Text Only
Search

 
Vietnam Releases 3 US Citizens Accused of Terrorism

12 December 2007
Steinglass report - Download MP3 (401k) audio clip
Listen to Steinglass report audio clip

Vietnam has released three of the four Vietnamese-born United States citizens it arrested in November and accused of involvement in terrorism. The release comes a day after the U.S. ambassador criticized the detentions. Matt Steinglass reports from Hanoi.

Leon Truong in Ho Chi Minh City, 11 Dec 2007, just after his release by Vietnamese authorities
Leon Truong in Ho Chi Minh City,  just after his release by Vietnamese authorities, 11 Dec 2007
Vietnamese television reported Wednesday morning that Leon Truong had left Vietnam, bound for his home in the United States. Truong had been arrested in Ho Chi Minh City November 17 with five other activists from the Viet Tan party, a U.S.-based pro-democracy group.

Also released were Le Van Phan and his wife Nguyen Thi Thinh, arrested at Ho Chi Minh City's airport November 23 after a gun was allegedly found in their luggage. They were scheduled to return to the U.S. today.

The U.S. Embassy in Hanoi said Wednesday it welcomed the releases.

In a press conference Tuesday, U.S. Ambassador Michael Michalak had said that if the Americans were not released, the U.S. would protest.

U.S. Ambassador Michael Michalak during a news conference in Hanoi, 11 Dec 2007
U.S. Ambassador Michael Michalak during a news conference in Hanoi, 11 Dec 2007
Michalak expressed the view that the U.S. citizens had been detained for peaceful political activism, and questioned Vietnam's terrorism allegations.

"Vietnam has said that Viet Tan is on their list of terrorist organizations. Viet Tan is not on any list that I know of, of American terrorist organizations," he said.

One American Viet Tan member, Quoc Quan Nguyen, has not been released.

Vietnamese officials say, and a U.S. Embassy official acknowledged, that Nguyen had entered Vietnam using a forged Cambodian passport, complicating the charges against him.

The release of Phan and Thinh leaves unsolved the question of the gun they are alleged to have imported into Vietnam. Vietnamese press reports say the couple confessed to carrying the gun, but Michalak said Thinh had denied the charge.

The United States enjoys increasingly warm relations with Vietnam, and has been seeking Vietnamese cooperation on counter-terrorism efforts and on efforts to halt nuclear proliferation.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Family of Vietnamese-American Dissident Welcomes Release
US Criticizes Vietnamese Detention of US Citizens
 
  Top Story
Iranian Opposition Protesters Hijack Government Rally

  More Stories
Clinton Tries to Reassure Arab Leaders on Israeli Settlements
British Leader Vows Afghan Mission Unchanged  Audio Clip Available
Afghanistan's Abdullah Says Karzai Re-election Lacks Legitimacy
Election Results Could Impact Obama, Democrats
US Envoy Urges Burma to Make Concrete Steps Toward Democracy
Italian Judge Convicts 23 in CIA Kidnap Case
Israel Seizes Ship Loaded With Weapons  Audio Clip Available
Pakistan Army: Troops Reach Key Taliban Strongholds
Researchers Say Elderly Not Necessarily Immune From Severe H1N1 Flu  Video clip available
Indonesia Debates Benefits, Risks of Carbon-Trading Plans
Africa Boycott Steers UN Climate Talks  Audio Clip Available
ICC Prosecutor Faces Uphill Challenges in Kenya Case