Entries by kayleedolen

Vietnam Free Expression Newsletter No. 17/2017 – Week of June 19-25

Greetings from Huong, Ella, and Kaylee from The 88 Project! We are bringing to you news, analysis, and actions regarding human rights and civil society in Vietnam during the week of June 19 to 25. Blogger Nguyễn Ngọc Như Quỳnh’s trial is scheduled for next week on June 29, admist appeals from international organizations to […]

Eight Years After His Arrest, Family, Supporters, and International Community Continue to Rally Around Tran Huynh Duy Thuc

May 24th, 2017 marks eight years since blogger and entrepreneur Tran Huynh Duy Thuc was arrested by the Vietnamese authorities. He is the founder of a large Internet provider in Vietnam and often blogged about economic and social conditions. He was arrested at first on charges involving theft of telephone wires, and then later under […]

Freedom House Report Gives the World Low Marks on Press Freedom

In Freedom Houses’s new report “Freedom of the Press 2017: Press Freedom’s Dark Horizons,” 13 is the magic number. That’s the meager  percentage of the world population that currently lives in a country where the press is classified as “Free.” The report also deems press freedom to be at its lowest level worldwide in 13 […]

Freedom House Declares Vietnam “Not Free” in 2017 Report

In its newest report, Freedom in the World 2017, Freedom House has once again decided that Vietnam is “Not Free.”  Many other Asian countries, including all of Vietnam’s neighbors, received the same designation, reflecting the larger trends of repression of freedom of expression and the violations of human rights seen in Asia and other regions […]

Update on Tran Huynh Duy Thuc and How You Can Help

The media has been buzzing lately with news about Vietnam– the protests of the large-scale fish deaths, President Obama’s visit (and the question of lifting the arms ban), and the much-welcomed release of Father Nguyen Van Ly from his fourth, and hopefully final, prison sentence. We also want to make sure that news circulates about […]

The Repression of Female Activists in Vietnam

The U.S. State Department’s latest report on human rights in Vietnam notes the lack of female and minority participation in national decision-making, despite the introduction of quotas. According to the report, less than one quarter of the National Assembly is made up of women, and only two out of 28 cabinet positions are held by females. […]

Human Rights Recap January 2016

In Hanoi this month, police detained ~30 people in a protest over land grabs. The entire protest drew about 100 participants and 200-300 police. Radio Free Asia notes that, “Land grabs in which government officials use their authority to confiscate and sell land to developers are a common cause of social unrest across Southeast Asia, […]