The Phnom Penh Post

VN jails activist for seven years over toxic leak protest

- Hanoi

A VIETNAMESE court on Monday jailed a blogger for seven years for disseminat­ing anti-state “propaganda” including articles which supported protests against a Taiwanese firm responsibl­e for a toxic leak.

Space for free expression is shrinking in the Communist country, with at least 15 activists and dissidents having been arrested and several others jailed so far this year.

Nguyen Van Hoa, 22, an environmen­tal activist, was accused of instigatin­g protests against authoritie­s via his Facebook account, mainly following the 2016 toxic leak at a steel factory operated by Taiwan’s Formosa.

Formosa was fined $500 million after being blamed for dumping waste along Vietnam’s central coast, which poisoned fish and decimated the incomes of fishing communitie­s.

The plant became the focal point for anger at environmen­tal damage wrought by big business.

Protests against the Taiwanese company were met with crackdowns by authoritie­s.

Hoa was also accused of taking part in the protest, according to a state media report quoting the indictment, which said he had “posted articles, videos and images with negative content on his Facebook [page]” while spreading “spreading reactionar­y propaganda against the party and state’s policies”.

Some of the posts in question date back to 2013.

He was convicted after a speedy trial in Ha Tinh province, a clerk told AFP without giving details.

The conviction comes more than one month after authoritie­s detained Tran Thi Xuan, another Vietnamese activist demonstrat­ing against Formosa.

She was charged under a separate part of the criminal code that carries a possible death sentence f or attempting to overthrow the govern- ment.

Vietnam routinely imprisons activists, bloggers and lawyers, but its poor rights record worsened further after a new conservati­ve leadership assumed power last year.

Authoritie­s have come under fire for a spate of arrests this year and in the lead-up to US President Donald Trump’s visit to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit in Danang earlier in the month.

During the trip artist Mai Khoi was locked inside her house after holding up a sign that said “Piss on you Trump” as the president’s motorcade passed through town in Hanoi.

Observers say Trump’s hands-off approach to human rights has freed authoritar­ian leaders across Southeast Asia and beyond to launch crackdowns without fear of censure.

In Vietnam’s most infamous recent case, 37-year-old Vietnamese blogger Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh, better known by her pen name “Mother Mushroom”, was sentenced to 10 years in June under the same charge as Hoa.

US f i r st lady Melania Trump bestowed a “Woman of Courage Award” on Quynh in March.

 ?? VIETNAM NEWS AGENCY ?? This photo from the Vietnam News Agency taken on Monday shows activist Nguyen Van Hoa (centre) standing trial at a local people’s court in the central province of Ha Tinh.
VIETNAM NEWS AGENCY This photo from the Vietnam News Agency taken on Monday shows activist Nguyen Van Hoa (centre) standing trial at a local people’s court in the central province of Ha Tinh.

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