Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05HOCHIMINHCITY581
2005-06-01 12:18:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Ho Chi Minh City
Cable title:  

MOUNTING CONCERNS ABOUT PASTOR TRAN VAN TRUONG

Tags:  PHUM SOCI PREL PGOV VM HUMANR RELFREE 
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011218Z Jun 05

ACTION EAP-00 

INFO LOG-00 NP-00 AID-00 CIAE-00 INL-00 DODE-00 DS-00 
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 ------------------F88B26 011130Z /38 
FM AMCONSUL HO CHI MINH CITY
TO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 1572
INFO AMEMBASSY HANOI PRIORITY 
ASEAN MEMBER COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
UNCLAS HO CHI MINH CITY 000581 

SIPDIS


SENSITIVE

DEPARTMENT FOR EAP/BCLTV, DRL

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM SOCI PREL PGOV VM HUMANR RELFREE
SUBJECT: MOUNTING CONCERNS ABOUT PASTOR TRAN VAN TRUONG

REF: HCMC 493

UNCLAS HO CHI MINH CITY 000581

SIPDIS


SENSITIVE

DEPARTMENT FOR EAP/BCLTV, DRL

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM SOCI PREL PGOV VM HUMANR RELFREE
SUBJECT: MOUNTING CONCERNS ABOUT PASTOR TRAN VAN TRUONG

REF: HCMC 493


1. (SBU) Summary: On May 27, we traveled to the province of Dong
Nai to meet with provincial and medical officials regarding Pastor
Than Van Truong. Per reftel, Truong was diagnosed as "delusional"
and involuntarily committed to a mental institution after a series
of run-ins with police, largely involving critical letters he
wrote to Party leaders. Our sense is that Truong, extremely
devout and politically aware, is being punished for his attempts
to express peacefully his political and religious views. We have
urged HCMC and Dong Nai authorities to find a swift and proper
resolution to this case. We cautioned that in allowing the case
to fester, Dong Nai risks having its reputation as a progressive
center of business and trade sullied, just as it is preparing to
send a provincial trade mission to the United States. We stressed
that the Dong Nai Prosecutor's office should request an immediate
review and reevaluation of Truong's case. End Summary.

Following Up on the case of Than Van Truong
--------------


2. (SBU) On May 27 we met with the Deputy Director of Dong Nai
Province's Ministry of Public Security, the Chief of Staff of the
provincial People's Committee, and the head of the provincial
Committee for Religious Affairs (CRA) to discuss the case of Than
Van Truong. (Per reftel, Truong has been involuntarily committed
to a mental institution in Dong Nai Province since October 2004,
reportedly for the peaceful expression of his religious and
political beliefs.) The MPS official dominated the discussion for
the Vietnamese side. He told us that the police had dropped all
criminal charges against Truong following the decision of the
provincial medical examination board that Truong was not fit
mentally to defend himself in court. Therefore, the police have
no further involvement in the case. Truong's treatment and
release, he noted, is a matter between the mental hospital and the
prosecutor's office, which had referred him to the hospital for
evaluation.


3. (SBU) The MPS official said that Truong had come under police
scrutiny and had been detained for eight months in 2003 and 2004

for "using materials from overseas to lure others to oppose the
GVN." He refused to describe or discuss further what these
materials were or the specific criminal acts that Truong had
committed. He claimed that "as a matter of principle" the
Consulate General would have to send the province another
diplomatic note requesting the information. We would receive that
information "within 24 hours" after submitting our request.
(Note: we sent such a request on the evening of May 27, although
our three previous diplomatic notes clearly had indicated that we
wished to discuss Truong's case in detail. As of COB on May 31,
we have not yet received the requested information.)


4. (SBU) The MPS official said that prior to Truong's arrest,
neighbors reportedly complained that he was trying to evangelize
them and to convince them to oppose the GVN. While in pre-trial
detention Truong was not behaving "like a normal person" and thus
was released -- after eight months -- into the recognizance of his
family. However, the MPS official would not detail Truong's
abnormal behavior. He confirmed that Truong was not threatening
or violent, nor had he undertaken any overt anti-GVN acts.


5. (SBU) The MPS and CRA officials indicated that Truong's
evangelizing activities were problematic as he was "not really a
pastor." The CRA official argued that in order to evangelize, a
person must be ordained by a recognized church; in the case of
Protestants, by the Southern Evangelical Church of Vietnam. After
some sharp exchanges, the CRA official admitted that his office
had not investigated Truong's background to ascertain his status
within Vietnam's unofficial house church movement. He grudgingly
acknowledged that Truong could have some status within an
unrecognized house church organization. When we expressed concern
that this case might set a worrying precedent for action against
other house church leaders in the province, the officials tried to
reassure us that Truong had not been prosecuted for his religious
beliefs. The province allows 24 "unrecognized" house churches to
operate in the province, they noted; seven or eight have
registered under Vietnam's new legal framework on religion.


6. (SBU) The closest we came to receiving any specifics about the
case in our government meeting is when we asked what the province
would expect of Truong were he to be released. The MPS Deputy
said that Truong should live like a "normal citizen" and not write
any documents opposing the government.

Meeting with Medical Staff
--------------


7. (SBU) Following our meeting with provincial officials, we met
with the Director of Central Mental Hospital #2 as well as with
the head of the criminal ward of the hospital. (Truong's

attending physician also was present, although nervous and silent
throughout.) The Director told us that Truong had been diagnosed
with a "persistent delusional disorder." The Director said that
part of the delusional behavior involved his Protestant faith in
that his belief was "too strong" and passed the borderline between
normal and abnormal. Other than specific delusional acts, his
emotions, speech and behavior were "normal." He was not violent
or threatening.


