Này đám cóc nhái thế hệ Hồ Chó Mèo và bọn tiểu nhân bưng bô VC, cứ lải nhải … cũng không làm rụng sợi lông nào của Anh Hùng LƯ TỐNG - cở như TT Clinton khi hạ cố đến VN, bọn mày đă xưng “ngài” rối rít – c̣n như TT Ronald Reagan, Anh Hùng của Hoa Kỳ và Thế Giới, “người” đă xiết cổ Liên bang Sô-viết USSR: ông cố nội của bọn vong bản chúng mày! th́ đă cám ơn, tri ân Lư Tống ….. (ráng lên các đ/c mén: “nợ áo cơm mà nhục đến h́nh hài” – c̣n biết Nhục không ???)
Ly Tong, a former South Vietnamese fighter pilot, whose courage President Ronald Reagan praised in a December 1984 letter as, "an example and inspiration to all who would know the price of freedom."
Just hours before President Clinton arrived on his historic trip to Vietnam, a small airplane buzzed downtown Ho Chi Minh City and dropped thousands of anti-communist leaflets over the area, calling on the Vietnamese people to stand up and win their freedom. Ly Tong paid a pilot $10,000.00 dollars to fly him into Vietnam to drop the leaflets. During the flight Ly Tong videotaped the entire civic action. On returning to Thailand after the civic action he was arrested. The pilot who flew Ly Tong, facing 10 years in prison, claimed that the plane had been hijacked. The videotape, seized by Thai authorities, has not been released.
The Thai government indicted Ly Tong on 24 January 2001, for having violated several Thai laws, including the Kingdom's Criminal Code of 1956, the Wrongful Aviation Act of 1978, the Civil Aviation Act of 1954 and the Immigration Act of 1979. The Office of the Attorney General has reviewed the case and submitted it to the Court of Justice on 9 February 2001. Ly Tong protested the charges and the lack of due process by beginning a hunger strike. According to an April 11 press release from the Royal Thai Embassy, " Mr. Ly Tong's health was affected by his hunger strike in the middle of January 2001, he resumed taking fruits, non-solid foods and water since March 2001."
Thai Prime Minister Chuan Leekpai told reporters "If we let people commit this crime and walk away freely, our friend, Vietnam, would be angry." There is pressure on Thailand, from its neighbor Vietnam, to deal harshly with Ly Tong, and to sacrifice justice on the alter of political expediency. Martin Luther King's observation, "injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere" applies here and his words should be heeded by friends of freedom everywhere, and by the Cuban exile community especially.
We have not forgotten the breath of freedom and rebellion Ly Tong provided Cubans on January 1, 2000 when his message calling on the Cuban people to rise up and reclaim their liberty floated down from the sky over the island by the thousands, breaking however temporarily, the monopoly on print information inside of Cuba. The Cuban dictatorship was visited by Vietnamese Communist Party thugs Le Kha Phieu and tyrant Tran Duc Luong, but the Cuban people received a message of hope from the Vietnamese people through the courage and bravery of Ly Tong.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VxWPUPkRIyM
Throughout the world free Vietnamese have rallied in support of Ly Tong. State governments, like the Washington State Senate, have recognized the valiant efforts of Ly Tong and his struggle for freedom, democracy, and human rights. The trial being prepared for him in Thailand will begin in just a matter of days. All of us who value freedom should raise our voices to counter the pressure placed on the Thai government by the communist regime in Vietnam and demand justice for Ly Tong.
Black April marks the beginning of the enslavement of the Vietnamese people under a communist dictatorship, and began a period in which hundreds of thousands perished seeking freedom. Ly Tong's message of defiance and freedom is a cause worth defending. The image of Ly Tong in shackles being led into court should be an outrage to friends of liberty everywhere. Write to Secretary of State Powell, and Thai Attorney General Suchart Traiprasit and request that all steps be taken to free Ly Tong for his earliest return to the United States.
Join the Campaign to Free Ly Tong
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