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Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly

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Full Name
  
Nguyen Van Ly

Role
  
Priest

Name
  
Thadeus Van

Ethnicity
  
Kinh

Nationality
  
Vietnamese



Born
  
15 May 1946 (age 77) (
1946-05-15
)
Vinh Chap, Vinh Linh, Quang Tri, Vietnam

Occupation
  
Roman Catholic priest and political dissident

Father thadeus nguyen van ly at vietnam s kangaroo court phi n t a nh c 30 3 2007


Father Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly (born 15 May 1946) is a Vietnamese Roman Catholic priest and dissident involved in many pro-democracy movements, for which he was imprisoned for a total of almost 15 years. For his ongoing imprisonment and continuous non-violent protest, Amnesty International adopted Father Ly in December 1983 as a prisoner of conscience. Most recently, his support for the Bloc 8406 manifesto has led to his sentence on 30 March 2007, for an additional eight years in prison, where he was released and then returned in 2011.

Contents

History

Nguyen Van Ly began his dissident activities as early as the 1970s. He spent a year in prison from 1977–78, and an additional nine from May 1983 to July 1992 for "opposing the revolution and destroying the people's unity."

In November 2000, Father Ly gained global and official attention when members of the Committee for Religious Freedom visited him in his village, during the visit of U.S. president Clinton to Vietnam. On 17 May 2001, Father Ly was arrested at An Truyen church, for his alleged "failure to abide by the decisions on his probation issued by authorized State agencies". In October 2001 Ly received another prison sentence of 15 years for activities linked to the defense of freedom of expression.

In 2002, Ly was awarded the Homo Homini Award for human rights activism by the Czech group, People in Need, which he shared with Thich Huyen Quang and Thich Quang Do. The sentence was later reduced several times and he was finally released in February 2004.

As a result of international pressure, including activities of the Vatican's Center of Pastoral Apostolate for Overseas Vietnamese under the leadership of Monsignor Philippe Tran Van Hoai, Father Ly was released from prison in early 2004 but remains under house arrest in the Archdiocese of Hue. On 8 April 2006, he collaborated with other writers on the "Manifesto on Freedom and Democracy for Vietnam". Later, the signers of this Manifesto called themselves "Bloc 8406", referencing the date of the document.

On 15 April 2006, Father Ly and three other Catholic priests published the first issue of "Free Speech" (in Vietnamese: Tu Do Ngon Luan), an underground online publication. On 8 September 2006, Father Ly participated in the establishment of the Vietnam Progression Party (in Vietnamese Dang Thang Tien Viet Nam).

2007 Arrest and Sentence

On 19 February 2007, security police surrounded and raided Hue Archdiocese to ransack the office, confiscate computers and arrested him. They moved him to the remote location of Ben Cui in central Vietnam, where he was under house arrest; Father Ly engaged in a hunger strike from 24 February to 5 March 2007. As a member of the Bloc 8406 pro-democracy movement, Ly was sentenced again on 30 March 2007 by Vietnamese provincial court judge Bui Quoc Hiep to eight years in prison for committing "very serious crimes that harmed national security" by trying to organize a boycott of the upcoming election.

The court appearance was televised in Vietnam, with foreign reporters allowed to attend. During the trial, when Father Ly tried to shout an unauthorized, dissident remark, ("Da Dao Cong San", meaning "down the communism") he was immediately held silent with a hand over his mouth by the security officer behind him. Father Ly kicked the bar and repeatedly interrupted the court's proceedings with anti-communist remarks and poems. The video and image was later widely circulated on the internet. The arrest was condemned by leaders including then-United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who called the arrests a "negative development".

After Father Lys' arrest, U.S. Congressman Christopher Smith introduced a House Resolution to call on Vietnam to immediately and unconditionally release him and his co-accused. and U.S. Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren wrote a letter to the U.S. Secretary of State to urge the US State Department to re-designate Vietnam on the US Countries of Particular Concern List due to its violations of human rights and religious freedom.

Updates

According to Amnesty International, Ly may have suffered a stroke on 14 November 2009, and was moved to Prison Hospital 198. They launched a letter-writing campaign encouraging the government of Vietnam to ensure Ly can receive adequate health care in hospital and on his return to prison. He was released from prison to receive medical care on 17 March 2010, several years earlier than his original sentence.

In February 2011, Amnesty International lodged an Urgent Action to stop the Vietnamese government's intended return of Father Ly to detention. However, Ly was returned to prison on 25 July 2011. The State Department was "concerned" by this decision.

On 6 March 2012, former U.S. Representative Joseph Cao organized a Vietnamese-American lobbying effort for Nguyen Van Ly, Nguyen Dan Que, Dieu Cay, and other Vietnamese political prisoners, calling on the administration of President Barack Obama and the U.S. Congress to take a stronger stand on their behalf.

References

Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly Wikipedia