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Thread: Video: Cộng Đồng Người Việt Quốc Gia Liên Bang Mỹ & Các blogger VN được vinh danh

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    Video: Cộng Đồng Người Việt Quốc Gia Liên Bang Mỹ & Các blogger VN được vinh danh








    Các blogger Việt Nam được vinh danh v́ dấn thân cho nhân quyền

    Năm blogger Việt Nam có tên trong danh sách 41 cá nhân xuất sắc đến từ 19 quốc gia, được trao Giải Hellman/Hammett hôm nay, một giải thưởng cao quư để vinh danh ḷng can đảm và tính bất khuất những người cầm bút trước áp lực của các vụ đàn áp chính trị.

    Tổ chức theo dơi nhân quyền Human Rights Watch cho biết các blogger được nhận Giải năm nay gồm có Huỳnh Ngọc Tuấn, Huỳnh Thục Vy, Nguyễn Hữu Vinh, Phạm Minh Hoàng và Vũ Quốc Tú.

    Ông Brad Adams, Giám đốc đặc trách Châu Á của Human Rights Watch, tổ chức quản lư giải thưởng thường niên Hellman/Hammett, nói: “Như tất cả những người Việt Nam khác t́m cách thực thi quyền tự do ngôn luận, nhiều người trong giới blogger phải chịu áp lực ngày càng tăng của các hành động đe dọa, tấn công, thậm chí bị bỏ tù, chỉ v́ bày tỏ quan điểm của ḿnh một cách ôn ḥa.”

    Ông Adams nói tiếp: “Bằng cách vinh danh 5 nhân vật dũng cảm này, những người đă chịu đựng nhiều gian khổ và đối mặt với những nguy cơ vẫn đang đe dọa các quyền cơ bản của họ, chúng tôi lấy làm vinh dự được tiếp thêm sức mạnh cho những tiếng nói mà Đảng Cộng Sản đang cầm quyền tại Việt Nam muốn ngăn cản, không cho tham gia công luận về nhiều vấn đề chính trị và xă hội của Việt Nam.”

    Human Rights Watch nói những người Việt được trao Giải Hellman/Hammett năm nay phản ánh tính đa dạng của các thành phần trong xă hội Việt Nam mà những tiếng nói phê b́nh và quan tâm bị chính quyền Việt Nam t́m cách dập tắt, như nhà vận động cho tự do tôn giáo Nguyễn Hữu Vinh, nhà đấu tranh bảo vệ nhân quyền Phạm Minh Hoàng, tức là blogger Phan Kiến Quốc, nhà báo tự do Vũ Quốc Tú, bút danh Uyên Vũ, nhà văn Huỳnh Ngọc Tuấn và nhà phê b́nh chính xă hội trẻ, cô Huỳnh Thục Vy.

    Tất cả 5 người đều bị chính quyền đàn áp v́ những bài viết của họ.

    Tổ chức theo dơi nhân quyền Human Rights Watch nói chính quyền Việt Nam đàn áp có hệ thống các quyền tự do ngôn luận, tự do lập hội và hội họp ôn ḥa, những người lên tiếng đặt nghi vấn về các chính sách của nhà nước, phơi bày tệ nạn tham nhũng trong hệ thống chính quyền, hoặc kêu gọi các giải pháp dân chủ để thay thế chế độ cai trị độc đảng.

    Trong số những người Việt Nam được trao Giải Hellman/Hammett năm nay, có ông Huỳnh Ngọc Tuấn, và con gái của ông. Ông Tuấn, một nhà văn, và con gái, cô Huỳnh Thục Vy, một blogger trẻ nổi tiếng, đă viết nhiều bài viết phơi bày bất công xă hội, đề cao nhân quyền, dân chủ và cổ vũ hệ thống đa đảng, một xă hội pháp quyền, đồng thời ủng hộ các nhà hoạt động đang bị cầm tù.

    Hôm 16 tháng 12 vừa rồi, cảnh sát tại phi trường Tân Sơn Nhất đă tịch thu hộ chiếu và cấm blogger Huỳnh Trọng Hiếu, em trai cô Huỳnh Thục Vy, đáp máy bay sang Hoa Kỳ để thay mặt cha và chị, nhận Giải Hellman/Hammett.

