Vietnam ’detains prize-winning publisher’

Share on facebook
Share on google
Share on twitter
Share on whatsapp
Share on email
Share on print
Share on facebook
Share on google
Share on twitter
Share on whatsapp
Share on email
Share on print

May 2, 2011

HANOI — An underground Vietnamese publisher has been arrested after receiving an overseas award honouring his courage and contribution to freedom of expression, an industry federation said.

Bui Chat, who received the International Publishers Association (IPA) Freedom to Publish Prize in Buenos Aires last week, was arrested on Saturday when he returned to Vietnam, according to the Geneva-based IPA.

“The award and prize certificate were confiscated,” the group said in a statement dated Sunday. “IPA condemns the arrest and calls for his immediate release.”

The association said Chat was being held for investigation, but it did not say what specific allegations he faced.

Foreign governments and rights groups have repeatedly expressed concern over the lack of freedom of expression in Vietnam, where all traditional media are controlled by the state. Bjorn Smith-Simonsen, who chairs IPA’s Freedom to Publish Committee, said the arrest appeared to be “directly linked” to Chat’s receipt of the prize, which honours the defence and promotion of freedom to publish.

IPA called Chat, the founder of Giay Vun Publishing House, “a courageous underground publisher” who issues the works of “pavement poets” and helped to create an independent publishing movement.

“Under extremely difficult conditions, the Giay Vun (“Scrap Paper”) Publishing House has initiated a new movement of free thinkers, free writers, free artists who refuse to conform to the state rules of creation,” Smith-Simonsen said.

“It has helped tear down the barriers of censorship.”

Dozens of peaceful political critics and activists have been sentenced to long prison terms since Vietnam began a crackdown on free expression about 18 months ago, Amnesty International has said.

Vietnam says it has achieved significant progress on human rights.

Past winners of the six-year-old IPA prize include Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who received a posthumous awarded after her murder in 2006.

Share on facebook
Share on google
Share on twitter
Share on whatsapp
Share on email
Share on print

LATEST ARTICLES

Vietnam: A Half Century Of Backwardness And The Path Forward

Half a century after the war and following three decades of integration, Vietnam has seen economic growth but our overall development remains behind the advanced countries in the region. Without sustainable and comprehensive development, Vietnam is at risk of falling further behind.

Internet Freedom Campaign

Vital to Vietnam’s development, the Internet has the power to transform Vietnamese society; in many ways it already has. In the absence of an independent media, citizens have turned to the Internet to follow the news and debate national issues.

Fleeing My Homeland but Unable to Escape Repression !

My name is Nguyễn Văn Tráng, a human rights defenderwanted by the Vietnamese government. As a democracy activist in Vietnam, I spent five years living in constant fear of being hunted down. I thought that fear would subside once I fled the country. I believed I would be safe—or at least safer. But I was wrong.

Chris MacLeod pays tribute to Y Brec Bya

Y Krec has exhibited personal bravery in the face of horrific persecution. Not just against himself but against his community. He has been jailed multiple times simply for practicing his faith outside of government control.