘animals’ like to see us [journalists] as losers, as their hostile forces, as their state enemy, enemy of the people, and fake news producers,” she said, adding that “they do everything they can to harm us, to destroy us.”

    “But it doesn’t matter much to us because we have what they don’t have. We have a passion for truth, we have a commitment to change, and we have hope … [that Vietnam will] soon turn into a democracy … where journalists like me, like us, can travel everywhere and not [have] to hide from the police, but can listen to unheard voices and tell untold stories, to bring information and knowledge to the people.”

    Trang, who also founded the online legal magazine Luat Khoa and edits another web-based rights journal called thevietnamese, noted that Vietnam is home to nearly 1,000 official media outlets, but said the country has “only one editor-in-chief—the head of the propaganda department of the [ruling] Communist Party.”

    And while some 20,000 journalists have been granted press cards or have been licensed to report, she said that “thousands of people have been imprisoned over the past two decades just because they spoke their mind.”

    Trang thanked RSF for the recognition and said she also received her award on behalf of others “fighting for the truth” around the world.

    “We will fight until journalism is no longer seen as a crime anywhere in the world,” she said.

    ‘Struggling with injuries’

    Huu Long Trinh, a Vietnamese journalist based in Taipei, Taiwan, who co-founded the civil society organization Legal Initiatives for Vietnam (LIV), accepted RSF’s Prize For Courage on Trang’s behalf, noting that the blogger is “struggling with severe injuries in her arms and legs” after she was beaten by police because of her work in August 2018.

    A colleague told RFA’s Vietnamese Service at the time that Trang was among at least four activists who were attacked after policemen stormed into a cafe and broke up dissident singer Nguyen Tin’s “Memory of Saigon” show. She was then taken by police to an unknown road outside the city and “beaten further to the point of disfiguring her face.”


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  • Pham Doan Trang in Voice of America: Vietnamese Blogger Wins Press Freedom Award

    Luật Khoa co-founder and blogger Pham Doan Trang receives the 2019 Press Freedom Prize for Impact from Reporters Without Borders (RSF.) A known critic of the Vietnam Communist Party, she has faced harassment, assault and detention but continues to lead the fight for truth, justice and human rights in Vietnam.


    Excerpt:

    An international press freedom monitor has awarded Vietnamese journalist and blogger Pham Doan Trang a 2019 Press Freedom Prize for Impact.

    “Pham Doan Trang is a true heroine given the situation of press freedom in Vietnam, where journalists and bloggers who do not toe the line of the current direction of the Communist Party face extremely severe repercussions,” said Daniel Bastard, who heads the Asia-Pacific Desk of Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

    Founder of Luât Khoa

    Trang’s prize is awarded to journalists whose work has led to concrete improvements in journalistic freedom, independence and pluralism, or to an increase in awareness of these matters, according to an RSF statement.

    Trang founded Luât Khoa, an online magazine that specializes in providing information about legal issues, and she edits another, The Vietnamese, which helps citizens defend their rights and resist the Communist Party’s rule, RSF said.

    Colleague accepted award

    Because Vietnamese authorities wanted to set conditions on Trang for her to leave the country to accept the award, which she said she would not consent to, her friend and colleague, Trinh Huu Long, editor-in-chief for Luât Khoa magazine, accepted the award on Trang’s behalf.

    “I hope this award will encourage the Vietnamese people to engage more in press freedom and to push Hanoi to improve the citizens’ basic rights,” Trang told VOA Vietnamese.

    “I really wish it [will] encourage other journalists, including freelance journalists, to become more committed to pursuing truth, justice and human rights in Vietnam,” said Trang, who was born in 1978.

    “I hope this award can help gain more international recognition of the hidden wave under the so-called political stability in the country. Below that surface is a layer of waves of repression and silence,” she added.

    Grateful for RSF

    RSF said that the Vietnamese government tries to stifle Trang’s voice through police intimidation, because she exposes its inconsistencies and its failure to guarantee civil and political rights.

