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"ĐỪNG NHGE NHỮNG GÌ CỘNG SẢN NÓI HÃY NHÌN KỸ NHỮNG GÌ CỘNG SẢN LAM" (Nguyễn Văn Thiệu)

Đả Đảo CSVN !!!
Hồn Việt Quốc Kỳ

Vietnam to release more than 17,000 prisoners


HANOI, Vietnam — Vietnam's president has ordered more than 17,000 prisoners freed as part of the country's annual National Day amnesty, officials said Saturday.
Twenty of those to be released have been charged with national security crimes, but no high-profile pro-democracy dissidents were included. Several were ethnic minorities from the restive Central Highlands bordering Cambodia.
Vietnam has been criticized by the United States and European Union for jailing political and religious dissidents. The Communist county does not tolerate any form of protest and often uses national security laws to convict those deemed a threat.


Of the 17,210 inmates being freed, 37 are foreigners from a number of countries, including France, the United States and Canada. The release will begin Sunday to commemorate National Day on Sept. 2.

AP

DBLB Cao Quang Ánh trong buổi họp báo tại Bắc Cali hôm 21-8-2010



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-r8rOiP9EH4

Chống Văn Hóa Vận Của VC Tại Nam Cali

The Task Force Committee against Cultural Propagandas by Communist Vietnam, which represents more than 100 associations, organizations and individuals from the Vietnamese refugee community in the United States and Southern California, decides to call a protest against the so-called "Tình Vào Hạ" (Love into Summer) Concert at Anaheim Arena on Saturday, July 24th, 2010, at 7:00 PM. As a vehement denouncement of the campaign of Cultural Propagandas by Communist Vietnam being carried via musical performances.

The Vietnamese refugee community in the U.S and Southern California respects freedom of speech and expressions, as well as everyone's rights to do business legally, but we resolutely stand up to the brutal totalitarian communist regime and its agents until the Country and the People of Vietnam truly enjoys freedom, democracy, and human rights.

Ủy Ban Đặc Nhiệm Chống Văn Hóa Vận Cộng Sản Việt Nam gồm đại diện hơn 100 hội đoàn, đoàn thể và đồng hương người Việt Tỵ Nạn Cộng Sản tại tại Hoa Kỳ và Nam California quyết định biểu tình chống Đại Nhạc Hội "Tình Vào Hạ" tại Anaheim Arena vào 7g chiều Thứ bảy 24 tháng 07, năm 2010 nhằm cực lực phản đối chiến dịch Văn Hóa Vận của Cộng Sản Việt Nam tại Hải Ngoại qua hình thức ca nhạc nghệ thuật.

Cộng đồng người Việt tỵ nạn cộng sản tại Hoa Kỳ và Nam Cali tôn trọng quyền tự do phát biểu, bày tỏ cảm tưởng cũng như quyền làm ăn, buôn bán hợp pháp của mọi người nhưng cương quyết chống lại chế độ bạo quyền cộng sản và tay sai cho đến khi Đất Nước và Người Dân Việt Nam thực sự được hưởng Tự Do, Dân Chủ và Nhân Quyền.



This text will be replaced



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQsrC17T_BQ

Vietnam Says 137 Fishermen Missing as Tropical Storm Mindulle Approaches


Vietnam’s government said as many as 137 fishermen are missing as Tropical Storm Mindulle churned its way across the South China Sea toward the country’s east coast with maximum sustained winds of 111 kilometers per hour.
Vietnam’s Border Guard High Command was unable to contact 10 fishing boats with the fishermen on board, the government said in a statement. Around 1,500 fishing boats with 7,600 fishermen were ordered back to port, the National Committee for Flood and Storm Control said in a separate statement.
Tropical Storm Mindulle is expected to make landfall at about 7 p.m. Hanoi time today close to the city of Vinh, south of the capital. The storm was 173 kilometers (107 miles) southeast of Vinh, Vietnam, at about 7 a.m. Hanoi time, the U.S. Navy Joint Typhoon Warning Center said on its website.
The storm is dumping heavy rain on Vietnam’s east coast, Vietnam’s National Centre for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting said on its website. The government warned the rain may cause flooding and mudslides, and ordered the evacuation of people in high-risk areas including river mouths.
Mindulle’s was moving northwest in the South China Sea at 22 kilometers per hour and is forecast to maintain strength as it approaches land, the center said. Mindulle, the Korean word for dandelion, will be upgraded to a typhoon if winds exceed 117 kilometers per hour.

bloomberg.com

Vietnam’s most challenging foods

There is a local Vietnamese saying that when a man encounters a new animal, his first question is: “Is it dangerous?” and the second question is: “Is it edible?”
The Vietnamese are adventurous eaters, and they're not afraid to eat the whole animal, blood, guts and all. Here are six Vietnamese dishes to chew over.

