English PEN call to action for Tran Khai Thanh Thuy

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7 April, 2010

UPDATE (7 April 2010): The appeal hearing of Tran Khai Thanh Thuy and her husband Do Ba Tan has been scheduled for next Friday, 16 April 2010.

Please send letters of appeal:

- Requesting that foreign embassy officials and foreign media should be allowed to attend the trial;

- Urging that Tran Khai Thanh Thuy is fairly represented in court;

- Calling for Tran Khai Thanh Thuy’s immediate release and for the charges against her and her husband to be dropped.

Appeals to:

President, Socialist Republic of Vietnam

His Excellency Nguyen Minh Triet
C/o Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Hanoi
Socialist Republic of Vietnam

Vietnamese Embassy, London, United Kingdom

His Excellency Tran Quang Hoan
Embassy of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
12 – 14 Victoria Road
W8 5RD
United Kingdom

You may also wish to write to the British Embassy in Hanoi encouraging them to send representatives to the upcoming trials of dissidents, as it is widely felt that international pressure and presence can have a positive impact on the outcome of the trial.

British Embassy, Hanoi, Vietnam

His Excellency Mr Mark Kent
Central Building
4th floor
31 Hai Ba Trung
Hanoi
Vietnam

Fax: ( 84) (4)3936 0561 (for Embassy in general)

*** Please do let us know if you send appeals, and certainly if you should receive any response. ***

Profession: Novelist, essayist, poet and journalist

Date of arrest: 8 October 2009

Details of arrest: Tran Khai Thanh Thuy was reportedly beaten and arrested after she publicly expressed her support for six dissidents facing trial. According to our information, Tran Khai Thanh Thuy was detained on 8 October as she made her way to Hai Phong to support the activists as they faced trial. She was reportedly held incommunicado for several hours before being returned to her home and told that she could not leave. Later that evening, an incident took place at her home, the details of which are not clear. Tran Khai Thanh Thuy was subsequently charged with assault, although it is widely believed that she was in fact the victim of an assault, and that the photograph used as evidence against her had been doctored. On 5 February 2010, Tran Khai Thanh Thuy was sentenced to three and a half years in prison, whilst her husband Do Ba Tan was sentenced to two years under house arrest for ’assault’. For more information, please click here. We are to calling for her immediate and unconditional release, and for the charges against her husband to be dropped, and urge PEN members to do the same.

Professional details: Tran Khai Thanh Thuy is a renowned novelist, poet, essayist and editor of the underground dissident magazine To Quoc (Fatherland). Because of her writing, published on the Internet, she has been under heavy surveillance and harassment since September 2006. She is a member of the Union of Writers and the Club of Women Poets of Hanoi, and won the 2008 Hellman Hammet Award.

Health concerns: She suffers from diabetes and advanced tuberculosis, for which she has been receiving hospital treatment.

Other Details: Tran Khai Thanh Thuy has been repeatedly denounced and humiliated in public meetings organised by the Vietnamese authorities, including a ’People’s Court’ in October 2006, where police gathered 300 people in a public stadium to insult her. Her home was attacked by mobs who entered her home calling her a traitor and a prostitute, threatening to beat her. The police refuse to protect her, calling for her to abandon her activism to ensure her safety. In September and October 2006, she was repeatedly questioned and detained by the authorities and dismissed from her job. She was held under strict house arrest during APEC meetings in November of that year.

On 21 April 2007, Tran Khain Thanh Thuy was arrested at her home in Hanoi, where she is said to have been under strict house arrest since November 2006. She was believed to be charged with violating Article 88 of the Criminal Code for disseminating information considered harmful to the State by the authorities. She was also accused of being a member of Bloc 8406, a leading underground pro-democracy group, of supporting a dissident human rights organisation and of illegally organising a trade union, and could have faced up to twelve years in prison. She was held at Detention Camp B14, Thanh Liet, in district Thanh Tri, Hanoi until, with only a day’s notice, her trial commenced on 31 January 2008.

On 31 January 2008, Tran Khai Thanh Thuy was sentenced to 9 months in prison by a Hanoi Court for ’disturbing public order’, but having already spent that time in pre-trial detention she was released the same day. English PEN warmly welcomed the news of her release, while regretting her detention and criminal conviction merely as a result of practising her profession and expressing her opinion.

Honorary Member: English PEN

http://www.englishpen.org/writersinprison/honorarymembers/vietnam/trankhaithanhthuy/

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