    Despite the major crackdown that began in 2016, Trang plays a crucial role in helping her fellow citizens gain access to independent information and enabling them to use the rule of law, as guaranteed by the Vietnamese constitution, against the arbitrary practices of the authorities, Bastard said.

    “I believe that RSF’s goals for giving the award are to let journalists around the world, especially journalists who are victims of persecution, harassment, abuse and persecution, [know they] are not alone in their fights,” Trang said. “RSF has really helped people like me to feel I’m not alone.”

    Her books, such as Politics for the Common People, A Handbook for Families of Prisoners and Politics of a Police State, were all published outside Vietnam. They “received much more readership than I expected,” Trang said.

    Trang has been beaten by the police because of her work and was detained arbitrarily twice for several days in 2018, according to an RSF statement.


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  • Pham Doan Trang in RFI Vietnamese Việt Nam : Blogger Phạm Đoan Trang được giải tự do báo chí của RSF

    Luật Khoa co-founder and journalist Pham Doan Trang is named as one of the three awardees of the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) 2019 Press Freedom Prize.


    Full Article in Vietnamese:

    Tối qua 12/09/2019 tổ chức Phóng Viên Không Biên Giới (RSF) có trụ sở tại Paris đã trao Giải tự do báo chí 2019 cho ba nhà báo nữ, trong đó có blogger Phạm Đoan Trang ở Việt Nam.

    Giải thưởng này lần đầu tiên được trao tại Berlin, ở nhà hát Deutches Theater, với sự hiện diện của nhiều khách mời quan trọng như thị trưởng Berlin (Michael Müller), tổng biên tập The Guardian (Alan Rusbridger) và một số nhà báo từng đoạt giải.

    Phạm Đoan Trang được tặng giải « Tác động », dành cho các nhà báo đã giúp cải thiện cụ thể sự tự do, độc lập và đa chiều của nghề báo hoặc đánh động ý thức về vấn đề này. Bà đã thành lập Luật Khoa tạp chí trên mạng và tham gia biên tập trang web thevietnamese, giúp độc giả hiểu thêm về luật pháp để bảo vệ quyền lợi của mình, chống lại sự độc đoán.

    Bà Đoan Trang cũng là tác giả của nhiều cuốn sách, trong đó có một tác phẩm cổ vũ quyền của cộng đồng LGBT (người đồng tính, chuyển giới). Blogger này từng bị đánh đập nhiều lần, và bị giam giữ tùy tiện nhiều ngày trong năm 2018.

    Giải « Can đảm » được trao cho nhà báo Ả Rập Xê Út Eman Al Nafjan, người sáng lập trang web SaudiWomen.me và là tác giả nhiều bài viết trên báo chí quốc tế, đấu tranh cho quyền lợi phụ nữ Ả Rập Xê Út. Bà bắt tháng 5/2018 và hiện nay đang trong tình trạng bị quản thúc, có nguy cơ lãnh án đến 20 năm tù.

    Giải « Độc lập » dành cho nhà báo Caroline Muscat ở Malta. Sau khi nhà báo điều tra Daphne Caruana Galizia bị ám sát, bà Muscat tiếp tục tố cáo nhiều vụ tham nhũng liên quan đến các quan chức Malta.

    Được thành lập năm 1992, các giải thưởng của Phóng Viên Không Biên Giới ngoài giá trị danh dự còn được kèm theo số tiền tượng trưng là 2.500 euro. Trong quá khứ, RSF đã từng trao giải cho một số nhân vật như Lưu Hiểu Ba (Liu Xiaobo), sau này trở thành khôi nguyên Nobel.

    Trên Facebook cá nhân, blogger Phạm Đoan Trang đã đăng một video clip (có phụ đề tiếng Việt) gởi đến tham gia buổi lễ trao giải do không đến dự được, đồng thời gởi lời cám ơn đến những độc giả lâu nay của bà.


