Home ›
Members of Buddhist youth dissident group in Vietnam banned from traveling
Tweet
HANOI, Nov 4 (AFP) - A group belonging to the banned Vietnamese Buddhist Youth movement has been banned from leaving the country to attend a Buddhist festival abroad, official sources said Thursday.
The International Buddhist Information Bureau, an arm of the banned Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, said 21 leaders of the youth movement were intercepted at Ho Chi Minh City's international airport earlier this week.
"The Buddhists, all of whom possessed the necessary travel documents and visas, were intercepted by security police as they prepared to board flights to India on Monday and Wednesday," the bureau said in a statement.
A security police officer at Tan Son Nhat airport confirmed the information. "We received an order from another service not to let these people leave the country. Their names were printed in a list we were given," he said.
The group, who was going to make a pilgrimage to Buddhist holy sites and attend a festival at Buddha's birthplace in Bodhgaya in India's Bihar state on November 8-9, was then subjected to "working sessions" with police and subsequently released, the statement added.
All of them came from central provinces of Thua Thien-Hue, Quang Nam, Khanh Hoa, Lam Dong as well as Ho Chi Minh City, where most of the Buddhists opposed to the communist regime live.
"Police simply declared that they were prohibited from traveling for 'national security' reasons," the bureau added.
"The ban is a flagrant violation of the right to freedom of movement enshrined in the United Nations International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights," its president, Vo Van Ai, said.
"Vietnam must uphold its international obligations and respect its citizens' fundamental freedoms and rights."
The Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam was officially banned in 1981 because it refused to come under the ruling Communist Party's control. It was subjected to a renewed crackdown on October last year.
Its patriarch, 87-year-old Thich Huyen Quang, who has been under effective house arrest without charge or trial for more than two decades, is currently being detained at a monastery in central Binh Dinh province.
The church's number two, Thich Quang Do, 76, is being held at a monastery in Ho Chi Minh City.
The International Buddhist Information Bureau says the Vietnamese Buddhist Youth Movement was founded over 60 years ago. An affiliate of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, it was outlawed in 1975 by the communist government.
In September, the US State Department designated Vietnam as one of the world's worst offenders in denying religious freedom.
The International Buddhist Information Bureau, an arm of the banned Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, said 21 leaders of the youth movement were intercepted at Ho Chi Minh City's international airport earlier this week.
"The Buddhists, all of whom possessed the necessary travel documents and visas, were intercepted by security police as they prepared to board flights to India on Monday and Wednesday," the bureau said in a statement.
A security police officer at Tan Son Nhat airport confirmed the information. "We received an order from another service not to let these people leave the country. Their names were printed in a list we were given," he said.
The group, who was going to make a pilgrimage to Buddhist holy sites and attend a festival at Buddha's birthplace in Bodhgaya in India's Bihar state on November 8-9, was then subjected to "working sessions" with police and subsequently released, the statement added.
All of them came from central provinces of Thua Thien-Hue, Quang Nam, Khanh Hoa, Lam Dong as well as Ho Chi Minh City, where most of the Buddhists opposed to the communist regime live.
"Police simply declared that they were prohibited from traveling for 'national security' reasons," the bureau added.
"The ban is a flagrant violation of the right to freedom of movement enshrined in the United Nations International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights," its president, Vo Van Ai, said.
"Vietnam must uphold its international obligations and respect its citizens' fundamental freedoms and rights."
The Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam was officially banned in 1981 because it refused to come under the ruling Communist Party's control. It was subjected to a renewed crackdown on October last year.
Its patriarch, 87-year-old Thich Huyen Quang, who has been under effective house arrest without charge or trial for more than two decades, is currently being detained at a monastery in central Binh Dinh province.
The church's number two, Thich Quang Do, 76, is being held at a monastery in Ho Chi Minh City.
The International Buddhist Information Bureau says the Vietnamese Buddhist Youth Movement was founded over 60 years ago. An affiliate of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, it was outlawed in 1975 by the communist government.
In September, the US State Department designated Vietnam as one of the world's worst offenders in denying religious freedom.
Gli iscritti e contribuenti 2012
| FRANCESCA T. MILANO | 200 euro |
| EUFEMIA T. MUGGIO' | 200 euro |
| AMBROGIO S. CASSINA DE' PECCHI | 200 euro |
| PIER PAOLO S. FROSINONE | 200 euro |
| DAVIDE R. MILANO | 200 euro |
| LORENA P. MONZA | 200 euro |
| DAVIDE L. MANTOVA | 200 euro |
| PAOLO G. ROMA | 200 euro |
| MARTA G. ROMA | 200 euro |
| ANNA MARIA D. ROMA | 200 euro |
| Total SUM | 397.572 euro |
Online Donations
Gruppi radicali nel mondo
Comunicati stampa
Rassegna stampa
05/08/2010
Security Forces Cut Phone Calls Reporting Human Rights Violations from Central Highlands
Montagnard Foundation
11/19/2009
Montagnar Foundation
Kok Ksor
Montagnard Foundation Addresses the Italian Parliament: Help Needed to Stop Vietnam's Ethnic Cleansing Against the Degar Montagnard People
12/26/2008
MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS' SPOKESMAN MR.LE DZUNG ANSWERS QUESTION ON 25 DECEMBER 2008
Vietnam Ministry of Foreign Affair
Documenti
05/30/2010
Burma Cambodia Italy Laos Montagnard Vietnam
General Council: Approved Resolution on South East Asia
02/08/2007
APPEALS/AND RELATED TO Vietnam
PETITION TO FREE OVER 350 DEGAR PRISONERS AND TO OPEN THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS TO THE WORLD
01/26/2007
APPEALS/AND RELATED TO Vietnam
Nomination of Venerable Thich Quang Do for the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize










