Tag: Pham Doan Trang

  • Pham Doan Trang in Radio Free Asia: Vietnam’s crackdown target: citizens who can inspire others

    The Vietnamese Communist Party has been arresting dissidents, including independent journalists, religious figures, land rights activists and environmentalists- generally, anyone who can mobilize and influence their fellow citizens.  


    Excerpt:

    The political activist Pham Doan Trang, who was arrested in October 2020, was a particular headache for the Vietnamese government as she was not philosophically inclined in her writing. Instead, she communicated Vietnamese laws, constitutional rights, and procedures in ways that ordinary people could understand. She exposed how the government violated its own laws, garnering her a large following. She’s now serving a nine-year sentence for spreading “propaganda against the state.”

    That Mother Mushroom and Pham Doan Trang had won multiple foreign awards and had deep international networks of support only amplified their voices at home. International recognition raised concerns of foreign interference amongst the conservative party elite.


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  • News: Pham Doan Trang Film World Premiere set on March 3, 2022

    News: Pham Doan Trang Film World Premiere set on March 3, 2022

    The International Film and Human Rights Festival (FIFDH) dedicates its 20th edition to 2 women activists – 2022 Martin Ennals Laureate Pham Doan Trang and Ida Leblanc, a winner of the Martine Anstett 2022 Prize.

    Join us in the world premiere of the film on Pham Doan Trang this Thursday, March 3 at 12:30h CET (Geneva time)!

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    Watch and register here.
  • Pham Doan Trang in One Free Press Coalition’s 10 Most Urgent, March 2022

    Pham Doan Trang in One Free Press Coalition’s 10 Most Urgent, March 2022

    Embattled journalist and human rights defender Pham Doan Trang is listed as one of the most urgent cases of women journalists facing harassment, injustice and press freedom issues.


    Excerpt:

    Ahead of International Women’s Day observed on March 8, the One Free Press Coalition in partnership with the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and the International Women’s Media Foundation (IWMF) are highlighting 10 cases of women journalists who have faced retaliation or threats because of their reporting.

    While some of the threats faced by these journalists are widespread press freedom issues, women journalists face unique challenges. In particular, women  journalists face a greater amount of harassment online, as well as workplace harassment, with IWMF estimating that a third of female journalists have considered changing jobs because of threats. A 2020 UNESCO report found that globally 73% of women journalists had faced online harassment, which in some cases turned into physical threats and had serious impacts on mental health.

    6. Pham Doan Trang (Vietnam)

    In December, Vietnamese authorities sentenced journalist Trang to nine years in prison. Trang covers human rights topics, including police abuses and environmental issues. Trang has faced harassment in the past for her reporting. Days before her arrest in October 2020, Trang released a letter titled, “Just in case I am imprisoned.”


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  • Pham Doan Trang in VOA Tiếng Việt: Việt Nam phản đối Anh, Canada trao giải cho nhà báo bất đồng chính kiến

    Vietnam opposes Britain, Canada awarding dissident journalist

    Deputy Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Hanoi, Pham Thu Hang said that Vietnam objected to the Media Freedom Award given to acclaimed journalist Pham Doan Trang by the British and Canadian Foreign Ministries, stating that the prominent human rights activist has “violated Vietnamese law.”  Furthermore, the Spokesperson also said that the Ms. Trang’s recognition is “not conducive to the development of bilateral relations with Vietnam.”


    Excerpt:

    Note:  Original texts in Vietnamese.

    The British and Canadian governments announced the awarding of the 2022 Media Freedom Award to Trang, Vietnam’s most famous dissident journalist, at the Press Freedom Conference in Tallinn, Estonia, on February 10. This is the latest award for Trang, who is internationally recognized for her work fighting for democracy in a Vietnam where there is little freedom of the press and is often criticized for its poor human rights record.

    Responding to this, Deputy Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Hanoi, Pham Thu Hang, said that the British and Canadian Foreign Ministry’s handing the award to Ms. Trang, whom the Vietnamese government considers “a violative individual” who has been “breaking the law”, is a “partial” and “inappropriate” action.

    Responding to a reporter’s request for comment on the awarding, Hang said on February 18 that the 44-year-old dissident journalist had been “arrested and tried for several times in serious violation of the law.”