    Full Article in English:

    Last night, September 12, 2019, the Paris-based organization Reporters Without Borders (RSF) awarded the 2019 Press Freedom Prize to three female journalists, including blogger Pham Doan Trang in Vietnam.

    This award was presented for the first time in Berlin, at the Deutches Theater, in the presence of many important guests such as the mayor of Berlin (Michael Müller), editor-in-chief of The Guardian (Alan Rusbridger) and a number of journalists. award-winning.

    Pham Doan Trang was awarded the “Impact” award, which is given to journalists who have specifically helped improve the freedom, independence and multi-dimensionality of journalism or raised awareness about this issue. She founded Luat Khoa, an online magazine and edited the website thevietnamese, helping readers understand more about the law to protect their rights and fight tyranny.

    Ms. Doan Trang is also the author of many books, including one that promotes the rights of the LGBT community (gay, transgender). This blogger was beaten many times, and arbitrarily detained for several days in 2018.

    The “Courage” award was presented to Saudi journalist Eman Al Nafjan, the founder of the website SaudiWomen.me and the author of many articles in the international press, fighting for the rights of Saudi women. . She was arrested in May 2018 and is currently under house arrest, risking a sentence of up to 20 years in prison.

    The “Independence” award goes to journalist Caroline Muscat from Malta. After the assassination of investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia, Ms. Muscat continued to denounce numerous corruption cases involving Maltese officials.

    Established in 1992, the awards of Reporters Without Borders, in addition to the honorary value, are accompanied by a symbolic amount of 2,500 euros. In the past, RSF has awarded prizes to a number of people such as Liu Xiaobo (Liu Xiaobo), who later became a Nobel laureate.

    On her personal Facebook, blogger Pham Doan Trang posted a video clip (with Vietnamese subtitles) sent to attend the award ceremony because she could not attend, and thanked her longtime readers.


  • LIV’s Pham Doan Trang and Trinh Huu Long in BBC News Tiếng Việt: Nhà báo ‘không lề’ Phạm Đoan Trang được giải Tự do Báo chí 2019

    LIV’s Pham Doan Trang and Trinh Huu Long in BBC News Tiếng Việt: Nhà báo ‘không lề’ Phạm Đoan Trang được giải Tự do Báo chí 2019

    2019 Press Freedom Prize honoree Pham Doan Trang talks to the BBC on the relevance of her Prize for Impact award especially to freelance journalists, bloggers, writers.. everyone who fights and works for democracy in Vietnam.


    Excerpt:

    Note:  Original texts in Vietnamese.

    Freelance journalist Pham Doan Trang was awarded the 2019 Freedom of the Press Award by Reporters Without Borders, in the category of Influence.

    Run for 27 years, the Freedom of the Press awards honor those who refuse to remain silent, “despite the most extreme circumstances” and “threats to life and body,” the statement said. Reporters Without Borders writes.

    From Hanoi, journalist Pham Doan Trang gave an interview to the BBC after hearing the news from Berlin.

    Ms. Pham Doan Trang: Knowing that I have been awarded the Press Freedom award in the category of Influence, I am very happy. That means that Reporters Without Borders organization evaluates that my works have had a certain impact on the Vietnamese reader community.

    I am very grateful to my readers. My main feeling right now is to thank those who have read my work, both at home and abroad. I believe that it is no coincidence that Reporters Without Borders is aware of my works.

    BBC: This year’s announcement and award ceremony took place in Berlin. She did not attend even though she was invited. Why?

    Ms. Pham Doan Trang: To go to Berlin, I will definitely have to work with the Ministry of Public Security in the exit procedures. There is no shortage of cases of activists in Vietnam who already have exit visas from foreign countries and bought plane tickets, but when they go to the airport, they are detained by the police and not allowed to go.

    I knew in advance that I would fall into such a situation. Not to mention, if it is possible to leave the country, when returning, immigration procedures will also be detained, will have to go through unpleasant dialogues with the security party.

    I know they will set conditions, and I also know in advance that I will not accept them.

    So I decided not to go, to avoid having to go through those uncomfortable conversations.