    Trong một cuộc phỏng vấn với Ban Việt Ngữ mới đây, Đại diện cao cấp của Ủy Ban Bảo vệ Kư giả, ông Shawn Crispin đề cập tới môi trường hoạt động của các blogger và nhà báo ở Việt Nam. Ông nói có một số đề tài cấm kỵ mà các nhà báo và giới blogger biết sẽ phải nhận lấy hậu quả, nếu dám vượt qua điều mà ông gọi là “giới hạn đỏ”. Ông Shawn Crispin nói:

    “ Nếu lần theo đường dây tham nhũng lên tới tận các cấp lănh đạo cao hơn, chẳng hạn nếu viết một bài báo chỉ trích các giao dịch làm ăn của ái nữ Thủ Tướng Việt Nam chẳng hạn, đó là loại đề tài mà ngay cả các kư giả nước ngoài cũng biết là lĩnh vực cấm. Ngay cả những người biết chuyện cũng cố tránh, không muốn phơi bày, trong khi câu chuyện lại rất đáng bị phơi bày ra trước ánh sáng.”

    Giải thưởng Hellman/Hammett là một giải thưởng thường niên được trao cho giới cầm bút trên khắp thế giới là nạn nhân của đàn áp chính trị hoặc các hành vi vi phạm nhân quyền.

    Phần thưởng bằng tiền mặt lên tới 10.000 đôla một người, là nhằm vinh danh và trợ giúp những cây bút bị đàn áp v́ bày tỏ những quan điểm bất đồng với chính phủ của họ, hay v́ đă chỉ trích các quan chức hoặc các hành động của chính phủ, hay viết về những đề tài mà chính phủ của họ không muốn phơi bày ra ánh sáng.

    * Source:
    http://www.voatiengviet.com/content/...n/1568666.html

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    Human Rights Watch loan tin và đăng tiểu sử 5 bloggers VN đoạt giải Hellman/Hammett 2012

    http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/12/20/v...mitment-rights

    Vietnamese Bloggers Recognized for Commitment to Rights
    5 Win Prestigious Hellman/Hammett Awards


    (New York) – Five Vietnamese bloggers are among an extraordinary group of 41 people from 19 countries who have received the prestigious Hellman/Hammett award recognizing writers who demonstrate courage and conviction in the face of political persecution. They are Huynh Ngoc Tuan, Huynh Thuc Vy, Nguyen Huu Vinh, Pham Minh Hoang, and Vu Quoc Tu (short biographies below).

    (New York) - Năm blogger Việt Nam trong số một nhóm phi thường của 41 người từ 19 quốc gia đă nhận được giải thưởng uy tín Hellman/Hammett, công nhận các nhà văn thể hiện ḷng can đảm và niềm tin khi đối mặt với cuộc đàn áp chính trị. Họ là Huỳnh Ngọc Tuấn, Huỳnh Thục Vy, Nguyễn Hữu Vinh, Phạm Minh Hoàng, và Vũ Quốc Tú (tiểu sử ngắn ở phía dưới).


    Huynh Thuc Vy, Huynh Ngoc Tuan


    Nguyen Huu Vinh, Vu Quoc Tu, Pham Minh Hoang

    “Like other Vietnamese exercising their right to free expression, many of the country’s growing corps of bloggers are increasingly threatened, assaulted, or even jailed for peacefully expressing their views,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch, which administers the annual Hellman/Hammett awards. “By recognizing these five brave men and women, who have already suffered much and face on-going threats to their basic rights, we are honored to amplify the voices the ruling Vietnamese Communist Party wants to prevent from participating in public discussions of Vietnam’s many social and political problems.”

    This year’s Vietnamese award-winners reflect the diversity of sectors in Vietnamese society whose critical and concerned voices the government wishes to silence: advocate of religious freedom Nguyen Huu Vinh (who blogs as J.B Nguyen Huu Vinh); rights defender Pham Minh Hoang (who blogs as Phan Kien Quoc); freelance journalist Vu Quoc Tu (known as Uyen Vu); novelist Huynh Ngoc Tuan; and the youthful political, social commentator Huynh Thuc Vy. All five have been persecuted for their writings.

    Human Rights Watch said that the Vietnamese government systematically suppresses freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly, and persecutes those who question government policies, expose official corruption, or call for democratic alternatives to one-party rule. Writers and bloggers often face lengthy prison terms imposed by “people’s courts,” temporary police detention and onerous interrogation, intrusive surveillance by various authorities, restrictions on domestic travel and prohibitions on leaving the country, beatings by security officials and anonymous thugs, fines, and denial of opportunities for livelihood.