    Ms. Trang was arrested in October 2020 and sentenced to nine years in prison for “Propaganda against the state” last December. Western governments, including the US, and international human rights organizations have voiced their objections to the Vietnamese government’s conviction.

    According to the deputy spokeswoman of BNG Vietnam, Ms. Trang has “contacted organizations and individuals abroad, published illegal publications with content to propagate, guide, and incite activities to overthrow the people’s government.” Ms. Hang said this behavior was “dangerous to society.”

    In addition to co-founding Luat Khoa Magazine, an independent journalistic form in Vietnam, Trang is also the author of many books banned from being published in the country, including “Popular Politics” and “Protesting non-violence.” Before her arrest, Ms. Trang and Mr. Will Nguyen, a Vietnamese-American citizen who had been detained in Vietnam, published the Dong Tam Report, which outlined the “human rights violations” of the Hanoi government in the past year; a deadly raid because of a land dispute between the authorities and the people of Dong Tam village.

    British Secretary of State Lord Ahmad called Ms. Trang a “brave human rights defender of Vietnam” while the Canadian Foreign Ministry called the jailed Vietnamese journalist “a supporter of human rights and the rule of law”, during the awarding of the imprisoned Vietnamese democracy activist.

    BNG Vietnam’s deputy spokesman on February 18 warned that the awarding by the British and Canadian Foreign Ministries to Ms. Trang would be “not conducive to the development of bilateral relations with Vietnam.”


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  • Pham Doan Trang in News Hub Global: FIFDH dedicates its 20th edition to Pham Doan Trang and Ida Leblanc

    The International Film Festival on Human Rights (FIFDH) dedicates its 20th edition to human rights defenders Pham Doan Trang and Ida Leblanc.


    Excerpt:

    Journalist and blogger Pham Doan Trang has been in detention since October 2020 and was recently sentenced to 9 years in prison for “propaganda against the state”. The 43-year-old was accused by the Hanoi regime of “defaming the Vietnamese government and inventing fake news“. In one of the world’s most repressive countries towards civil society, where freedom of the press is non-existent, Pham Doan Trang – RSF 2019 Prize – has founded numerous independent media and publishing houses – including Nha Xuat Ban Tu Do or Law Magazine – and the NGO Green Trees, making her the target of a government that does not tolerate dissent. Despite intimidation, torture and repeated arrests, Pham Doan Trang is fighting to end systematic abuse of both human rights and freedom of the press in Vietnam. She won several awards including recently the Martin Ennals Award 2022.


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  • Pham Doan Trang in Léman Bleu: Invités d’exception et retour du public pour les 20 ans du FIFDH

    The International Film Festival on Human Rights (FIFDH) returns with in-person events and activities after 2 years in pandemic.  This time around, it is dedicating its 2oth edition to 2 women activists, Pham Doan Trang and Ida Leblanc.

    Title: Invités d’exception et retour du public pour les 20 ans du FIFDH
    Publish Date: February 15, 2022
    Publisher: Léman Bleu


    Excerpt:

    In Geneva, the International Film Festival on Human Rights (FIFDH) will find its audience for its 20th anniversary, after two editions in line with the pandemic. From March 4 to 13, women and racism in Switzerland are the favorite themes of the anniversary edition.

    This year, the FIFDH will be resolutely turned towards women. Opened by the High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet, it will be dedicated to the Vietnamese journalist and activist Pham Doan Trang, detained for several months in her country. As well as the general secretary of the union of domestic workers in Trinidad and Tobago, Ida Leblanc who will receive a prize.


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  • Pham Doan Trang in The International Film Festival on Human Rights: The FIFDH dedicates its 20th edition to Pham Doan Trang and Ida Leblanc

    Acclaimed human rights defender Pham Doan Trang is one of the featured women activists in The 20th International Film and Human Rights Festival in Geneva, Switzerland.  The FIFDH will have its screenings from March 4 to 13, 2022.


    Excerpt:

    Pham Doan Trang is a Vietnamese journalist, Ida Leblanc an advocate for domestic workers’ rights in Trinidad and Tobago

    PHAM DOAN TRANG

    Journalist and blogger Pham Doan Trang has been in detention since October 2020 and was recently sentenced to 9 years in prison for “propaganda against the state”. The 43-year-old was accused by the Hanoi regime of “defaming the Vietnamese government and inventing fake news“.

