Posted on 06/18/2004 6:15:41 PM PDT by bd476
"Symptoms of mental instability suspicious of his 're-education'"
"Ho Chi Minh City (AsiaNews) - Father Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly, sentenced to 15 years for speaking out about the persecution of Christians, received a reduction of the term for good attitude and conduct.
AsiaNews sources in Hué confirm that Fr. Van Ly wrote and signed letters in prison praising Vietnamese socialism and the politics of the Communist Party.
According to individuals who were allowed to visit him, the priest showed symptoms of mental imbalance and that he seemed to have been drugged as part of the effort to re-educate him.
The Vatican Delegation, led by Mons. Piero Parolin, were able to talk about the Van Ly case with Hanoi authorities during their journey to Vietnam at the end of April. For every answer, government representatives showed Van Lys letters as demonstrating his re-education.
A Hué priest declared: This letter shows a-180 degree change. We suspect that he has been drugged. Now the government is no longer afraid of him. It seems that in soon they will free him completely.
The news of his sentence reduction was circulated by state agency Vietnam News Agency.
Father Van Ly, 58 years, sent a letter in 2001 to the American Congress asking for a delay in the ratification of the bilateral trade agreement between United States and Vietnam, citing Vietnams human rights violations and religious persecutions.
Father Van Ly was arrested last October and condemned to 15 years of prison. The punishment was then reduced to 10 years.
Now a local court ordered the jail term to be reduced to 5 years, with 5 years of house arrest, declaring Fr. Van Ly as having good conduct in prison, and complying with prison rules.
American human rights groups consider Father Van Ly a prisoner of conscience and the U.S. government has pressured for his release.
The news of Father Van Lys sentence reduction arrives just before a visit from European Union representatives in Vietnam for a meeting on human rights, which will also address the treatment of the prisoners."
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"...Father Van Ly was arrested last October and condemned to 15 years of prison..."
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"The news of Father Van Lys sentence reduction arrives just before a visit from European Union representatives in Vietnam for a meeting on human rights, which will also address the treatment of the prisoners."
Great, this makes it all seem better now. /sarcasm off
"Ho Chi Minh City (AsiaNews/ANS) Rev. Nguyen Hong Quang, a minister of the Mennonite church, was arrested on June 8th. Thirty policemen surrounded the reverends house and arrested him.
They confiscated Quangs computer as well as personal papers and numerous documents, including his legal files on human rights cases he was defending. Rev. Quang has been accused of instigating people to obstruct officials from carrying out their duties.
According to HRW, the charge refers to a protest demonstration organised by Quang and his followers on March. They were complaining against the arrest of 4 Mennonite pastors.
Dinah PoKempner, general counsel at Human Rights Watch (HRW), declared that "Quang was arrested in the midst of a massive crackdown against Montagnard Protestants in the Central Highland. His arrest is part of the Vietnamese government's mounting repression of activists who promote human rights or religious freedom".
The 45-year old minister is general secretary of the Vietnamese Mennonite Church, which has been officially banned by the government. Quang is a lawyer.
He has reportedly defended farmers from the provinces and spoken out against the arrests of religious and political dissidents.
Particularly, Quang wrote and publicized through the internet an important essay concerning one of Vietnam's most prominent political prisoners, Father Nguyen Van Ly. The Roman Catholic priest was sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2001 for "undermining the policy of national unity".
In truth, he had just submitted a report on the difficult situation in Vietnam to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom."
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