Read more.

The true face of vietnamnews.vnagency

Usually a newspaper has to be independant now let'S look what Vietnam News (a lubricating journal)
is writting. They don't want that the world public get information about the real face of VN.
They are afraid that big companies don't invest money anymore to VN.

Click on that picture to read this article of the propaganda newspaper.


Congressmen Urge State Department to Return Vietnam to List of Human Rights Violators

Members of the a congressional human rights commission want the State Department to reinstate Vietnam as a “country of particular concern” (CPC) after hearing testimony Wednesday on the lack of religious freedom in the Communist-controlled country.

“I fear that when the U.S. granted Vietnam normal trade relations in 2001, we lost crucial leverage that puts pressure on the Vietnamese government to improve a very poor record on human rights,” Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.) said at the hearing. “Over the last year, we’ve seen Vietnam’s record on human rights and religious freedom take a turn for the worse.”

Read more.

Ai là ngụy?


 We still know it from the communist propaganda and all spamming losers across the world wide web,
they are calling everyone who still believes in VNCH as ngụy.

But wait, who is the puppet?
Spammers and communist monkeys are living in the past.

What can we see at the moment? CSVN is doing drills together with the US.
















 Stupid VC @ USS Washington

And why? Because CS has problems with their Chinese puppet masters, so
the  Việt Gian Government needs a new partner.

To this issue we don't see any comments around the fool world of communists
idiots because they aren't able to answer anything.
Because in their idealogy the enemy is the US, but now CSVN needs a lot of money
for business and the US is the first address.

So a new ngụy is born, but not only a ngụy it's more a "ngụy xấu".
DCSVN isn't just a party of traitors, no also loan sharks and people who earn money with human trafficking.

If all this kinds of repression will be continued the "revolution" will be destroyed by the party itself.

We hope that this day will be soon.

But maybe if the next economic down turn will hit Vietnam, what will happen with VN?
There will be social riots and then, what will you do DCSVN?
Arresting everyone? Shoting anybody?
If yes, a new civil war will start and the time of DCSVN is over.

So watch your step ngụy xấu, there will be one day when your ruling of terrorism will be overthrown
and no army is needed, Vietnam its people will do it.

Nothing is for eternity.

Vietnam's bid to tame the internet boom


Vietnam is one of the fastest growing economies in Asia, spurred by a policy of rapid liberalisation in the Communist state.



Shops are packed with the latest designs, from watches to iPads and MP3 players.
The country is opening up to the outside world - and that presents a challenge to the authorities.
Nowhere is that more clear than over the use of the internet.
More than a third of Vietnam's young population now regularly goes online.
Almost every cafe in central Hanoi, it seems, offers free WiFi.
Safeguard or censorship?
I met Minh, a 26-year-old lawyer, and Ngan, who has just graduated from university, at one of their favourite haunts.
Minh was surfing the internet on his iPhone and Ngan was checking Facebook on her laptop.
"Whenever I have free time I often come here to surf the internet and hang out with my friends," Ngan told me over a cup of Vietnam's famous coffee.
The government has responded to the internet boom with a new law obliging any place that provides public access to the internet - cafes, hotels, businesses - to install monitoring software.
The law, announced in April, will enable the authorities to track who is doing what online, and that worries Minh and Ngan.
"Sure, there are some bad websites and malicious information on the web," Minh said. "But on the other hand, if they overdo it, then it will be like restricting access to information for Vietnamese people."
Human rights groups, including Viettan and Reporters Without Borders, say that is precisely what the government is trying to do.
The new regulations, they say, amount to state censorship.
The government says it is simply trying to safeguard the vulnerable.
"These regulations are necessary to protect the people from the negative effects of the internet, first of all, and to protect our society," foreign ministry spokeswoman Nguyen Phuong Nga said.
But a recent report from Human Rights Watch alleged that the Vietnamese government was deliberately targeting independent bloggers.
"That's not true," Ms Nga said.
"In Vietnam we have more than a million bloggers. Bloggers are not arrested because of the expression of their opinions. Only those who break the law are dealt with according to the law."
Same problems
An awful lot of political dissidents seem to fall into that category.
It is not blogging as such that causes the problem, rather it is the choice of subjects that can land someone in jail.
Writing about corruption, religious freedom, land seizures, or unpopular government deals with China can result in an unwanted knock on the door from the police.
Le Thi Cong Nhan is a prominent human rights lawyer, who has openly campaigned for multiparty democracy, often using the internet to get her message out.
She was sentenced in 2007 to three years in prison for "spreading propaganda against the state".
Now she is under house arrest.
But despite the potential risk, Le Thi Cong Nhan agreed to meet me, under cover of dark, and on condition that I was able to lose my government-appointed minder.
Ms Nhan's internet connection has been cut off, but somehow she still manages to use email, although she would not tell me how.
Internet censorship, she told me, is just a new version of an old problem.
"The most basic thing in human rights is freedom of speech," she said emphatically. "We can have nothing if we don't have freedom of speech."
The internet it seems is helping to fuel that demand, in part because controlling the flow of information on the web is increasingly difficult.
Inevitably perhaps, the tension between a centralised state and a globalised world is growing.