    In one of the world’s most repressive countries towards civil society, where freedom of the press is non-existent, Pham Doan Trang – RSF 2019 Prize – has founded numerous independent media and publishing houses – including Nha Xuat Ban Tu Do or Law Magazine – and the NGO Green Trees, making her the target of a government that does not tolerate dissent.

    According to Reporters Without Borders, Vietnam currently has a record 44 journalists and bloggers in detention, and ranks 175th out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index.

    Despite intimidation, torture and repeated arrests, Pham Doan Trang is fighting to end systematic abuse of both human rights and freedom of the press in Vietnam. Nominated for the prestigious Martin Ennals Award 2022 on 2nd June in Geneva, the Festival dedicates its 20th edition to her.


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  • Vietnam Briefing: Vietnamese Activists Receive Speech Freedom Awards; Vietnam Steps Up Crackdown On NGO

    Vietnam Briefing: Vietnamese Activists Receive Speech Freedom Awards; Vietnam Steps Up Crackdown On NGO

    Source:  The Vietnamese Magazine

    The Vietnam Briefing, which is released every Monday morning Vietnam time, looks at Vietnam’s social and political developments of the past week.


    Pham Doan Trang was awarded the 2022 Canada-United Kingdom Media Freedom Award

    • On February 10, Vietnamese human rights defender and journalist Pham Doan Trang was awarded the 2022 Canada-United Kingdom Media Freedom Award. The result was announced during the third Global Media Freedom Conference in Tallinn, Estonia.
    • Pham Doan Trang spent 434 days in detention before being sentenced to nine years imprisonment for allegedly conducting “anti-state propaganda.” Doan Trang’s family and her lawyers have reportedly not been able to visit her since she was convicted last year.
    • The Media Freedom Award, launched in 2020 at the second Global Conference for Media Freedom, honors and recognizes “the work of those who have defended journalists, or championed media freedom at a local level.” Doan Trang is the second recipient of this award; the Belarusian Association of Journalists received this prestigious prize in 2020.

    Mai Khoi Do Nguyen, a Vietnamese singer and activist, received the Freedom of Speech Award 2022

    • On February 9, Mai Khoi Do Nguyen, a Vietnamese singer and democracy activist, was named one of the laureates in the Four Freedoms Awards 2022, an annual award presented by the Roosevelt Institute. Mai Khoi received the Freedom of Speech award this year for bringing to the forefront “the importance of freedom of expression, social justice and improving the human rights situation in Vietnam,” according to the Four Freedoms’ website.
    • The prizes are awarded each year to the people whose achievements have demonstrated a commitment to the principles presented by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in his historic speech to Congress on January 6, 1941, which were regarded as essential to democracy: freedom of speech and expression, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear.
    • Upon awarding her the Freedom of Speech Award, the committee added that Mai Khoi “emphasizes the right of everyone to make their own choices,” while she draws public attention to “equal opportunities for women and the LGBTI+ community, gender-based violence, freedom of expression, and the environment.” Furthermore, she also called attention to the Formosa Plastics disaster in 2016 that resulted in environmental damage and which had an economic impact on local fishermen.

    Vietnamese Dominican priest killed while administering the sacrament of confession forgave his murderer

    • Father Joseph Tran Ngoc Thanh, the 41-year-old Vietnamese Dominican priest killed while listening to confessions and celebrating the Sacrament of Reconciliation in the diocese of Kon Tum on January 29, forgave his murderer just before he died, according to the missionary news agency Fides.
    • The news was reported to Fides by Msgr. Aloisio Nguyen Hung Vi, the bishop of the diocese of Kon Tum. On February 7, together with other priests, the bishop visited the community of Sa Loong, part of the Dak Mot parish, where Father Joseph Tran Ngoc Thanh carried out his pastoral service and was later murdered, Fides reports.
    • Local police subsequently arrested the murderer, Nguyen Van Kien, and declared he was mentally ill. But several rights groups and individuals blamed the incident on the Vietnamese government for nurturing hostility against religions. This serious incident has nevertheless received scant media coverage in Vietnam.

    Vietnamese environmentalist and NGO founder arrested and prosecuted on “tax evasion” charges

    • State media on February 9 reported that the Hanoi Police investigation department had officially prosecuted Nguy Thi Khanh, a Vietnamese environmentalist and NGO founder, on “tax evasion” charges in accordance with Article 200 of Vietnam’s Penal code.
    • Khanh, the founder of Green Innovation and Development Center (GreenID) and a recipient of the Goldman environmental prize in 2018, was reportedly detained last month, but her detention was only confirmed by state media on February 9. Khanh’s organization had campaigned for Vietnam to adopt greener and more sustainable energy production alternatives while pressuring the government to cut down on fossil fuel-generated energy.
    • She was the latest activist to be prosecuted by the Vietnamese authorities for tax-related crimes. Last month, Dang Dinh Bach, director of the Law and Policy of Sustainable Development Research Center, was sentenced to five years in prison for “tax evasion.” Previously, Mai Phan Loi, a former journalist and the director of the Center for Media in Educating Community, also received four years imprisonment for the same charge.
    • In a 2020 interview with AFP, Khanh acknowledged the risks that her activism brought. “When we got global recognition, these vested interest groups recognized us as their enemy and they are very powerful,” she said.
    • Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, told The Guardian regarding Khanh’s arrest: “Now that Hanoi has finished imprisoning all the political dissidents while the world was distracted by COVID-19, the state’s repressive apparatus is turning on the environmental and social NGOs.”

    Vietnam a ‘country of particular concern,’ US religious freedom agency says

    RFA reports:

    • Despite some improvements, Vietnam remains a “country of particular concern” the 15th consecutive year in terms of allowing its citizens to freely practice their religion, according to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF).
    • The commission said a new law adopted in Vietnam in 2018 was a “notable improvement” to a previous ordinance but remains overly restrictive and has been applied unevenly across the country. Meanwhile, Hanoi continued cracking down on unregistered independent religious groups and publicly labeled many as “bizarre or wrong.”
    • “Authorities continued to actively persecute independent religious minority communities, including Protestant Hmong and Montagnard Christians, Hoa Hao Buddhists, the Unified Buddhists, Cao Dai followers, Catholics and Falun Gong practitioners,” the report said.
    • “Ethnic minority communities faced especially egregious persecution for the peaceful practice of their faith, including physical assault, banishment, detention, imprisonment, and forced renunciation of faith,” it added.

    Former journalist prosecuted for “defaming provincial police leaders”

    • Doan Tu Tan, a 40-year-old former journalist, was prosecuted on February 5 for “abusing democratic freedom to infringe on state and individuals’ legal rights,” state media reported.
    • According to the police, Tan allegedly used several untraceable phone numbers to send hoax messages to leaders in Bac Giang Province, spreading rumors and accusing the police heads of the local Luc Ngan District of wrongdoings. The police concluded that Tan’s messages were “defamatory and slanderous” of the local police leaders.
    • The former journalist was previously convicted and sentenced to three-year imprisonment for “receiving bribes” and is currently awaiting the execution of his sentence. There is no clear evidence that Tan’s accusations about police officials had any correlation to his previous conviction.

    Le Chi Thanh, the former policeman, appealed his conviction of “resisting law enforcement officers”

    • Le Chi Thanh, a former policeman who was sentenced to two-years in prison for “resisting law enforcement officers on duty,” has filed an appeal against the Thu Duc court’s verdict, his lawyer Dang Dinh Manh told RFA Vietnamese on February 10.
    • Attorney Manh added that Thanh had also been prosecuted for another charge of “abusing democratic freedom” by the investigative unit of Binh Thuan Police Department. Thanh used to be a correctional officer in the Binh Thuan Province Police Department, where he accused its leaders of corruption and other wrongdoings.
    • Thanh is expected to be transferred to Binh Thuan after his appeal trial, according to attorney Manh. His appeal hearing date has not been announced yet.

    Vietnam warns of hospitals strain as COVID-19 cases spike after the holiday

    Reuters reports:

    “Vietnam warned on Thursday that its healthcare system could become overloaded, after seeing a surge in new daily coronavirus infections following its week-long Lunar New Year holiday.

