Vietnam Catholic protestors' sentences upheld

<http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/asiapacific/news/article_1467225.php/Vietnam_Catholic_protestors_sentences_upheld_>http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/asiapacific/news/article_1467225.php/Vietnam_Catholic_protestors_sentences_upheld_
 



Asia-Pacific News

Mar 27, 2009, 12:08 GMT

    Hanoi - A Hanoi court Friday upheld the convictions of eight 
Catholic parishioners for damaging property during protests last year 
over a land dispute between the church and the Hanoi government.

    Hundreds of supporters of the parishioners who had gathered 
outside the courthouse shouted their opposition when the verdicts 
were announced. Protestors carried signs reading 'justice, truth, and 
peace,' and applauded defendant Nguyen Thi Nhi when she passed by.

    The charges related to protests last year at Thai Ha Church in 
Hanoi. Parishioners at the church staged a vigil demanding that a 
state-owned company return land the government seized from the church 
in the early 1960s.

    Protestors erected crosses and shrines and knocked down a brick 
wall on the disputed land. The government refused to return the land, 
but ultimately announced it would turn the plot into a public park.

    In December, eight parishioners, ranging in age from 21 to 63 
years, were given light sentences involving no jail time.

    In rejecting their appeal, one of the court's judges, Nguyen Quoc 
Hoi, said the defendants' actions showed 'contempt for the laws, 
caused dissatisfaction among the people, and affected national unity.'

    He said the government had shown tolerance in handing out light sentences.

    'It is impossible to say the parishioners received tolerant 
sentences, when the sentences were unjust,' said Nguyen Thanh Van, 
47, a Catholic who had traveled 80 kilometres to attend the trial.

    'If they (the protestors) had not prayed, the land would have 
been given to government officials,' said fellow Catholic protestor 
Nguyen Van Mui. 'Thanks to their rallies, the land has become 
beautiful flower beds now.'

    Vietnamese police blockaded the area surrounding the courthouse 
during the trial. Several foreign press agencies and diplomats were 
allowed to watch the trial through closed-circuit television.

    One of the three defence lawyers, Le Tran Luat, did not attend 
the trial. Several Catholic websites Friday published an email Luat 
sent the defendants on Wednesday in which he said the government was 
preventing him from attending.
[]



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