    BBC: Although the press freedom award has been awarded for nearly 30 years, it is known that she is the first Vietnamese to be awarded the award as a professional reporter . Will this have any impact on the activities of you and freelance journalists in Vietnam in the future?

    Ms. Pham Doan Trang: I don’t want to make predictions about the future, but I hope that this award will have a positive value not only for me personally but also for the whole community that fights and works for democracy. , the community of freelance journalists, bloggers, netizens in Vietnam, who dare to use social networks to voice their opinions, who are always direct victims of bullying, oppression and terrorism by the police.

    Thousands of bloggers have been constantly “noticed”, and in the past two years alone, hundreds of people have been sent to prison for things related to livestream on Facebook.

    I hope this award of mine, as the mission of Reporters Without Borders puts it, will bring comfort to journalists in countries that are still authoritarian, so that they can feel that they are not alone, they are always supported, supported, encouraged, encouraged, knowing that their work is not in vain, unknown to anyone.

    I hope that in the near future, in Vietnam, there will continue to be more people boldly speaking up, voicing their views and opinions on socio-political issues.

    In particular, I very much look forward to the appearance of more writers, more freelance journalists, independent journalists, bloggers with professional writing careers, including ‘right-margin’ journalists, participating in the event. social democratization through the media.

    BBC: She started her career as a journalist in what she calls a ‘right-wing’ journalist before moving to a freelance journalist position. What do you think is the biggest difference between your role when holding a pen and writing as a person in the mainstream press system and when holding a pen to write in another marginal position?

    Ms. Pham Doan Trang: I have worked at the mainstream newspaper, which we often call the state newspaper, or the state-owned newspaper for quite a long time. I worked from 2000 until 2013.

    During those 13 years, I worked continuously for VnExpress, VietnamNet, Ho Chi Minh City Law Newspaper, VTC Television, and other places, about 10 different press agencies.

    I also do publishing work. Therefore, I think I have a good understanding of journalism in Vietnam under the censorship of the Communist Party’s Propaganda Department.

    Since switching to being a freelance journalist, or as we call ourselves ‘unmarried’ journalists, I see a lot of difference.

    I also realized that there are many things that we have misunderstood from time immemorial.

    The most obvious difference is more repression.

    Free journalists are persecuted by every means, from the subtlest to the grossest. The free space for ‘margin’ journalists is much less than for oriented journalists.

    Another big difference that people often misunderstood, or so to say is a misconception so far. That is, people think freelance journalists will not be as influential as mainstream journalists. The articles of freelance journalists are not read by anyone, or only have a negligible number of readers. That is a common concept, and is especially common in mainstream journalism and in police circles.

    I know that many of my colleagues in mainstream newspapers question why they have to break their pen to work as ‘reactionaries’, why not go to work for a certain newspaper but go freelance. How many people can it be written down like that?

    While if we put ourselves in a newspaper that follows the direction of the Party and the State, we still have the opportunity to have the article published in the newspaper, read by many people, create a greater influence, maybe even influence to policy, through public officials read their articles and they will change their policies, change their minds, etc..

    They argue that the influence of the mainstream press is still stronger than that of the fringe press.

    I think that is a misconception, and every day I find it more and more wrong.

    We see that bloggers, Facebookers who have never been recognized by the state, such as Wind Trader, have great influence.

    So does publishing. When I embarked on ‘off-the-shelf’ publishing, i.e. not with officially licensed state publishers, I found that the ‘off-the-shelf’ audience was surprisingly large.

    I believe the readership of the Liberal Publishing, such an ‘out-of-the-box’ publisher, is larger than that of the National Political Publishing House, i.e. the Truth Publishing of the day.

    In comparison, the number of prints is more, the number of readers is more, the influence is more, the level of interaction with readers is much more.

    We had people delivering Liberal Publishing books, specifically my books, to readers, and there were readers who hugged the transcriber and cried, saying, “Thank you for your help. brave enough for us to have these books.”

