The detention of blogger Nguyen Huu Vinh (a.k.a. Anh Ba
Sam) and his assistant Nguyen Thi Minh Thuy constitutes an arbitrary
deprivation of liberty under national and international laws.
A
failure of due process in the first place
The case “The SRV vs. Anh Ba Sam” was initiated on May 5,
2014 with the detention of Mr. Nguyen Huu Vinh and his assistant, Ms.
Nguyen Thi Minh Thuy.
In accordance with the Vietnamese Penal Code, an urgent
arrest or detention is different from an ordinary arrest to the extent that in
the former, an approval by the People’s Procuracy is not required prior to the
act of arrest or detention. That approval may be granted subsequent to the act
of arrest or detention, within 12 hours since the People’s Procuracy receives
the request for deprivation of liberty from the investigating body.
This provision authorizes the investigating body to act
immediately at their discretion without any restriction. It also helps the
investigating body to minimize the risk of information leakage.
In the case of Anh Ba Sam, however, the detention by the
Investigating Body under the Ministry of Public Security fails to fit into any
category of urgent arrest or detention as stipulated in Article 81, the
Vietnamese Procedural Criminal Code of 2003.
Under this law, urgent arrests can only be made in the
following cases:
- (i) when there exist grounds to believe that such persons are preparing to commit very serious or exceptionally serious offenses;
- (ii) when victims or persons present at the scenes where the offenses occurred saw with their own eyes and confirmed that such persons are the very ones who committed the offenses and it is deemed necessary to immediately prevent such persons from escaping; or
- (iii) when traces of offenses are found on the bodies or at the residences of the persons suspected of having committed the offenses and it is deemed necessary to immediately prevent such persons from escaping or destroying evidences.
Obviously the arrest of Nguyen Huu Vinh and Nguyen Thi
Minh Thuy does not fall in any of these cases, because the Article 258 of the
Penal Code under which they were charged does not belong to the category of
“very serious” or “exceptionally serious” crimes. There was not any victim or
person present at the homes and offices of Vinh and Thuy to see with their own
eyes or to confirm that Vinh and Thuy had committed any offence. The
investigating body also failed to find any trace of offence at the homes and
offices of Vinh and Thuy: as confirmed in the Investigative Report of October
30, all of the objects confiscated at their homes and offices were found
“unrelated to the case.”
The failure of due process in the first place led to due
process violations in the subsequent phases.
Violation
of privacy rights
Notably, the Investigative Report obviously revealed unlawful
means by the police to obtain the evidence based on which the urgently arrest warrant
on Nguyen Huu Vinh and Nguyen Thi Minh Thuy was signed.
The unlawful means
were clearly referred to on the first page of the Investigative Report, which
wrote that “the case began on April 1, when the Department of Political
Guardian No.6 [Cục Bảo vệ Chính trị 6] under the General Department of Public
Security No. 1, Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security [Tổng cục An ninh I – Bộ
Công an] dispatched a note to the Investigating Body of Public Security,
providing surveillance data collected from two Internet subscribers who were
VDC’s and FPT’s clients and whom they alleged “often posted to the Internet articles
with signs of infringing upon the interests of the State, the legitimate rights
and interests of organizations and citizens.”
This inevitably raises questions as to whether the police
are authorized to monitor and access personal data of Internet users, whether Internet
service providers are to provide personal data of their clients upon police’s request,
and whether Internet service providers are allowed to do so.
Some people automatically linked the issue to similar
circumstances in Western countries, where the police can only monitor phone
calls when they are authorized by the court(s).
Under Vietnamese law, Article 38 of the Civil Code can
provide a hint to answer the above questions. It stipulates that “individuals’
letters, telegrams, telephones, and other electronic correspondence shall be
protected to ensure confidentiality.”
In addition, Article 72 of the Law on Information Technology
strictly prohibits the access to, adjustment to or removal of the data of
organizations and citizens in the cyber area.
Some people may invoke Article 38 of the Civil Code to
argue that the monitoring of correspondence and electronic information can
still be conducted “in circumstances which are stipulated by law” AND “with the
order from the competent State authority.” However, which specific law this provision
refers to, or which State authority is competent in the case of Nguyen Huu Vinh and Nguyen Thi Minh Thuy, was
not mentioned in the Investigative Report.
More importantly, if the Ministry of Public Security is
authorized to monitor personal Internet data, and if there was indeed an
official decision granting them the authority to monitor Nguyen Huu Vinh and Nguyen
Thi Minh Thuy’s data on the Internet, then a big question should be raised
about the constitutionality, legality and legitimacy of such decisions.
It should be noted that the two regulatory notes that
define duties, obligations, and authority of the Ministry of Public Security,
ie. Decree No. 77/2009/NĐ-CP and Decree No. 21/2014/NĐ-CP, cannot be found in any national gazette or legal database on the Internet. Some sources said these
two notes were classified as “confidential”, thus closed to the public.
"Citizen journalist" Anh Ba Sam. Photo by Nguyen Lan Thang
An arbitrary arrest
Under international human rights laws, the arrest of Mr.
Nguyen Huu Vinh and Ms. Nguyen Thi Minh Thuy is a violation of their right to
liberty and constitutes an arbitrary arrest.
Articles 9 of both the 1948 Universal Declaration of
Human Rights and the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
stipulate that “no one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or
exile.”
Vietnam, as a full member of the United Nations, has
signed these two treaties, which are generally agreed to be the foundation of
international human rights laws.
The general standards of these above treaties, in the
context of a rule of law with an independent judiciary system, are always
interpreted and enforced in a manner that helps to achieve social justice and balances
human rights with security.
In 2000 the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, a
body consisting of independent human rights experts working on arbitrary
detentions in its member states, introduced a set of criteria to assess whether
an act of deprivation of liberty is arbitrary. Among the criteria, Category II provides
that the deprivation of liberty results from the exercise of the rights or
freedoms guaranteed by UN human rights treaties is regarded as arbitrary.
The police, by alleging Nguyen Huu Vinh and Nguyen Thi
Minh Thuy to have posted to web 24 articles mentioned in the Investigative
Report and arresting them despite their denial of allegation, have evidently violated
freedom of expression, and this act of arrest fits into the above-mentioned
Category II.
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