Friday, March 29, 2024 | Ramadan 18, 1445 H
broken clouds
weather
OMAN
23°C / 23°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Vietnam’s ‘Mother Mushroom’ blogger sentenced to 10 years

1047490
1047490
minus
plus

HANOI: Vietnamese activist blogger Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh — better known by her pen name ‘Mother Mushroom’ — was sentenced in court on Thursday to 10 years imprisonment for “propagating” against the state.


“This is an extreme injustice and cruelty given out by the authoritarian (government), as they want to silence my daughter,” Quynh’s mother, Nguyen Thi Tuyet Lan, said after she attended the trial.


Quynh, 38, was arrested in October in Khanh Hoa province.


She had criticized the government’s response to last year’s catastrophic chemical spill at the Formosa Ha Tinh Steel factory,which decimated fisheries along the north central coast in Ha Tinh province.


She was formally charged on June 2 for “conducting propaganda against the state of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam,” a charge that carries up to 20 years in prison.


The trial, access to which was heavily restricted, lasted one day. Trinh Kim Tien, an activist who travelled from Ho Chi Minh City to attempt to attend, said the area around the courthouse was blocked off.


“This sentence is an act of inhumanity, they defy public opinion and people,” she said.


Lan said the verdict would be hard for the family.


“At the trial, my daughter apologized to me and our relatives for having to separate our family for such a long time, but she said if she could go back in time and had a choice, she would still go on the way she has chosen to fight for justice and democracy,” she said.


Quynh’s activism won her the US State Department’s Women of Courage award in March. She was not able to collect her award, however, which would have been presented by US First Lady Melania Trump.


“The scandal here is not what Mother Mushroom said, but Hanoi’s stubborn refusal to repeal draconian, rights-abusing laws that punish peaceful dissent and tarnish Vietnam’s international reputation,” Phil Robertson, the rights group’s deputy Asia director said.


— dpa


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon