Vietnam activists flash and dash under de facto martial law

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Protesters against the proposed SEZ law

Persecuted activists resort to ‘flash’ protests to keep pressure on the government and stay out of prison amid a sweeping clampdown on dissent

 

by Vu Quoc Ngu, Asia Times, July 21, 2018

 

Vietnamese activists and pro-democracy campaigners in Ho Chi Minh City are now locked in a game of cat-and-mouse with security forces as the country’s main economic hub falls under the grip of de facto martial law.

Authorities have tightened their public controls in the city in a bid to prevent new rounds of protests in the wake of last month’s popular eruptions against two controversial proposed laws on special economic zones and cybersecurity.

Tens of thousands participated in the rallies against the Communist Party-dominated government’s perceived selling out of national interests, namely to China, and curbing of online privacy and freedom in the name of order and security. Similar protests held across the country quickly morphed into calls for democracy and rights.

In a show of force, the government has since deployed riot police and armed militia members to main thoroughfares and major street corners in Ho Chi Minh City. Dedicated walking streets have been barricaded and closed to local residents and foreign tourists. Scores of activists involved in the protests have been detained in a gathering clampdown.

But patriotic pro-democracy activists are not bowing meekly to the government’s latest wave of repression. Initiated by a dissident known pseudonymously as Vu Thach, activists are now holding flash public protests at times and places where the police and security forces are not present in Ho Chi Minh City.

While the city’s center is under tight police control, campaigners have gathered in small groups in less popular areas at times when police lose concentration or switch shifts, often in the late afternoon or early evening.

Vietnamese protesters take to the streets against the government's plans to pass a controversial special economic zone law. Photo: Twitter

Vietnamese protesters take to the streets against the government’s plans to pass a controversial special economic zone law. Photo: Twitter