Vietnam activist 'abuses democratic freedom', jailed
BY Agencies6 Feb 2018 5:37 PM GMT
Agencies6 Feb 2018 5:37 PM GMT
Hanoi: A Vietnamese environmental activist was jailed for 14 years on Tuesday over protests against a toxic waste dump that killed tonnes of fish in the communist country, whose leadership is accused of cracking down on critics.
The toxic dump in 2016 by Taiwanese steel firm Formosa destroyed livelihoods along swathes of coast in central Vietnam and sparked rare nationwide demonstrations that saw several activists put behind bars.
Hoang Duc Binh, 34, was convicted of "abusing democratic freedom" and "resisting public officers" following a half-day trial in the central province of Nghe An held under heavy security, his lawyer said.
"The court on Tuesday had no grounds to give such a harsh sentence," lawyer Ha Huy Son said.
Binh's co-accused Nguyen Nam Phong, 38, was given two years in prison for "resisting public officers" after he was stopped in a car along with Binh at an anti-Formosa protest in February 2017.
The court said he expressed remorse, while his co-accused Binh did not, according to Nghe An's official newspaper.
Binh, a well-known blogger and activist, was also accused of posting anti-government material on Facebook after the April 2016 fish kill.
At the time of his arrest in May 2017, he was the head of the activist group Vietnam Labour Movement, and was accused of stoking unrest by "luring" fishermen in central Vietnam to join and organise protests, the Nghe An newspaper reported.
The verdict was a "lesson and a warning to those intending to disrespect laws", the official mouthpiece added.
Formosa, which was building an 11 billion steel firm at the time of the massive toxic leak, was ordered to pay 500 million to the Vietnamese government after the disaster.
Next Story