    The Southeast Asian country reported nearly 24,000 new cases on Wednesday, compared to about 15,000 per day in the week before the annual holiday, when millions of people traveled to their rural homes and to tourist hotspots.

    “Increased traveling will lead to the risk of more infections among the community, including the risk of spreading the Omicron variant,” the health ministry said in a statement.”


    Vietnam Releases Guidance on Implementation of COP26 Commitments

    Mayer Brown:

    “At the United Nations Climate Change Conference in November 2021 (COP26), Vietnam’s prime minister announced that the country would target achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050, and phase out coal power generation by 2040.

    As a follow-up to this announcement, on 30 January 2022 the Vietnam government issued Notice no. 30/TB-VPCP identifying the following eight areas of focus for implementing Vietnam’s COP26 commitments:

    1. conversion from fossil fuel to green/clean energy sources;
    2. reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in various sectors/industries;
    3. reduction of methane emissions, especially in agriculture and waste management sectors;
    4. R&D and use of electric vehicles;
    5. sustainable management, use of existing forests, and increase of afforestation for carbon absorption;
    6. R&D and use of construction materials and urban development for sustainable and green development;
    7. public relations campaigns directed at the public and business communities to enhance awareness and support for the government’s implementation of COP26 commitments; and
    8. acceleration of digital (economy) conversion for climate change.”

    Vietnam Insight: Learn more about Vietnam

    Prospects and challenges for Vietnam’s economy in 2022

    East Asia Forum/ David Dapice/ February 11

    “The big question now is if these developments will tarnish Vietnam’s hard-won reputation as a reliable supplier and alternative to China for manufactured exports? Despite factory closures, exports rose 19 percent in 2021 to an astonishing US$336 billion — while GDP was only US$271 billion in 2020 and grew only slightly in 2021. The high level of foreign direct investment (FDI) did not grow nor shrink much. The rapid increase in vaccinations — about 60 percent fully vaccinated by early 2022 — suggests that factory closures will be modest in 2022.

    But labour shortages may be more of a problem, as workers fear another round of factory closures and travel restrictions. There were troubles hiring even in 2019 as labour force growth slowed. Global pressures to reduce risk and increase resilience in supply chains are another headwind. While the momentum of past FDI commitments will keep export growth high in 2022, there are questions about later years.”

    The Biden Administration and Southeast Asia: One Year in Review

    ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute/ Hoang Thi Ha, Ian Storey/ February 11

    “The Biden administration’s record in Southeast Asia was also mixed, though generally positive. Due to the above-mentioned priorities, Washington’s engagement with the region was slow to start, causing much frustration in Southeast Asian capitals. In the second half of the year, however, momentum picked up as a flurry of senior officials visited the region, and culminated in a virtual US-ASEAN Summit and an American president’s full attendance at the East Asia Summit for the first time since President Barack Obama in 2016.”

    Why Won’t Vietnam Teach the History of the Sino-Vietnamese War?

    The Diplomat/ Travis Vincent/ February 9

    “According to Professor Tuong Vu from the University of Oregon, the Sino-Vietnamese war still divides Hanoi’s leadership today. One faction puts the blame on Le Duan, a former party leader known for being anti-China, while the other faction believes the party was wrong all along for having trusted China too much.

    “Allowing any discussion of the war threatens to deepen that rift and the survival of the party and would expose the mistakes of party leadership,” Vu said via email. “Teaching children about this war might over time create public pressure that forces the party to move away from China and closer to the U.S., which it does not want to.”

    Inequity and corruption taint Vietnam’s return to international travel

    Southeast Asia Globe/ Govi Snell/ February 3

    “Despite the easing of restrictions, some are still frustrated by the inequity: the high cost of entry, often fueled by corruption, turned travel to the country into a luxury. Further, while travel restrictions aligned with the government’s ‘Zero-Covid’ policy, once cases of the virus ballooned in the summer of 2021 the continued barriers felt increasingly unreasonable.”

    Rhino horns pierce a wall between crime and affluence in Vietnam

    Southeast Asia Globe/ Govi Snell/ January 19

    “Among the target rhino users in the country – rich, middle-aged individuals – Nam sees very little stigma and low perception of risk for using the illegal product. The government focuses on making big seizures of illegal wildlife products rather than seeking out and punishing consumers, he stated. The combined factors make lowering demand for rhino horn difficult.”

