Internet dissident released in Viet Nam
Posted: July 13, 2007

Journalist and writer Nguyen Vu Binh was released in Viet Nam on June 9, 2007. Amnesty members has campaigned extensively for his release. © Private
Internet dissident Nguyen Vu Binh has been released from prison after spending almost five years behind bars.
According to official media, the 39-year-old was granted an amnesty by President Nguyen Minh Triet on June 8, after he sent a letter to the head of state “pleading for clemency”.
The journalist and writer served over two-thirds of his seven-year sentence. According to media reports, he left Ba Sao prison on June 9 to be reunited with his wife and two daughters in their Ha Noi home.
Nguyen Vu Binh was arrested in September 2002 and convicted for “spying” after he wrote and posted articles about democracy on the internet and kept email contact with political groups in exile.
It is hoped the release marks the reversal of a political crackdown in which more than 20 people, including lawyers, trade unionists, religious leaders and internet dissidents, have been arrested in Viet Nam. Eleven of these have been convicted in apparently politically-motivated trials.
Amnesty International had considered Nguyen Vu Binh a prisoner of conscience, imprisoned solely for the peaceful expression of his opinions. Amnesty members has campaigned extensively for his release.
On his release, Nguyen Vu Binh sent a message to Amnesty through a friend. He says he is conscious that the support Amnesty and other human rights and democratic organizations gave him was not for him personally, but for universal values such as freedom, democracy and human rights. He concluded that: “The way to thank you is to continue to struggle for these values.”