    Of course, there is also the risk of being ‘trapped’ by the police, but we can feel the genuine affection that our readers have for us.

    So it can be said that the noticeable difference is the degree of influence between the ‘out-of-the-box’ and the mainstream, the level of readers’ affection for each.


    Download article in Vietnamese:

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  • LIV’s Trinh Huu Long in Thoibao.de: Phạm Đoan Trang nhận giải báo chí 2019: Phỏng vấn anh Trịnh Hữu Long và chị Lê Thị Minh Hà

    Watch Legal Initiatives for VIETNAM co-director Trinh Huu Long as he receives the 2019 JOURNALISM AWARD in behalf of his colleague Pham Doan Trang.


    Watch the Interview:

    Interviewing Mr. Trinh Huu Long (receiving the award on behalf of Doan Trang) and Ms. Le Thi Minh Ha (Anh Ba Sam’s wife) right in the hall, after awarding the award.


  • Pham Doan Trang in UCA News: Vietnamese journalist wins press freedom award

    Pham Doan Trang, Luật Khoa and The Vietnamese co-founder, was honored by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) with the Prize for Impact.  

    In her recorded acceptance message, Ms. Trang says the award “shows that “journalists around the world, especially those who are victims of persecution, maltreatment, torture and extortion by government authorities, are not alone in their fight for justice, truth and human rights.”


    Excerpt:

    The press freedom efforts of a Vietnamese blogger-reporter were honored at a Reporters Without Borders (RSF) event held in Berlin on Sept. 12.

    Pham Doan Trang, 41, won RSF’s Prize for Impact, an award granted to journalists whose work improves journalistic freedoms, independence and pluralism.

    Trang was unable to receive her prize in person, so it was instead accepted by one of her colleagues, Trinh Huu Long, at the German event.

    For her press work, Trang was beaten and detained twice for several days in 2018.

    Trang is the founder of www.luatkhoa.org, an online magazine that specializes in providing legal information. She also works as an editor of www.thevietnamese.org, which assists Vietnamese citizens to defend their rights in their communist-run country.

    She is the author of many books including one defending the rights of Vietnam’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities.

    In a brief video clip sent to the ceremony, Trang played the guitar and sang a folk song.

    She also said RSF’s annual Press Freedom Awards shows that “journalists around the world, especially those who are victims of persecution, maltreatment, torture and extortion by government authorities, are not alone in their fight for justice, truth and human rights.”

    Via the video, Trang said journalism in Vietnam is seen as a crime against the communist state.

    “The prize helps me understand fully that no prize is a private one, no achievement is purely of an individual without countless efforts of many people secretly and publicly accompanying that person,” she said, adding that the prize is also for all people seeking the truth.

    Trang also expressed her deep gratitude to advocates for her cause and thousands of readers who accept risks, anxieties and dangers to buy her banned books.

    The Liberal Publishing House, Vietnam’s only independent publisher whose activities are restricted by police, said the prize is a great honor for both itself and Trang.


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  • LIV’s Trinh Huu Long and Pham Doan Trang in DW: Reporters Without Borders honors journalists who fear for their lives

    LIV’s Trinh Huu Long and Pham Doan Trang in DW: Reporters Without Borders honors journalists who fear for their lives

    Deutsche Welle (DW) narrates the challenges faced by the three recipients of the RSF 2019 Press Freedom Prize.  

    Vietnamese blogger and journalist Pham Doan Trang was awarded The Prize for Impact but missed the award ceremony because of harassment and threats of imprisonment by the authorities.  She was represented by Legal Initiatives for VIETNAM co-founder Trinh Huu Long who, together with Pham Doan Trang and several other free press advocates established two online magazines – Luật Khoa and The Vietnamese.


    Excerpt:

    Only Muscat was able to appear in person to collect her “Prize for Independence.” Vietnamese blogger Pham Doan Trang, who won the “Prize for Impact,” and Saudi Arabian women’s rights activist Eman al-Nafjan, winner of the “Prize for Courage,” both remain barred from leaving their countries, their websites blocked, and under constant threat of detention and harassment.