    On December 16, 2012, the police at Tan Son Nhat airport in Ho Chi Minh city prohibited blogger Huynh Trong Hieu from leaving Vietnam for the United States to receive the 2012 Hellman/Hammett awards on behalf of his father, Huynh Ngoc Tuan, and his sister Huynh Thuc Vy, and confiscated his passport. According to the police, they acted upon a request from the police of Quang Nam province where the Huynh family resides. Two other 2012 Hellman/Hammett recipients, bloggers Nguyen Huu Vinh and Vu Quoc Tu, have been also prohibited from leaving the country (Nguyen Huu Vinh in August 2012 and Vu Quoc Tu in May 2010). Blogger Pham Minh Hoang is serving a three-year probation term, which restricts his movement within his residential ward.

    In a recent case, the three founders of Vietnam’s Club of Free Journalistsand former Hellman/Hammett awardees, Nguyen Van Hai (who blogs as Dieu Cay), Ta Phong Tan, and Phan Thanh Hai (who blogs as Anhbasg), were sentenced to imprisonmenton September 24, 2012, for “propaganda against the state.” That same month, politically beleaguered Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung ordered the Ministry of Public Security to target blogs and websites not approved by the authorities, punish those who create them, and prohibit state employees to read and/or disseminate information published on these websites.

    “As Vietnam’s government escalates its repression of an increasingly outspoken online community, it is more important than ever for the world to celebrate the work of the five Vietnamese recipients of this year’s Hellman/Hammett awards,” Adams said. “The world’s democracies should not just continue with business as usual in Vietnam. Instead, they should make the release of all writers and political prisoners a condition of good relations.”

    Human Rights Watch also commemorated the life and work of the 1994 Hellman/Hammett award winning poet Nguyen Chi Thien, who died in exile on October 2, 2012. Revered as one of Vietnam’s greatest political poets, Nguyen Chi Thien symbolized personal courage and determination despite every effort by Vietnamese authorities to silence him over many decades. Nguyen Chi Thien was first detained in 1960 for questioning the Communist Party’s version of history. In 1979, during one of his brief periods of freedom, he barged his way into the British embassy in Hanoi to make available to the world hundreds of poems he had composed in his head and memorized while previously in detention, knowing that he would be arrested again. The poems were published under the title “Flowers from Hell,” becoming a worldwide literary sensation as he indeed languished in another series of Vietnamese jails.

    Human Rights Watch cũng kỷ niệm cuộc đời và tác phẩm của nhà thơ Nguyễn Chí Thiện, người đoạt giải thưởng Hellman/Hammett 1994, đă qua đời khi lưu vong ngày 02 Tháng Mười 2012. Được tôn kính như là một trong những nhà thơ chính trị lớn nhất của Việt Nam, ông Nguyễn Chí Thiện là biểu tượng cá nhân can đảm và quyết tâm bất chấp mọi nỗ lực của chính quyền Việt Nam để bịt miệng ông ta trong nhiều thập kỷ qua. Ông Nguyễn Chí Thiện lần đầu tiên bị bắt vào năm 1960 khi chất vấn sự diễn giải lịch sử của đảng Cộng Sản. Vào năm 1979, trong thời gian ngắn được tự do, ông đă đột nhập vào ṭa đại sứ Anh tại Hà Nội để cho thế giới biết đến hàng trăm bài thơ ông đă sáng tác trong đầu và ghi nhớ trong khi bị giam giữ trước đây, biết rằng ông sẽ bị bắt một lần nữa. Những bài thơ được xuất bản dưới tiêu đề "Hoa Địa Ngục", đă trở thành một cảm xúc về văn học trên toàn thế giới, khi ông thực bị ṃn mỏi trong hàng loạt các nhà tù Việt Nam.

    ==================== =

    Biographies and Writings of Vietnamese 2012 Hellman/Hammett Winners

    Huynh Ngoc Tuan

    Huynh Ngoc Tuan has written dozens of influential articles, commentaries, and a novella exposing social injustice and government repression. His writings promote human rights, democracy, and what he believes are the virtues of a multi-party political system. He was arrested in October 1992 for attempting to send abroad a novella and several short stories critical of government policies, for which he was charged with conducting propaganda against the Socialist state. In April 1993 he was sentenced to 10 years in prison, followed by another four years of probation that restricted his movement and activities. He nevertheless resumed his dissident actions, writing a memoir detailing his 10 years in various prisons. In 2007, he joined the pro-democracy grouping Bloc 8406.
    In 2011, the police searched Huynh Ngoc Tuan’s house and confiscated a computer, computer accessories, and paper notebooks. He was fined 100,000,000.00Vietna mese Dong (about US$5,000) for using information technology to conduct propaganda against the state. Police pressure has made it impossible for Huynh Ngoc Tuan to obtain a secure job. Two of Huynh Ngoc Tuan’s children, Huynh Thuc Vy and Huynh Trong Hieu, are prominent young bloggers in their own right. They also suffer from police surveillance, intimidation, interrogation, and other forms of police harassment, such as confiscation of cameras and cell phones.

