The Observatory has been informed about renewed acts of torture and ill-treatment perpetrated against Mr Trinh Ba Tu while
in detention. Mr Tu is a land rights defender who has been vocal about
land grabbing and its impact on small-scale farmers across the country,
along with his mother Can Thi Theu and brother Trinh Ba Phuong, who are also being arbitrarily detained.
On
November 21, 2022, for the first time in two months, Trinh Ba Tu was
allowed to receive a visit from a family member in Thanh Hoa Prison No.
6, Nghe An province. His father had attempted to visit him three times
previously, after taking a six-hour trip from his home in Hoa Binh
Province to the prison each time, but was regularly denied access to his
son. Trinh Ba Tu told his father he continued to be subjected to
disciplinary procedures amounting to torture and ill-treatment . These
include incommunicado detention and 10 days of solitary confinement with
foot shackling. He also informed his father he had lost at least 10kg
due to the hunger strike he carried out from September 6 to September
28, 2022. Trinh Ba Tu and his father were kept physically separated by a
glass partition and remained under strict surveillance during the
visit.
At
the time of publication of this Urgent Appeal, Trinh Ba Tu remained
detained in a cell with three other inmates in Thanh Hoa Prison No. 6.
He has been denied access to letters sent by his brother Trinh Ba
Phuong, and is subjected to hard labour. While in detention, Trinh Ba Tu
remains at high risk of further acts of torture and ill-treatment.
Prison No. 6 in Nghe An is notorious for its harsh detention conditions
and particularly cruel treatment of political prisoners. The prison is
300 km away from Trinh Ba Tu’s home in Hoa Binh Province, making it
extremely difficult for his family to visit him.
The Observatory recalls
that Trinh Ba Tu started a hunger strike on September 6, 2022 to
protest the ill-treatment he and other detainees had been subjected to
while in detention. Prior to his hunger strike, he had been placed in
solitary confinement for ten days, during which he was severely beaten
and denied access to the toilet, as a punishment for writing a complaint
against the prison authorities for allegations of ill-treatment against
other detainees. On September 20, 2022, during a family visit, Trinh Ba
Tu was dragged out of the visiting room, as he was explaining his
father the acts of torture and ill-treatment prison officers had
subjected him to. Trinh Ba Tu’s father was later informed that his son
had been placed under disciplinary measures but the prison officers
refused to provide any details about the length or application of these
measures.
The Observatory further recalls
that Trinh Ba Tu, Can Thi Theu, and Trinh Ba Phuong were arbitrarily
arrested on June 24, 2020, under Article 117 of the Criminal Code
(“making, storing or disseminating information, documents, materials and
items against the Socialist Republic of Vietnam”). Their arrest and
detention are connected to their work denouncing on social media the
excessive use of force against farmers of the Dong Tam Village, about 25
km Southwest of Hanoi, during a deadly police raid conducted in January
2020, in which a farmer and three policemen died.
On
May 5, 2021, Trinh Ba Tu and Can Thi Theu were sentenced by the Hanoi
People’s Court to eight years of imprisonment each under Article 117 of
the Criminal Code. Their conviction and prison sentence were upheld on
appeal on December 24, 2021 and are final.
Trinh
Ba Phuong was sentenced to 10 years of imprisonment and five years of
probation on December 15, 2021, by the Hanoi People’s Court. His
conviction and prison sentence were upheld by the Hanoi High People’s
Court on August 17, 2022 and are final. During the investigation, he was
subjected to acts of torture and ill-treatment, and was confined to a
psychiatric hospital for one month in March 2021.
The
Observatory condemns in the strongest terms the above-mentioned acts of
torture and ill-treatment, and urges the Vietnamese authorities to
protect and respect Trinh Ba Tu, Can Thi Theu and Trinh Ba Phuong’s
right to be free from torture and other ill-treatment, and to carry out
an immediate, thorough and impartial investigation into the
above-mentioned allegations and hold those responsible accountable.
The
Observatory further condemns their ongoing arbitrary detention and
calls on the authorities to quash their prison sentences and to
immediately and unconditionally release them.
The
Observatory urges the Vietnamese authorities to stop misusing Article
117 of the Criminal Code to prosecute human rights defenders and silence
dissent in Vietnam, and recalls that several United Nations Special
Procedures declared
that this article is “overly broad and appears to be aimed at silencing
those who seek to exercise their human rights to freely express their
views and share information with others”.
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