Vietnam to go ahead with bauxite mines despite opposition
February 7, 2009 Vietnam to go ahead with bauxite mines despite opposition Vietnamese prime minister Nguyen Tan Dung is determined to go ahead with a
February 7, 2009 Vietnam to go ahead with bauxite mines despite opposition Vietnamese prime minister Nguyen Tan Dung is determined to go ahead with a
Geneva, 20 February – For immediate release Deeply concerned about the 3-month ban imposed on the Da Nang Publishing House in Vietnam, the International Publishers
February 3, 2009 One year after Beijing officially incorporated Vietnam’s Spratly and Paracel Islands into a Chinese province, Vietnamese youths continue to protest Chinese encroachment
Last week, during the official visit of Australian Parliamentary delegation to Vietnam, Mr. Luke Simpkins of the Australian Liberal Party met with democracy activists as
January 20, 2009 Vietnam’s authoritarian government has made a habit in recent years of cracking down on dissent around Tet, the lunar new year festival
January 18, 2009 BANGKOK — Vietnam’s government has issued several decrees in recent months to curtail blogging, as the number of Internet users soars in
January 7, 2009 “Let my people go” (Exodus 9:1c) THE CASE OF PASTOR NGUYEN THI HONG UNDER TRIAL AGAIN According to the notice from family
January 8, 2009 Journalists and Bloggers Jailed, Fired, and Harassed (New York, January 8, 2009) – The editors of two leading Vietnamese newspapers were fired
January 6, 2009 Royce Introduces Legislation Calling for Vietnam to be Returned to list of “Countries of Particular Concern” Resolution cites increased religious persecution Today,
December 30,2008 Vietnamese university students sit at a row of computers at an Internet shop in Hanoi, Vietnam on Friday April 21,2006 The reins on
December 24, 2008 Hanoi – The Vietnamese government on Tuesday announced regulations to tighten state control of internet blogs, a senior government official said Wednesday.
December 13, 2008 With fast, free wireless Internet now available at cybercafes and universities across Vietnam, bloggers are increasingly challenging censorship and the ruling Communist