8. (SBU) As evidence for his delusional behavior, the Director
said that Truong had asserted that he did not need to be ordained
by anyone other than God, that God had ordained him through the
bible and that he considered himself the closest person to God.
Truong reportedly believed that "God commands the sun and the
earth." The Director also cited an incident on April 30 when
Truong dressed in a military uniform -- he is an ex-Army officer -
- and with other inmates sang revolutionary songs in celebration
of Vietnam's unification. If he were a sane political or
religious dissident, the Director observed, he would not criticize
the Party and Chairman Ho at one moment and pose in uniform the
next. We replied that there was nothing inconsistent with a
former military man celebrating Vietnam's unification while still
holding views critical of the GVN or Party. "You could be right,"
the Director mumbled.


9. (SBU) We asked the Director what were the specific problems
that had led the police and prosecution to refer Truong to the
hospital for evaluation. The only information the police provided
was a set of letters -- some directed to the Party's General
Secretary -- that sharply critiqued the ethics of Party leaders,

SIPDIS
Ho Chi Minh and traditional Vietnamese cultural myths. These
letters advised the Party to abandon Marxism-Leninism and to
follow the Bible. They contained a "complicated logic" and
"illogically constructed ideas" that were symptomatic of delusion.
The letters, however, did not contain any threats to the Party or
to GVN leaders. The Director said that these letters reflected
mental illness as "religious people do not curse or criticize the
society in which they live."


10. (SBU) Continuing his explanation, the Director said that, in a
Marxist-Leninist society, one might oppose the government, but one
would voice opposition in secret. The fact that an individual
would attack the government openly clearly makes that person mad.
In Vietnam, "most people, even the religious minority, follow the
Party and do not call Marxism-Leninism a lie, a cheat and cruel."
The fact that Truong did -- and criticized Ho Chi Minh in the
process -- is a sign of his mental instability. He added that as
laypersons, we did not have the technical ability to comprehend
the subtleties of a difficult condition such as a delusional
disorder.


11. (SBU) The Director told us that, because a delusional person
cannot be convinced of the illogic of his views, conventional
therapy is useless. As a result, Truong's only treatment had been
to receive the anti-psychotic Haloperidol. If Truong stopped
having "extreme beliefs," he could be released. Barring that, he
could be in the hospital for the rest of his life. As he had been
involuntarily committed, it would be up to the Dong Nai
Prosecutor's Office to request a reevaluation. While the patient
can request an independent psychiatric evaluation, it would be up
to the Prosecutor whether or not to accept these findings, if they
are at variance with the hospital's views. The doctor noted that
since May 20, Truong's Haloperidol treatment had been discontinued
on the orders of Truong's attending physician.

An Alternate View
--------------


12. (SBU) The day prior to our visit to Dong Nai we had a text-
message exchange with Truong's attending physician (strictly
protect). As part of the hospital's preparations for our visit,
he had been summoned by the hospital director and asked for his
views on Truong's condition. He reportedly had told the Director
that Truong did not appear "so mentally ill that he needed to stay
in the hospital." In a subsequent conversation with us, the
doctor advised that a non-Vietnamese doctor should conduct any
independent medical review, as a local physician would not dare
issue an opinion different from that of the hospital.

Meeting with Truong
--------------


13. (SBU) After some negotiation and a two-hour delay we were
allowed to see Truong for 20 minutes. The director of the
hospital's criminal ward, provincial officials and a police
videographer remained throughout the meeting, despite our requests
to meet in private. We asked Truong why he thought he was in a
mental institution. He replied calmly and matter-of-factly that
he had written letters to the Party Secretary and others
criticizing Marxism-Leninism and Ho Chi Minh and advising the

leadership to follow God and the Bible. He said that he had
expected to be imprisoned or even killed for expressing his views,
but not sent to a mental institution. He asserted that God had
saved him and that he must try to bring the Bible to Vietnam's
leaders. He would never be violent or threatening, as such acts
were against God's word. He had not been physically abused in the
hospital.


14. (SBU) Truong was firm that he could be considered a pastor
under the criteria laid out by the Baptist General Conference. He
had been called by God to evangelize, had trained in theology and
had successfully led believers and established congregations on a
number of occasions. (A leading pastor within that Baptist
organization later confirmed Truong's claim.) Were he to be
released, he would seek to "rejoin his family and worship God in
accordance with the laws of Vietnam." He wished to have an
independent medical evaluation.


15. (SBU) Comment: We found Truong no different from other
extremely devout or politically impassioned people we have met in
Vietnam. While his writing the Party on politics and religion is
highly unusual in Vietnam even the police agree that Truong is non-
violent and non-threatening. His indefinite involuntary
commitment strikes us as retributional and not therapeutic. If
Truong showed the same degree of passion in favor of Marxism-
Leninism he would not be in his current predicament. It thus
appears that Truong was hospitalized as a direct result of his
attempts to express peacefully political and religious beliefs at
odds with those of the Party. Both the Dong Nai Hospital Director
and his assistant asserted that Truong's involuntary commitment to
a mental institution is a humane alternative to prison.


16. (SBU) Through a variety of channel we have and will continue
to urge the authorities to find a swift and proper resolution to
this case. We cautioned that if it allows this case to fester,
Dong Nai risks damaging its reputation as a progressive center of
commerce and trade. We stressed that the Dong Nai prosecution
should request a formal, transparent and independent review of
Truong's condition as a possible precursor to his release. End
comment.

WINNICK


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