BFF-17 US man to face death penalty trial in Vietnam

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VIETNAM-TRIAL-POLITICS-RIGHTS

US man to face death penalty trial in Vietnam

HANOI, June 11, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A Vietnamese-American man charged with
“attempting to overthrow the state” will go on trial in Ho Chi Minh City on
June 24, his family said, and could face the death penalty if found guilty.

Michael Nguyen has been held for nearly a year in the one-party communist
state, which has tightened its grip on power since a new administration came
to office in 2016 and took a harder line on dissent of any kind.

Nearly 130 prisoners of conscience are currently behind bars in the
country, where independent media is banned and protests are illegal.

Nguyen was detained in July last year while travelling with two activists
on a visit to Vietnam.

The father of four young daughters could face the death sentence if
convicted.

His family said he has been denied access to lawyers during his detention
and insisted he is innocent.

“He is severely disadvantaged and unable to properly defend against any
accusations against him,” said a statement from his family in the US.

His trial is set for June 24-25 in the southern commercial hub of Ho Chi
Minh City, his family and a lawyer said.

The two activists arrested with Nguyen — Huynh Duc Thanh Binh and Tran
Long Phi — will also go on trial with him, along with Binh’s father, who is
accused of failing to report “criminal activity”, said Binh’s lawyer Nguyen
Van Mieng.

“They were just simply in contact with each other, they didn’t set up a
political party, they didn’t intend to try to replace the current party,”
Mieng said.

A US State Department official said it was aware of reports that a US
citizen has been detained since July 2018 and the safety of its citizens
abroad is a top priority.

Michael Nguyen left Vietnam in 1975, settling in the US alongside more than
a million people who fled when the communist regime took over after the long,
bitter Vietnam War.

Many war refugees mobilised against the communist government from afar, but
Nguyen’s family have said he is not involved with any dissident groups.

Vietnam routinely jails its critics and is accused of tightening its grip
on activism in recent years.

A cybersecurity law passed last year gives authorities unprecedented powers
to police online content and has come under fire from the US, the EU and the
UN.

The bill requires internet companies like Facebook and Google to hand over
user data and remove material from their sites when requested by the
government.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0956 hrs