Mayor ends hostage crisis
19 cops and officials held over land dispute freed in Vietnam
HANOI: The mayor of Vietnam’s capital met with representatives from a village on the outskirts of the city and secured the release of 19 policemen and officials who had been held hostage by villagers over a land dispute, ending the weeklong crisis.
In a statement signed by Mayor Nguyen Duc Chung and read out over loudspeakers yesterday, the mayor promised not to prosecute the villagers involved in the hostage crisis and said their land grievances would be addressed, the online newspaper Vnexpress reported.
The stand-off began a week ago when police clashed with villagers who alleged that their farmland was illegally taken by a military-run telecoms company.
Nearly a dozen villagers were arrested. Villagers then took as many as 38 policemen and officials hostage. Sixteen were released and three managed to escape, leaving 19 remaining.
All the detained villagers were released.
Before the two-hour dialogue yesterday, villagers removed barricades that had been erected around the village.
The centre of the dispute is 59ha of land in Dong Tam village, some 40km south of Hanoi, which was planned for a military airfield in 1980. The airfield was never built and part of the land was given to the military-run Viettel telecoms firm, the country’s largest cellphone operator.
The villagers insisted that land was their farmland, while authorities said the villagers had trespassed on the land.
The villagers said the authorities were to blame for the episode.
“I admit that it’s wrong to hold people, but it stemmed from the wrongdoing of the authorities first,” villager Bui Van Ky was quoted by Vnexpress as telling Chung.
Chung said the city government had decided to inspect the land and the findings will be announced within 45 days.
Economist Pham Chi Lan said the main cause of Vietnam’s rampant land disputes are the lower-thanmarket-price compensation for land taken by the state, particular for property projects.
“Behind property projects were thousands of farmer families who lost their land and faced prospects of being poor from generation to generation because they have no other jobs to do other than farming,” she said.
In Vietnam, all land belongs to the state and people have the right to use it, but not to own it. — AP