BBC

Video: BBC Report
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-11010924



Commies protest against Commies

Paris - Last month the VC children protested in front of the Chinese Ambassy against the Chinese claims of Hoang Sa and Truong Sa. While the protest they sang old communist songs.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uyxboV0Pqc4

Now our general questions about the issue:

1. Why the children of party members and Bộ Độis are studying in France?

- In the party propaganda we always hear the successful war against the colonialist France,
but why now the next generation is studying there?

2. Why the VCs are protesting against their Chinese communist "friends"?
- ĐCSVN always says there are so brilliant relations to their idealogical friends.

3. Yes, the Chinese claims about these islands are of course not right. But on the other hand
now communist can see what will happen if you believe another communist.
So no mercy for all Vietnamese communist supporters.

4. The propaganda always celebrate the success of the Vietnamese "peoples liberation army" and
it is also expressing the strength of it.
So my question: Why CSVN doesn't show their "power" to China?
Maybe there doesn't exist any "power", so we have to say this kind of army isn't strong,
they are just a bunch of cowards.

5. Who will listen to the Vietnamese communists? The Chinese communists, good joke, huh?

6. Which effect will have a picture of HCM what we can see in the video?
- I think it woul have the same effect if you had a photo of Mickey Mouse in your hands.


What can we learn about it: We see how communists destroying themselves and I wish that
they'll continue fighting each other so the Vietnamese communist world will collapse.

Đả Đảo CSVN !!!

Vietnam man questioned over alleged tie to US group: wife

A Vietnamese university lecturer has been arrested for attempted subversion after police questioned him about alleged links to a US-based political group, his wife said Tuesday.

Pham Minh Hoang, 55, who trained in France, was arrested last Friday in southern Vietnam under Penal Code Article 79, his wife Le Thi Kieu Oanh told AFP.

People convicted under the article can be jailed or sentenced to death.

"I was really confused at that time, so I could not tell exactly what the reason for the arrest was," Oanh said.

Before Hoang's arrest, the couple had been questioned by police for two days and accused of being members of Viet Tan, the Vietnam Reform Party, she said.

Based in the United States, the group is banned in Vietnam and labelled a "terrorist group" by the one-party communist regime.

Oanh said she and her husband denied being members of Viet Tan.

He went to France in 1973 but returned after 27 years to settle in Vietnam, where he has been working as a mathematics lecturer at the Polytechnic University of Ho Chi Minh City, she said.

Police in the city refused to comment, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was not immediately able to make a statement.

msn.com

Vietnam releases democracy activist





Hanoi - The Vietnamese government on Tuesday released a prominent democracy activist who had served four years in prison.
Le Nguyen Sang, 49, was arrested in August 2006, along with three other members of the People's Democratic Party of Vietnam, a banned political group based in the United States.
He was sentenced to four years in prison under Article 88 of the criminal code, which bans "conducting propaganda against the state."
Sang had written articles critical of the communist regime on the internet.


Read more.

vietnam.com = just a commie trick?

