2013-05-07 | Vietnam Committee on Human Rights European Union deplores “mismatch” between government rhetoric and reality on religious freedom in Vietnam
2013-05-07 | IBIB Security Police surround Giac Hoa Pagoda in Saigon
2013-04-29 | Vietnam Committee on Human Rights VII Ministerial Conference of the Community of Democracies in Mongolia launches Asia Democracy Network
2013-04-18 | Vietnam Committee on Human Rights European Parliament condemns violations of human rights, freedom of expression, religion and assembly in Vietnam
2013-04-11 | Vietnam Committee on Human Rights US Congressional Hearing examines human rights and religious freedom violations against the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam
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 Thailand bars Vietnamese human rights activist... again
2010-10-28 | Saksith Saiyasombut | Asian Correspondent
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Vo Van Ai, centre, is pictured here with Anwar Ibrahim, right, and Penelope Faulkner. Pic: AP |
In September, a press event on human rights in Vietnam was to take place at the Foreign Correspondent’s Club of Thailand (FCCT), when the FCCT got a letter from the Thai ministry of affairs which pressured it to cancel the event, asking that it not allow “organizations and/or persons to use Thailand as a place to conduct activities detrimental to other countries”.
Shortly thereafter the event was indeed actually canceled after the speakers and activists have been denied entry to Thailand. This dubious act by the Thai government drew public criticism.
Why am I telling you this, you might ask? Well, maybe they have learned some lessons and actually try to.... Ah, what the hell - this is Thailand we’re talking about! And guess what? They’ve done it again!
The president of the Vietnam Committee on Human Rights, Vo Van Ai, was refused a visa by the Thai Embassy in Paris, the second time that he has been prevented from travelling to Bangkok in recent weeks. (...)
An empty chair marked the place where Vo Van Ai was to have delivered a lecture titled “Universality and Particularity in Human Rights: A Vietnamese Buddhist Viewpoint” at the “First International Conference on Human Rights in Asia.” The event drew scholars and activists from across southeast Asia and beyond and was held by the Southeast Asia Human Rights Network (SEAHRN) and Bangkok’s Mahidon University.
Speaking today, Dr. Srirapha Petcharamasree read letter from Vo Van Ai to SEAHRN, in which he said that “the attitude of the Thai government is particularly shocking given that Thailand holds the presidency of the UN Human Rights Council.” Dr. Srirapha is Thailand’s representative at the AICHR, but stressed that she was speaking in a personal capacity. She called on the Thai Government “to be faithful to the commitment made to the UN when it made its candidacy to the presidency.”
While this case has generated less outcry than the first ban, it nevertheless bluntly reveals Thailand’s current stance and hamfisted handling of these thorny issues.
Saksith Saiyasombut is a Thai blogger and journalist based in Hamburg, Germany. He can be followed @Saksith (http://twitter.com/saksith).
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