Vietnamese authorities have especially targetted Catholic prayer group leaders who have called for the return of properties seized by the government.
Hanoi Catholics have written to the President of the United States Bush and the prime ministers of the Great Britain and Australia to complain about their government’s repression, hopeful that their letter might show to the world that the latter is not yet respecting human rights and religious freedom of Catholics.
In recent days Communist authorities in Hanoi have launched a repression campaign against lay Catholics who meet in their parishes to pray. Traditionally, Vietnamese Catholics turn to prayer to the Virgin Mary when they face difficulties.
“It is worrying when the police comes to your home with a paper order when you lead a prayer group,” a young man told AsiaNews. “As a student at a state university I refrain from criticising the government or its policies. But I saw in Catholic media that the police have used violence, beaten up lay people with electric truncheons. I cannot image why four agents took a woman to their headquarters just because she and her group prayed to Our Lady in their parish everyday.”
Now the authorities are after the leaders of prayer groups who demanded that the government return land seized from the Vietnamese Church and its parishes.
Some Catholics wrote to US President George W. Bush, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, and Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd asking for intercession with the Vietnamese government in the hope that the world will understand what the real situation is and support justice and religious freedom in Vietnam.
At noon on 28 August people gave a round of applause to Christian Marchant of US Embassy when he showed up in Thai Ha parish to listen and see for himself how the government carried out repression against dissidents.
Hanoi Catholics have written to the President of the United States Bush and the prime ministers of the Great Britain and Australia to complain about their government’s repression, hopeful that their letter might show to the world that the latter is not yet respecting human rights and religious freedom of Catholics.
In recent days Communist authorities in Hanoi have launched a repression campaign against lay Catholics who meet in their parishes to pray. Traditionally, Vietnamese Catholics turn to prayer to the Virgin Mary when they face difficulties.
“It is worrying when the police comes to your home with a paper order when you lead a prayer group,” a young man told AsiaNews. “As a student at a state university I refrain from criticising the government or its policies. But I saw in Catholic media that the police have used violence, beaten up lay people with electric truncheons. I cannot image why four agents took a woman to their headquarters just because she and her group prayed to Our Lady in their parish everyday.”
Now the authorities are after the leaders of prayer groups who demanded that the government return land seized from the Vietnamese Church and its parishes.
Some Catholics wrote to US President George W. Bush, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, and Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd asking for intercession with the Vietnamese government in the hope that the world will understand what the real situation is and support justice and religious freedom in Vietnam.
At noon on 28 August people gave a round of applause to Christian Marchant of US Embassy when he showed up in Thai Ha parish to listen and see for himself how the government carried out repression against dissidents.