A website which is called vietnam.com presents travel information about Vietnam.
The first strange thing is that the language choice also shows the German language.
A lot of blogs which are published there are from another communist blog of a German writer,
who alleges that she's a Vietnamese student in Hanoi.
So it's no wonder why the content is always in German language.
A lot of English articles have grammar mistakes.

The next thing is the very strange contact address:

17311 Dallas Pkwy Ste 100
Dallas, TX 75248
This combination doesn't exist, the postal code has to be TX 75001 in combination to the street
but there you'll only find this building.




View Larger Map

Another suspect issue is that the IP address is from BC, Canada because the registrar
uses dedicated server of GoDaddy.com to hide every information.
Get more information about this site here.

Former Enemies US, Vietnam Now Military Mates



ABOARD THE USS GEORGE WASHINGTON (AP) - Cold War enemies the United States and Vietnam demonstrated their blossoming military relations Sunday as a U.S. nuclear supercarrier cruised in waters off the Southeast Asian nation's coast - sending a message that China is not the region's only big player.

The visit comes 35 years after the Vietnam War as Washington and Hanoi are cozying up in a number of areas, from negotiating a controversial deal to share civilian nuclear fuel and technology to agreeing that China needs to work with its neighbors to resolve territorial claims in the South China Sea.



Read more.

Vietnamese brides flock to South Korea



After 30 minutes of discussion it was settled. Le would become his bride. She and three other young Vietnamese women had been presented to two South Korean men by illegal marriage brokers in Ho Chi Minh City.

The men made their choices and three days later Le, then 25, was married. After completing the paperwork, she left behind her poor life on a farm in southern Vietnam to live in South Korea.

Tens of thousands of other Vietnamese women have made the same journey.

Read more.

35 Năm Người Việt Tỵ Nạn Tại Đức

35 Năm người Việt ty nạn cộng sản tại Đức. Hội Nhập và Tri Ân. Tổ chức tại Hannover ngày 27 tháng 3 năm 2010



Human Rights Watch honours 6 Vietnamese dissident writers who faced political persecution


HANOI, Vietnam - An international human rights group has honoured six Vietnamese activists for their courage in the face of political persecution in Vietnam.

The six were among 42 writers from 20 countries to receive the annual Hellman/Hammmett award, New York-based Human Rights Watch announced Wednesday.

All of this year's awardees from Vietnam are activist writers whose work was suppressed by the government in its efforts to restrict free speech, control independent media, and limit access and use of the Internet, it said.

"By honouring courageous writers who have suffered political persecution, lost their jobs, or even sacrificed their freedom, we hope to bring international attention to voices that the Vietnamese government is trying to silence," Phil Robertson, deputy director of the group's Asia division, said in statement.

Vietnam's government says it does not jail or harass people over political beliefs, and only incarcerates people who break the law.

This year's winners include jailed novelist and journalist Tran Khai Thanh Thuy; human rights activist Pham Van Troi; poet and military veteran Tran Duc Thach; and teacher and writer Vu Van Hung.

Also honoured were bloggers Bui Thanh Hieu and Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh who were detained briefly last year for criticizing the government's policies on China and its disputed claims to the Spratly islands.

Tran Khai Thanh Thuy was given the same award in 2007.

The Hellman/Hammett award is named after U.S. playwright Lillian Hellman and her longtime companion novelist Dashiell Hammett, both of whom were questioned in the United States during 1950s about their political beliefs amid anti-communist hysteria.

macleans.ca

Cao Disappointed Over Administration's Decision to Strengthen Ties with Hanoi



WASHINGTON, DC - Today, Congressman Anh "Joseph" Cao (LA-02) expressed his "profound disappointment" over the Obama Administration's decision to strengthen bilateral relations with Vietnam's communist government.

Cao, the first and only Vietnamese-American ever to serve in the United States Congress, described Hanoi's record on human rights and religious freedom as "atrocious." He said the the Vietnamese government does not deserve better U.S. ties until it demonstrates greater respect for the freedom and dignity of its own people.

Cao cited numerous examples of abuses committed by the Vietnamese government, including the harrassment, arrest and false imprisonment of pro-democracy advocates and clerics, the seizing of religious institutions and destruction of religious symbols, and the use of eminent domain to strip property owners of their holdings without just compensation.

Read the full article.