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  • Pham Doan Trang in BBC News Tiếng Việt: Phạm Đoan Trang nhận giải thưởng của Anh và Canada dù bị VN cầm tù

    Pham Doan Trang received British and Canadian awards despite being imprisoned by Vietnam.


    Excerpt:

    Note:  Original texts in Vietnamese.

    Canada and the UK awarded the Media Freedom 2022 of the two countries to Vietnamese journalist currently in prison, Ms. Pham Doan Trang.

    The announcement was made by Canadian Minister Melanie Joly and British Secretary of State Lord Ahmad, who is also the representative of the British Prime Minister, at the Press Freedom Conference in Tallinn, Estonia on the afternoon of February 10, 2022. British Foreign Office.

    The British Minister in charge of South Asia and the Commonwealth, and the British Prime Minister’s special envoy, named Ms. Pham Doan Trang:

    “Democracy is under attack around the world, and journalists who shine in those dark corners are paying a heavy price.

    The truth is always worth pursuing and that is why the UK and Canada established the Media Freedom Awards. This award recognizes journalists, individuals and organizations who work tirelessly to promote and protect media freedom.

    I’m pleased to announce that this year’s Media Freedom Award winner is Pham Doan Trang. I congratulate Pham Doan Trang as an award-winning independent journalist and Vietnamese human rights defender.”

    The British Foreign Office website wrote: “Mrs. Trang is known for her books on democracy and articles written on civil society and dissidents in Vietnam. As a rights advocate. people and the rule of law, Ms. Trang has written about important environmental issues. Reporters Without Borders awarded Ms. Trang the 2019 Press Freedom Prize in recognition of this merit.”

    In December 2021, Ms. Trang was sentenced to 9 years in prison for “Propaganda against the State”. She spent 434 days in prison before being sentenced.

    Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada said:

    “Journalists play an essential role in any democracy by illuminating important issues of our time. On behalf of all Canadians, I would like to thank you for your courage. and Ms. Trang’s determination to hold those in power accountable. Canada will continue to fight for media freedom around the world.”

    Previously, on January 19, 2022, in Geneva, Switzerland, the organizers of the Martin Ennals human rights award also named Ms. Pham Doan Trang, as one of the three winners of the 2022 Martin Ennals Prize, also known as “” Nobel Prize for Human Rights”. The organizers describe Ms. Trang as “a leading journalist, editor and democracy activist in Vietnam, where the Communist Party leaves little room for opposition voices to flourish”. .

    Ms. Trang received the Homo Homini Award 2018 from the Czech-based human rights organization People In Need.

    She also received Reporters Without Borders’ 2019 Press Freedom Award in the “Influence” category.

    Who is Pham Doan Trang ?

    Journalist Doan Trang, 43 years old this year, residing in Cat Linh ward, Dong Da district, Hanoi; graduated from Hanoi-Amsterdam School and Hanoi Foreign Trade University and worked as a reporter for Vnexpress Electronic Newspaper, an employee of HAKI Advertising Company, VTC Digital Television Company, a contributor to Vietnamnet Newspaper and a Newspaper Reporter. Law of Ho Chi Minh City.

    After a period of writing newspapers, Ms. Trang gradually became a famous dissident blogger. She wrote many famous books such as Popular Politics, Prison Farming Manual, Non-Violent Resistance.

    Trang is also the co-founder of the blog Luat Khoa Magazine, which provides information on legal issues to help Vietnamese people protect their rights.


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  • Government of Canada: Minister Joly participates in Third Global Conference for Media Freedom

    Government of Canada: Minister Joly participates in Third Global Conference for Media Freedom

    Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang was presented with the Canada-United Kingdom Freedom Award for Media Freedom for her work in promoting democracy and human rights.


    Excerpt:

    At the conference, Minister Joly and Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon, U.K. Minister for South Asia, the United Nations and the Commonwealth, presented the Canada-United Kingdom Freedom Award for Media Freedom to Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang for her work in advancing democracy and human rights in Vietnam.


    More on Mélanie Joly and Global Affairs Canada commendations for Pham Doan Trang’s work in support of media freedom in Vietnam.

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