Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05HOCHIMINHCITY55
2005-01-15 10:17:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Ho Chi Minh City
Cable title:  

VIETNAM'S PRESS PUSHES BACK AFTER REPORTER'S ARREST

Tags:  PGOV KPAO PHUM SOCI PREL VM 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

151017Z Jan 05

ACTION EAP-00 

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FM AMCONSUL HO CHI MINH CITY
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 0880
INFO AMEMBASSY HANOI 
ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN NATIONS
UNCLAS HO CHI MINH CITY 000055 

SIPDIS


SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV KPAO PHUM SOCI PREL VM
SUBJECT: VIETNAM'S PRESS PUSHES BACK AFTER REPORTER'S ARREST


UNCLAS HO CHI MINH CITY 000055

SIPDIS


SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV KPAO PHUM SOCI PREL VM
SUBJECT: VIETNAM'S PRESS PUSHES BACK AFTER REPORTER'S ARREST



1. (SBU) Summary. The recent indictment of an investigative
journalist triggered a media-backlash from her newspaper, other
major HCMC news outlets, legal experts, and the general public --
much to the surprise of the Communist Party and the Ministry of
Public Security (MPS). It is unclear if the indictment was an
isolated event, resulting from internal GVN rivalries or a GVN
warning to the more activist press not to go too far in
investigating government and Party corruption. Our contacts see
the ongoing controversy as a hopeful sign of the press' evolution
in Vietnam, but the journalist's fate and that of her supportive
editorial staff -- are not yet resolved. End Summary.


2. (U) On January 5, the MPS accused Nguyen Thi Lan Anh, a
journalist for southern Vietnam's most popular newspaper Tuoi Tre
of "appropriating state confidential documents," and placed her
under house arrest. The charge stemmed from a May 20 article by
Anh about pharmaceutical price fixing in which she referred to a
letter from the Minister of Health to the Prime Minister
requesting an inspection of the offending company, Zuellig Pharma
Vietnam. MPS claimed that the letter was a classified document
containing "state secrets." (Note: Zuellig Pharma Vietnam was the
only distributor in Vietnam of certain drugs and had steadily
increased its prices over the previous three years by as much as
60 percent. Pharmaceutical price gouging has been a hot topic in
Vietnam, and Anh and other journalists had been covering the issue
for months. End Note)

Pushing the Envelope
--------------


3. (U) Since January 7, Tuoi Tre and four other high-circulation,
HCMC-based newspapers have reported heavily on Anh's detention and
the public's reaction, publishing editorials and letters to the
editor in her defense. Tuoi Tre reported that it has received
hundreds of e-mails, letters, and telephone calls from readers
supporting the reporter. The papers published the opinions of
legal experts, including a member of the National Assembly's
Legislation Committee, a former Minister of Justice, and the Vice
Chairman of the HCMC Bar Association, challenging the MPS claim
that the document that Ms. Anh published was a state secret.

Thanh Nien Newspaper ran an editorial saying MPS' rationale was
"unconvincing" and that "public opinion disagrees with the
prosecution." In a published statement, Chairperson of the HCMC
Journalists Association, Le Thi Hang Nga, stopped short of
directly criticizing MPS, saying the association supported the
rights of journalists to do their jobs and hoped to work with the
authorities "to find out the truth about Anh's case." The deputy
chair at the national level was more blunt, saying that MPS should
"reconsider their decision" and "avoid wasting time and
resources."


4. (SBU) In a series of meetings with two legal experts,
journalists and newspaper editors in HCMC (all Party members),our
contacts said that the controversy showcases the evolution of
media in Vietnam from a simple mouthpiece of the Party to a more
sophisticated and independent role. One contact, a senior HCMC
judge, told us that he was not surprised that Tuoi Tre defended
its journalist, despite the fact that the paper is owned by the
Party's Youth Union. Tuoi Tre, he explained, is a "brave"
newspaper that has pushed the envelope of journalism in Vietnam's
"ongoing economic and social transition." However, another
contact said that many journalists were frustrated that Tuoi Tre
and allied newspapers did not use the controversy to push even
harder for comprehensive media freedom in Vietnam.


5. (SBU) Our contacts said that the MPS and the Party were caught
flatfooted by Tuoi Tre's decision to push back and by the support
the newspaper received from other leading dailies. They
anticipated the Party would eventually reign in the newspapers
criticizing MPS, but also expected MPS to drop the charges against
the journalist. A leading defense attorney added that the Party
would act because it was sensitive to public opinion and "afraid"
of its influence.

Why arrest Anh?
--------------


6. (SBU) One legal expert speculated that Anh's arrest was
triggered by a power struggle between opposing factions within the
MOH. Anh's source for the article was an MOH official, and others
had pushed for the journalist's arrest as ammunition against their
rivals in the Ministry, this source told us. However, our media
contacts said the MPS took action against the reporter on the
order of senior elements within the Party -- some said Prime
Minister Van Khai -- "as a warning," to try and reign-in Tuoi Tre
and other more activist newspapers. This contact explained that,
over the past year, these newspapers had spearheaded reporting on
a series of scandals in health, education and sports sectors that
embarrassed a number of senior Party members. The PM and the
Minister of Health apparently are reportedly related by marriage,
according to a number of our contacts. Another well-placed
journalist told us that, six months ago, Deputy Prime Minister for

Cultural and Social Affairs Pham Gia Khiem, who bears primary
responsibility for media oversight, submitted a plan to the
Politburo to replace a number of editors-in-chief -- including
Tuoi Tre's -- but the Politburo has not yet acted on his proposal.


7. (SBU) Comment. Some of our contacts said that the very vocal
pushback against the MPS signals that journalistic freedom in
Vietnam has expanded, at least incrementally. It is notable that
more progressive elements within southern Vietnam's media now have
the confidence to defend one of their own and challenge the
powerful MPS. However, the Party has not yet spoken on the issue.
End Comment.

WINNICK


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