(RSF/IFEX) – RSF has condemned the suspension of the monthly “Nha Bao va Cong Luan”, which was reportedly ordered to cease publishing in mid-January 2005. The decision, taken by the Ministry of Culture and Information, has not been made public. The organisation criticised the Vietnamese authorities for suspending a publication whose investigations proved embarrassing. “In […]
(RSF/IFEX) – RSF has condemned the suspension of the monthly “Nha Bao va Cong Luan”, which was reportedly ordered to cease publishing in mid-January 2005. The decision, taken by the Ministry of Culture and Information, has not been made public.
The organisation criticised the Vietnamese authorities for suspending a publication whose investigations proved embarrassing. “In this country, where the authorities view the media as propaganda vehicles, we deplore the censorship inflicted on the press when it reflects popular discontent,” it said.
On 18 January, RSF learned that “Nha Bao va Cong Luan” had received an order to cease publishing just a few days earlier. The reason for the order was unknown but in its first two issues, which appeared in November and December 2004, the publication carried investigative reports involving influential figures and some business circles.
One investigation focused on a major tourist development near a well-known beach at Vung Tau in the south of the country, in which local people were quoted as objecting to the expensive project because it would be harmful to the environment. The investigation also highlighted corruption among the local elite and their protection of those in charge of the project.
In the past few weeks, the Vietnamese government has slapped bans on a number of publications, in particular news websites, or ordered them to toe the line. For more information on the crackdown see: http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=12291
RSF also repeated its appeal for the release of journalist Nguyen Dinh Huy and four cyberdissidents, Nguyen Dan Que, Nguyen Vu Binh, Pham Hong Son and Nguyen Khac Toan, who are still in prison.