Showing posts with label Pro-democracy movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pro-democracy movement. Show all posts

Monday, December 17, 2007

Pro-reform party coddled in US, branded terrorists in Vietnam

Do Hoang Diem

WASHINGTON (AFP) — They rub shoulders with US President George W. Bush and lawmakers in Washington but are shunned as "terrorists" by Vietnam's communist leadership -- members of US-based Viet Tan are stepping up their campaign for democratic reforms in their motherland.

Short for Vietnam Reform party, Viet Tan has built up a vast membership of Western educated Vietnamese spanning the globe and is fuelling an underground dissident network inside Vietnam.

Now, the group is boldly testing the limits of the authorities in Hanoi by secretly sending members to the tightly governed Southeast Asian state, taking the pro-democracy campaign right to the home ground.

Three of its members -- two Americans and a French -- were caught last month by the Vietnamese authorities together with three other Viet Tan associates -- a Thai and two locals -- in Ho Chi Minh City as they were preparing to distribute pro-democracy pamphlets.

One of the arrested Americans, a mathematician developing a machine to translate English to Vietnamese, was accused of entering Vietnam on a fake Cambodian passport.

All were branded "terrorists" in the state media and the arrests triggered protests from France and the United States, where lawmakers criticized Vietnam for what they call political and religious repression.

Hanoi has released one of the two Americans and the French citizen Nguyen Thi Thanh Van, a journalist with Radio New Horizon, whose nightly broadcast spreads Viet Tan's message to counter Vietnam' state-controlled media.

To highlight its growing influence in Vietnam, Viet Tan's chairman, Do Hoang Diem, said farmers who participated in land protests that journalist Van featured in her broadcasts came to the jail were she was detained to offer flowers.

"Viet Tan holds that the Vietnamese people must solve the problems of Vietnam," he told AFP.

"Change, therefore, must come through the power of the people in the way of grassroots, peaceful means," said Diem, 44, who met Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney at the White House earlier this year to seek action against Hanoi for cracking down on dissent.

Most of the leadership of Viet Tan were just teenagers or younger when the Vietnam war ended. Viet Tan's members in Vietnam include intellectuals, university students, and workers.

Diem as a 12 year old was among hundreds of thousands of "boat people" who fled to the United States in the late 1970s after the war fearing communist rule.

A masters graduate in management from the University of Houston, Diem quit as a senior health care executive to work full time in Viet Tan, whose name is a contraction of "Viet Nam" and "Canh Tan," which means wide-ranging reform and modernization.

"To support civil society in Vietnam, Viet Tan focuses on empowering the Vietnamese people through independent associations and a de facto free media," said Duy Hoang, 36, who also quit as an investment banker to concentrate as Viet Tan central committee member.

When its members were caught last month by Vietnamese authorities preparing pro-democracy leaflets, Viet Tan rallied 300 Vietnamese-Americans to stage protests in front of the Vietnamese embassy in Washington and organized press conferences with lawmakers to highlight their plight.

The lawmakers wrote letters of protest to the Vietnamese leaders and sought intervention by the Bush administration, which swiftly lodged a protest with Hanoi.

Republican lawmaker Ed Royce said he raised the issue with Vietnamese envoy in Washington Le Cong Phung but was told that Hanoi regarded Viet Tan as a "terrorist organization that had long advocated armed activities against the government."

Viet Tan said that while some of its members carried arms for self defense during its founding days in the 1980s, it has never pursued an armed struggle.

"Our activities for many years now have been promoting democracy by purely peaceful, non-violent means," Duy Hoang said.

Viet Tan members arrested in Ho Chi Minh City "didn't come armed with guns and ammo but leaflets and pamphlets touting democracy," Royce said.

Angered by what it sees as a breach of promise by Hanoi to embrace reforms when it joined the World Trade Organization a year ago, the US House of Representatives has passed binding legislation that will tie US foreign aid to Vietnam to its human rights record.

Viet Tan is now knocking on the doors of the Senate to do the same.

Thursday, October 04, 2007

The Saffron Bloggers Strike Back [- A lesson for Cambodian and Khmer Krom Monks, and for all pro-democracy Cambodians]

Wednesday, October 3, 2007
By Joshua Hill
Canada Free Press

Everything is bloggable” - Superman, a blogger from inside Burma
For the past two months or so we’ve watched with a sort of horrified fascination as the country of Myanmar (Burma) has deteriorated into a mess of bloody and fatal riots, and an oppression of its people akin to the horror stories from countries like North Korea and Cambodia.

The catalyst was the dramatic increase in the prices of everyday goods and fuel, with fuel jumping sometimes a massive 100%.

This led to the veteran democracy advocates of the country to once again make their voices known. They were soon followed by the saffron clothed Buddhist monks of the country, who in their tens of thousands marched on the nation’s military.

But as The Times have opined, there is a “third pillar” to this attempted revolution that is only now being recognized, but one that is indicative of the society in which we all now live.

Five bloggers—known only as Ko Latt, Arca, Eye, Sun and Superman-- have for the past year or so blogged from within their country. With the breach of peace though, they saw the chance to do more. As Superman said, “Everything is bloggable.”

So armed with digital cameras, and internet geekery fit to keep them one step ahead of the government, they set about showing the world what was happening. With the aid of internet applications helping them combat slow internet speeds and an intrusive government, they were able to upload their photos and video footage, along with their words, to the World Wide Web for the rest of the planet to witness.

In the span of a day or so, their blog hits soared from 100 a day to 1,000. They became the eyes and ears for the world, in a country where few reporters dare to tread, and only a few are known to be working undercover.

The country of Myanmar is not a ripe place for freedom of the press. A blogger who posted a photo she had taken of a protest found herself soon arrested, and her computer seized. And sadly, last Thursday, Kenji Nagai, a Japanese photographer, was shot dead.

“When things were hot on the streets, we were not the main worry,” Ko Latt says. “But as the situation cools down, they will follow us. They know who we are, they know we are bloggers, and I am afraid.”

The bloggers themselves have been halted, despite their best attempts, by a reaction from the government akin to taking a two-by-four to a spider. The ruling junta--the State Peace and Development Council--turned off the internet in Myanmar. Now, unless a website is hosted within the country of Myanmar, everything is off; that includes everything from Google to Amazon. By simply turning off the central line in to the country, the government has been able to effectively stop any unauthorized information leaking out.

So now the five intrepid bloggers who kept the world in the loop are now on the run. They are sleeping in a different location every night, and waiting to see whether the democratic movement has been crushed, or simply put on the back burner.

Myanmar has essentially been thrown back in to the digital version of the Stone Age, with no access to anything outside their own country. Let us hope that, when everything settles down, these five young geeks, typical in every sense of the word geek, manage to survive.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

SRP-France: Let's Not Allow The Burmese People To Be Crushed

SRP-France Communiqué

LET'S NOT ALLOW THE BURMESE PEOPLE TO BE CRUSHED

La version française de ce communiqué se trouve à la fin du texte en anglais

SRP France unreservedly gives total support to Buddhist monks and to the Burmese people who bravely fight against the military junta, and SRP France condemns the repression initiated by the Burmese army to destroy the protest movement for the democracy in Rangoon.

We also ask for the release of all the officials of the Aung San Suu Kyi opposition party.

We are siding with the European Union, in particular with France and the United States, to ask the UN Security Council to plan sanctions against the Burmese military junta and to put an end to the totalitarian regime and to give hope for democracy for the Burmese people.

Paris, September 27, 2007

MEN Sothavarin
President of SRP France
---
Communiqué du PSR France

NE LAISSONS PAS ECRASER LE PEUPLE BIRMAN

Le PSR France tient à apporter le soutien total et sans réserve aux moines bouddhistes et au peuple birman qui luttent courageusement contre la junte militaire et condamne la répression entamée par l'armée birmane pour anéantir le mouvement de protestation pour la démocratie à Rangoun.

Nous demandons également la libération de tous les responsables du parti de l'opposante Aung San Suu Kyi.

Nous sommes avec l'Union Européenne, en particulier la France et les Etats-Unis pour demander au Conseil de Sécurité de l'ONU d'envisager des sanctions contre la junte militaire birmane pour mettre fin au régime totalitaire et donner au peuple birman l'espoir de démocratie.

Fait à Paris, le 27 septembre 2007

Le Président du PSR France

MEN Sothavarin