Activists kept out of Vietnam amnesty of 15,446 convicts

Source:AFP Published: 2013-8-30 0:28:01

Vietnam will free more than 15,000 convicts to mark its Independence Day celebrations, the president's office said Thursday, in a major amnesty that excludes prominent political prisoners.

The 15,446 detainees, including 1,842 women, will be released for the 68th National Day anniversary which falls on Monday, said Giang Son, an official in President Truong Tan Sang's office.

The mass pardon is one of the country's largest in recent years.

But no prisoners sentenced for "propaganda" against the state or attempting to overthrow the communist regime appear on the amnesty list seen by AFP.

Among those to be released are four prisoners sentenced for national security crimes, including two ethnic minority Montagnards from the restive Central Highlands, vice-minister of public security General Le Quy Vuong told reporters.

Sixteen foreigners - five Chinese, four Cambodians, two Taiwanese, two Malaysians, one American, one Australian and one Belgian - will also be released.

These people were jailed for "violations of social order," drug crimes or human trafficking.

Vietnam is regularly denounced by rights groups and Western governments for its intolerance of political dissent and systematic violations of freedom of religion.

US officials said in June that Vietnam was holding more than 120 political prisoners.

National day marks the declaration of independence on September 2, 1945 by Ho Chi Minh, the founder of the Vietnamese Communist Party.

AFP


blog comments powered by Disqus