    “In Vietnam, what dominates all social relations is not the law, but the will of the Communist Party. The Party has absolute power to make all decisions, ranging from the destiny of the nation to economic, culture and daily life of the people. The Party has ‘hard’ power including a prison system, a powerful police force, a big army and a system of ‘Law’ designed to serve this power. The Party also possesses ‘soft’ power including national resources, the press and media and the state-owned religious churches. It controls and dominates society using both ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ power in an attempt to turn the people into a herd of sheep, or a kind of puppet that is ignorant, powerless or complicit”. – Huynh Ngoc Tuan, 2012

    Huynh Thuc Vy

    Huynh Ngoc Tuan’s daughter Huynh Thuc Vy is a young political blogger whose writing has spread extensively on the internet. Due to her father’s status as a political prisoner, Huynh Thuc Vy suffered discrimination during her childhood. She began publishing articles on the foreign-based website Dan Chim Viet in late 2008. Touching upon various social and political issues, Huynh Thuc Vy’s writing promotes a multi-party political system, freedom, and democracy, and urges young people to become socially and politically engaged. While teaching herself law, Huynh Thuc Vy has emerged as a proponent of a society run by rule of law and written in support of legal activists who have been imprisoned for their peaceful activism.

    After the Huynh family home was searched and computer equipment and notebooks seized, Huynh Thuc Vy was fined 85,000,000.000 Vietnamese Dong (about US$4,250). Like her father, she has difficulty finding gainful employment because of police pressure.

    “In Vietnam, one has to vote whether one wants to or not. Who you vote for is not important. It does not affect or change any national matter, whether big or small. It also has nothing to do with the life of any particular community of normal people.…

    “To remain silent before such absurdity is to agree with such absurdity. It means a lack of responsibility to oneself and to society and the country. We must choose for ourselves a progressive society in which the right to vote and the right to run for an election must be carried out in a meaningful, democratic and just manner.” – Huynh Thuc Vy, 2011

    Nguyen Huu Vinh

    Nguyen Huu Vinh (also known as Jean Baptiste Nguyen Huu Vinh or J.B Nguyen Huu Vinh)is a prominent Catholic blogger advocating freedom of religion and fundamental human rights. He writes about such topics of great public concern as land confiscation, police brutality, abusive government policies, and repression of church and religious freedom. He is also well known for having written a five-part series of reports narrating in detail the appeal trial of prominent legal activist Dr. Cu Huy Ha Vu. In addition, Nguyen Huu Vinh composes poetry and short fiction commenting on social and political issues. His 2012 blogs have included the four-part satire “Meeting President Obama,” with himself as protagonist, in which he encounters Obama in a dream and the two of them discuss issues like freedom of speech and freedom of press.

    Nguyen Huu Vinh has been subjected to intrusive surveillance, intimidation, interrogation, and detention. He has been assaulted twice by unknown thugs: first, in January 2010, for reporting police ill-treatment of parishioners during a land dispute between Dong Chiem parish and the local government; then, in July 2012, for blogging reports about anti-China protests at Hoan Kiem Lake in Hanoi. In August 2012, the authorities prohibited Nguyen Huu Vinh from leaving Vietnam to accompany his mother on a medical trip to Singapore.

    I am walking along the road

    What changes in the last sixty years do I see?

    On the side, new villas are being constructed

    Syringes and needles are thrown on the path

    Drug addicts hang out nearby

    They are the children and grandchildren of peasants

    I asked what happened

    They responded that there are many development projects

    Fertile rice fields in the old days

    Have become parts of these projects to please the leader

    I am not sure if I was awake or in a nightmare

    The countryside is “reformed,” yet individual family is destroyed

    The old master of the land before, the peasants

    Now become landless wanderers

    A class of land petitioners grows every day

    They used to toil the field,

    Today they are drifting on urban streets…– Nguyen Huu Vinh, 2012

    Pham Minh Hoang

    Pham Minh Hoang (who blogs as Phan Kien Quoc) previously taught applied science at the Ho Chi Minh City Polytechnic University. In his blog, he has written about social and political issues, including workers’ rights, national destruction of Vietnamese cultural heritage sites, and environmental pollution. He has conducted free “soft” skills courses for young people, teaching them how to build self-confidence and how to form scientific views so they can be prepared for future careers. According to state media, in these courses, Pham Minh Hoang allegedly taught young people about civil disobedience.

