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To: 2MAR$ who wrote (31)2/11/2001 12:52:17 AM
From: 2MAR$  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 80
 
Buddhists In Central Vietnam Claim Government Harassment


HANOI (AP)--Police and government officials have been harassing and
intimidating Vietnamese Buddhists during a week of special prayers in the
central city of Hue, monks said Saturday.
Communist authorities have sought to prevent people from attending a
weeklong prayer service, said Thich Thai Hoa, head of the Thua Thien Hue
Order of Buddhist monks, which is part of the banned Unified Buddhist Church
of Vietnam, or UBCV.
"Police have gone from home to home warning people not to come, and
intimidating them," Hoa said.
Students from primary to university level were ordered to attend classes
Saturday and Sunday and forbidden to attend prayer services, he said, and
police checkpoints were set up around the city. Buddhist followers reported
being questioned after attending services.
Police have also been deployed around Tu Hieu Temple trying to prevent
people from attending the weeklong prayer service, another monk said on
condition of anonymity. No arrests have been reported so far.
Despite the threats, more than 1,000 people have attended services at the
temple since the event began on Wednesday, said Hoa. It runs through next
Tuesday.
"The people who have come are very brave," Hoa said. "They know they may
have trouble but they are willing to risk it."
International human rights groups, along with the U.S. State Department,
have consistently criticized Vietnam for its restrictions on religion and
free expression.
Leaders and members of the UBCV, the Hoa Hao Buddhist sect, Cao Dai
believers, along with Catholics and Protestants have been harassed, detained
without charges, placed under house arrest, and even imprisoned.

U.S., Vietnam Set To Ratify Trade Agreement

The services in Hue offered prayers of peace and happiness for the new
millennium, Hoa said. It was also to honor the souls of soldiers who had
died and victims of natural disasters. And finally, it asked for religion in
Vietnam to be liberated, and human rights to be respected.
Last week, Thich Quang Do, the second highest-ranking leader of the UBCV,
was detained, interrogated and strip-searched after paying a New Year's
visit to the church's patriarch in central Quang Ngai province.
Do, 73, who was later released, said the incident shows the need for the
U.S. to make human rights a condition for a proposed trade agreement with
Vietnam.
The U.S. Congress and Vietnam's National Assembly are set to ratify a
historic bilateral trade agreement signed last year.
From Hue, Hoa said he has also heard that he and other organizers of the
prayer service may be arrested for organizing the services.
"I am not afraid, because I do work for my people," he said. "I am doing
what's right. Those who would do me harm are simply ignorant and bad."
The reports of repression in Hue came as the U.S. Commission on
International Religious Freedom, an official body charged with advising the
president on strengthening religious freedom and combating religious
persecution worldwide, was set to begin hearings Monday on religious freedom
violations in Vietnam and Indonesia.

(END) DOW JONES NEWS 02-10-01
05:45 AM