    Both women were represented by friends who have moved to freer countries, and who are also committed to the struggle for press freedom. Trang sent Huu Long Trinh, a Taipei-based journalist who co-founded the civil society organization Legal Initiatives for Vietnam (LIV), while al-Nafjan was represented by her former student Omaima al-Najjar, who, following her former teacher’s example, started her own blog about Saudi women’s rights from her home in Italy.

    Saudi Arabia and Vietnam: different regimes, same repression

    The Vietnamese regime is not religious, but hardly less repressive. Vietnam is still a communist country dominated by a single political party that allows no private, independent media at all.

    For that reason, LIV has set up two magazines: Luat Khoa, which focuses on political and legal issues, and the English-language The Vietnamese, while also training and providing resources to journalists in Vietnam to produce their own work. “What we’re trying to do is to make free press a reality in Vietnam,” Huu Long Trinh told DW.

    Trinh said Trang is helping to produce these magazines in the face of extreme government harassment: “She’s been detained by police countless times, beaten up a few times,” he said. “She’s not even allowed to stay in one place for more than a week. She has to move to different places every one or two weeks. So what I’m trying to do now is have her be recognized internationally more, so that it could be safer for her at home.”


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  • Pham Doan Trang in Reporters Without Borders: Journalists from Saudi Arabia, Vietnam and Malta honoured at RSF’s 2019 Press Freedom Awards

    Luat Khoa co-founder and The Vietnamese co-editor Pham Doan Trang received the 2019 Press Freedom Prize for Impact, given by Reporters Without Borders (RSF).  Saudi journalist Eman al Nafjan and Maltese journalist Caroline Muscat were the other two awardees.

    Title: Journalists from Saudi Arabia, Vietnam and Malta honoured at RSF’s 2019 Press Freedom Awards
    Publish Date: September 12, 2019
    Publisher: Reporters Without Borders (RSF)


    Excerpt:

    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) awarded its 2019 Press Freedom Prize today (12 September) to Saudi journalist Eman al Nafjan, Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang and Maltese journalist Caroline Muscat, at a ceremony held for the first time in Berlin.

    To mark the 25th anniversary of its German section, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) held its annual Press Freedom Awards at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin today (12 September). Hosted by TV presenter and journalist Pinar Atalay, the ceremony was attended by many distinguished guests including Berlin governing mayor Michael Müller, former Editor in Chief of The Guardian Alan Rusbridger, Der Spiegel journalist Susanne Koelbl, TV5Monde journalist Nidhya Paliakara, former RSF Press Freedom Prize laureates Swati Chaturvedi, Can Dündar and Grigory Pasko…

    The Prize for Impact, which is given to journalists whose work has led to concrete improvements in journalistic freedom, independence and pluralism, or to an increase in awareness of these matters, was awarded to Vietnamese journalist and blogger Pham Doan Trang. She is the founder of Luât Khoa, an online magazine that specializes in providing information about legal issues, and she edits another, thevietnamese, which also helps Vietnamese citizens to defend their rights and resist the Communist Party’s arbitrary rule. The author of many books including one defending the rights of Vietnam’s LGBT communities, she has been beaten by the police because of her work and was detained arbitrarily twice for several days in 2018.


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  • Pham Doan Trang in VOA Tiếng Việt: Phạm Đoan Trang đạt giải Tự do Báo chí 2019 của RSF

    Blogger and Luật Khoa editor-in-chief Pham Doan Trang states her reasons for refusing to go to Berlin to receive her Reporters Without Borders (RSF) Press Freedom award despite the interventions and assistance of the German Embassy in Hanoi.


    Excerpt:

    Note:  Original texts in Vietnamese.

    On the evening of September 12, 2019 in Berlin, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) officially awarded the Press Freedom award in the category of Influence to independent journalist and blogger Pham Doan Trang of Vietnam.

