The Borneo Post

Vietnam convicts 12 ‘terrorists’ for subversion

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HANOI: Vietnam yesterday jailed two American citizens and 10 others from an outlawed US-based ‘ terrorist’ group for attempting to overthrow the state after they spread anti- government leaflets and tried to incite protests last year.

Critics of the communist regime are routinely jailed in the oneparty state.

Most are loosely-linked bloggers, activists and rights lawyers, with few groups designated as ‘terrorist organisati­ons’.

One of those groups is the California- based Provisiona­l National Government of Vietnam ( PNGV), an anti- communist organisati­on with its own selfappoin­ted prime minister that pledges allegiance to the former South Vietnam regime.

Twelve of their members were jailed for between five and 14 years after a two- day trial in Ho Chi Minh City for “attempting to overthrow the state”, according to Phap Luat newspaper, the mouthpiece of the city’s justice department.

They were accused of printing 4,000 leaflets, plotting to take over national radio and calling for demonstrat­ions on April 30 last year – celebrated as ‘reunificat­ion day’ to mark the end of the Vietnam War in 1975.

The group included two American citizens, Phan Angel and Nguyen James Han, who allegedly travelled to Vietnam from the United States to help the failed plot, state media reported.

They were the only two to receive the harshest sentences of 14 years in prison and will be deported after serving their sentences.

“The defendants’ behaviour was extremely serious, violating national security, underminin­g the country’s stability and developmen­t (and) causing political and social disorder,” the official Vietnam News Agency quoted the court decision as saying.

US embassy spokesman Pope Thrower said the safety of American citizens was a top priority.

The foiled plan was allegedly set to coincide with a failed attack on Ho Chi Minh City’s Tan Son Nhat internatio­nal airport last year, for which 15 PNGV members were convicted.

The group was also accused of bombing a police station in the city in June and injuring three people.

The PNGV was establishe­d in 1990 in California, where large numbers of Vietnamese refugees settled after the end of the war.

Its members, many who wear the yellow- and-red- striped southern flag of the former Saigon regime, say their aim is to ‘liberate Vietnam from communism’. — AFP

 ??  ?? Members of California-based Provisiona­l National Government of Vietnam stand with policemen during a trial in Ho Chi Minh city. — AFP photo
Members of California-based Provisiona­l National Government of Vietnam stand with policemen during a trial in Ho Chi Minh city. — AFP photo

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