San Francisco Chronicle

Court sentences environmen­tal activist to 7 years

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HANOI, Vietnam — A court in central Vietnam on Monday sentenced an activist to seven years in prison for producing online videos and interviews related to an environmen­tal disaster that instigated antigovern­ment protests, in the authoritie­s’ latest crackdown on dissent.

Following a trial that lasted half a day, Nguyen Van Hoa was convicted of spreading antistate propaganda by the People’s Court in Ha Tinh province.

He was also charged with using social media platforms including Facebook to spread documents that defamed the government, the staterun online Ha Tinh newspaper reported.

In April last year, Taiwanese-owned Formosa Plastics Group’s steel complex in Ha Tinh province dumped toxins into the ocean that killed hundreds of tons of fish along 124 miles of coastline in four central provinces. It was one of Vietnam’s worst environmen­tal disasters.

The incident devastated the region’s seafood and tourism industries and sparked protests against Formosa and the local government for its allegedly slow response to the disaster. The Taiwanese company was ordered to pay compensati­on of $500 million.

The Ha Tinh newspaper said 22-year-old Hoa had directly arranged for the videos, photos and interviews related to the disaster to be posted on social media to instigate protests against the government.

Vietnam opened up to foreign trade and investment three decades ago and has one of the fastest-growing economies in Asia, but the Communist government continues to have almost no tolerance for dissent.

In the past year, police have arrested at least 28 people and charged them with vaguely interprete­d national security violations, according to New York-based Human Rights Watch.

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