|
|
 |
|
Vietnam's President
Nguyen Minh Triet, seen here, on Monday left for the United States on
the first visit by a post-war head of state to the former enemy nation,
officials and state media said.
(AFP/File/Tang
Chhin Sothy)
by P. Parameswaran Sun Jun 17, 6:49 PM ET
|
Vietnam's President Nguyen Minh Triet is expected to get an earful of
human rights complaints when he makes his maiden visit to the United
States this week despite a last-minute release of a couple of imprisoned
activists.
The concerns are to be conveyed to him by President George W. Bush's
administration as well as leaders from the Democratic party-controlled
Congress during his June 18-23 trip, officials said.
Some groups have linked the Vietnamese leader's pardoning last week of
Nguyen Vu Binh, 39, a journalist and pro-democracy activist, and the
release at the weekend of pro-democracy lawyer Le Quoc Quan, 36, as a
fence-mending gesture ahead of the landmark visit.
"We leave it to the government of Vietnam to explain the reasons for
their decisions. We have raised cases, we will continue to raise cases
and we often raise human rights issues with the highest levels of the
Vietnamese government," a State Department official told AFP.
"Obviously, we welcome that (the release) and we continue to call on the
government of Vietnam to release everyone else currently in detention
and in prison because of peaceful expression of their political views,"
said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
President Triet is scheduled to arrive in New York and on Friday meet
Bush at the White House during a visit hailed by both sides at cementing
diplomatic and economic ties between the ex-battlefield enemies.
Vietnamese-American pro-democracy groups are planning large protests
outside the White House when the two leaders meet.
Bilateral relations soured this year when Vietnam reimposed a crackdown
on pro-democracy activists and dissidents after winning entry into the
World Trade Organization in January.
The membership in the global trade body preceded US Congressional
approval to the Bush administration to normalize trade ties with the
rapidly-growing Southeast Asian state with a condition that human rights
come under continued scrutiny.
The Congress was given an undertaking that Vietnam was serious about
polishing its human rights record "but now we know that it is a total
lie and it is important to shake the administration on this issue," said
Ed Royce (news, bio, voting record), a lawmaker from Bush's Republican
party.
The US government has received a deluge of letters from various
organizations complaining about Hanoi's human rights record ahead of
Trient's visit, officials said.
Among them was global rights watchdog Amnesty International, which urged
Bush to "deliver a strong and clear message to the government of Vietnam
that their mistreatment of citizens is unacceptable to the United
States," said its Asia-Pacific advocacy director, T. Kumar.
Bush would voice his concerns to Triet, a White House spokesperson has
said.
In a bid to underscore concerns about repression in Vietnam, Bush met
with four Vietnamese-American democracy advocates about two weeks ago.
"As Vietnam's economy and society reform and move forward, such
repression of individuals for their views is anachronistic and out of
keeping with Vietnam's desire to prosper, modernize, and take a more
prominent role in world affairs," national security spokesman Gordon
Johndroe said.
But the Vietnamese President, in an interview with American newspapers
ahead of his visit, defended his crackdown and dispelled any notion that
Vietnam was against human rights.
"Vietnam has experienced war and understands well the loss of human
rights and freedom," he told The New York Times. "Therefore, we really
love the fundamental rights of man and respect human rights. But if
anyone violates the law we have to punish them."
But Diem H. Do, chairman of Viet Tan, a pro-democracy group active in
Vietnam, charged that Triet was trying to separate political freedom
from business to the dismay of a growing grassroots democracy movement.
"As long as the Hanoi communist government stifles peaceful dissent at
home, the leaders of the regime will be protested wherever they go
abroad by Vietnamese who have the liberty to speak up," he said. |