    Pham Minh Hoang was arrested on August 13, 2010, for his alleged affiliation with the officially-proscribed Viet Tan party, a group that once espoused rebellion against the communist government but later changed its approach to peaceful resistance. Human Rights Watch has found no evidence that Pham Minh Hoang has advocated or participated in violent action against the government. Instead, according to state media itself, Pham Minh Hoang’s “crime” is having written “33 articles that distort the policies and guidelines of the Party and the State.” He was convicted on August 10, 2011, by the People’s Court of Ho Chi Minh City for “conducting activities to subvert the administration.” He was sentenced under article 79 of the Vietnamese penal code to three years in prison, to be followed by three years on probation. During his appeal trial on November 29, 2011, the People’s Supreme Court reduced his sentence to 17 months, as a result of which Pham Minh Hoang was released on January 13, 2012. However, he is currently serving his three years of probation, which confines his movement to the residential ward where he lives.

    “For a long time, Vietnam’s human labor has been among the cheapest in the world. This has attracted many investors, primarily for labor-intensive industries. Now, Vietnam has become a big processing [country] in the region. The consequence of cheap labor is that the life of the worker becomes worse and worse. This leads to disputes, conflicts and collective work stoppages.

    “If the state does not have a mechanism to protect laborers and keeps running after growth statistics, these conflicts will never end. Vietnam will never get rid of the processing status with its usual risk, uncertainty and dependency.

    “Workers and peasants are not the only victims of the cost of political stability and economic growth. Another serious harm is environmental pollution, which has been and will continue to destroy the health of millions of people in the months and years to come.” – Pham Minh Hoang, 2009

    Vu Quoc Tu

    Vu Quoc Tu (who writes as Uyen Vu) is a freelance journalist and a blogger. He worked for state-controlled magazines in the 1990s and started to blog in the mid-2000s. Vu Quoc Tu was a founding member of the Club for Free Journalists established in September 2007 to promote freedom of expression and independent journalism. During the first few months of its existence, club members covered newsworthy stories and events that were either suppressed or ignored by Vietnamese officialdom and the government-controlled media. For example, they covered wild-cat strikes by industrial workers in Binh Duong province, the trials of prominent dissidents such as Le Thi Cong Nhan and Nguyen Van Dai, 2008 street protests against the Beijing Olympics, land disputes between Catholic churches and local administrations, and the 2007 protests by Buddhist monks in Burma. Three other members of Club for Free Journalists have received Hellman /Hammett awards in the past: bloggers Nguyen Van Hai (known as Dieu Cay), Phan Thanh Hai (known as Anh Ba Sai Gon or Anhbasg) and Ta Phong Tan, all of whom are currently serving prison sentences for exercising their right to freedom of expression.

    Vu Quoc Tu writes about social, economic, and political issues. He has also reviewed the Vietnamese translation of Orwell’s Animal Farm and the dissident poetry of Tran Vang Sao and Bui Chat. He has voiced support for imprisoned fellow writer Nguyen Van Hai.

    Vu Quoc Tu lives with his wife, Le Ngoc Ho Diep, who blogs as Trang Dem. The couple has been subjected to intensive police harassment, including intrusive surveillance, interrogation, and beating. On May 1, 2010, police detained Vu Quoc Tu and Le Ngoc Ho Diep at Tan Son Nhat airport in Ho Chi Minh City as they were boarding a plane to Bangkok to go on honeymoon. The police held and interrogated them for several hours and forbade them from traveling abroad, contending this was necessary to protect Vietnam’s national security. Police pressures have also prevented Vu Quoc Tu from securing employment in Vietnam.

    “… our participation in protests was a way to peacefully express our views. But the enthusiasm of Vietnamese youth from Hanoi to Saigon was rejected. Peaceful protests were crushed. I lost my job. Many others lost a place to live or a job to earn their living. The most enthusiastic protesters face the most difficulties. Some left our country… Patriotic people look at one another in reservation. But I still believe that these spirited young people, no matter how few of them, are like swallow that signal a Spring is coming for the country of Vietnam.” – Vu Quoc Tu, 2009

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