    Blogger Pham Doan Trang, the author of several political books banned from publication in the country, told VOA that she decided not to go to Berlin to attend the RSF award ceremony on September 12 because she knew that the Vietnamese government could cause harm. prevented her from leaving the country, even though the German Embassy in Hanoi intervened.

    Female blogger Pham Doan Trang says:

    “I think if I want to go, the government can give it away, but certainly before I go, I have to sit down and negotiate, and I have to accept some conditions set by the government, and if I don’t accept it, then I don’t want to go. can not go. Since I didn’t want to talk to them, I decided not to go.

    “As far as I know, the German Ambassador intervened with the Vietnamese government to return the right to carry passports as well as ensure the freedom of entry and exit of some Vietnamese activists including myself.

    “The German side is very enthusiastic, but in my experience, we have to negotiate with the Vietnamese police anyway such as: not campaigning, not propagandizing, not slandering the country…otherwise they will start a campaign. element; they’ll also think they’ll have a hard time deciding whether or not I’ll go home, so it’s best for me to decide not to go.”

    On August 29, activist Pham Doan Trang, co-founder of the online website Law Faculty Magazine , was nominated by RSF for the Freedom of the Press Award in the Influence category.

    Ms. Doan Trang commented on the reason why she was nominated by RSF for the Influence category :

    “I think maybe they know that in the last 2-3 years I have published a lot of books, besides my editorial work at Law Faculty of Journalism . Every year I publish 2-3 books and have such a large readership that I am surprised myself. Maybe they use that to award prizes.

    “I know that the value that RSF pursues when considering this award is that they want journalists around the world, especially journalists who are victims of persecution, harassment, abuse, government abuse. right to know that these journalists are not alone in their fight.

    “RSF has really helped people in my situation feel that they are not alone.”

    Blogger Pham Doan Tranh’s books recently released by Freedom Publishing House include Popular Politics, Nonviolent Resistance, Prison Raising Manual, Politics of A Police State , etc.

    On the evening of September 12, present in Berlin, journalist Trinh Huu Long announced on Facebook:

    “For many reasons, journalist Doan Trang did not go to Germany to attend this award ceremony. Journalist Trinh Huu Long, Editor-in-Chief of Law Khoa , will attend the event on behalf of journalist Doan Trang.”


    Download in Vietnamese:

    Download in English:

  • Pham Doan Trang in Global Voices: New documentary series highlights the struggles of women activists in Vietnam

    Pham Doan Trang shares the challenges and her personal experiences as a woman blogger and human rights activist, recounting the incident of police brutality that led her to permanently injure both of her legs.


    Excerpt:

    The 88 Project, an organisation supporting freedom of expression in Vietnam, released the first video of an ongoing interview series with female activists in Vietnam. In the first interview with Pham Doan Trang, a dissident journalist and political activist, she discusses the challenges women face as bloggers and human rights activists:

    In general, Vietnamese women are not respected. Not only in democracy activism but in all fields. In democracy activism, female activists are disadvantaged because they get attacked no less than male activists. They get beaten and assaulted. The work they do is no less than their male counterparts. But what they often get from other people is pity. I think it is not respect.

    She also recounts an incident of police brutality which led to permanent injury to both of her legs.

    During a demonstration to protect trees and the environment in Ha Noi, they attacked me and broke both of my legs.

    Despite the challenges faced by female human rights defenders both in and out of prison, Pham Doan Trang says that there may be a higher purpose when women are involved in political activism.

    In a dictatorship nobody has freedom, but especially for women, their lack of freedom is multiplied many times compared to men. Because women are not only victims of the regime in terms of politics, but they are also victims of gender inequality and self-constraint. Women restrain themselves in thinking that they are not suitable for a political career. That politics are for men.

    We should think that our fight is not only against dictatorship or to free Vietnam from a dictatorship. It is also a fight to free ourselves from the ideological constraints from the prejudice that we impose on ourselves until today.

    According to the 88 Project database, there are currently more than 200 prisoners of conscience in Vietnam with over 30 identifying as female.


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