Home Asia Rights Group Claims Vietnam’s Imprisonment of Khmer Monks Breaches Religious Freedom

Rights Group Claims Vietnam’s Imprisonment of Khmer Monks Breaches Religious Freedom

Human rights activists condemn Vietnam's imprisonment of Khmer monks, asserting it violates religious freedom.
File Photo: Khmer Kampuchea Krom monks hold a protest to demand Vietnam release anti-communist Buddhist monk Tim Sakhorn, at a pagoda in Phnom Penh August 17, 2007. The Vietnamese embassy in Phnom Penh confirmed Tim Sakhorn, who went missing on June 30 after being defrocked by Phnom Penh's Supreme Patriarch for "damaging Vietnamese-Cambodian relations", was in custody in Vietnam, but said he had been arrested for illegal entry. The so-called Kampuchea Krom, whose existence is due to the redrawing of the Vietnamese-Cambodian border under French colonial rule, have longed complained about religious persecution by Vietnam's communist rulers. REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea (CAMBODIA)

Human rights activists have accused Vietnam of violating religious freedom after a Vietnamese court sentenced six ethnically Khmer Buddhist monks and three religious activists to prison this week.

A court in the southern province of Long An condemned the men to prison terms between two and six years after finding them guilty of “abusing democratic freedoms to infringe upon state interests” and illegally detaining people, according to a police statement.

Among them, Khmer Krom Buddhist monk Thach Chanh Da Ra was given the longest, six-year prison term during a trial on Tuesday, Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security said in a statement.

Asia Human Rights and Labour Advocates (AHRLA) said late on Wednesday the sentences against the monks were “outrageous and unacceptable.”

The police said Thach Chanh Da Ra instructed his followers to illegally detain and attack local authorities when they tried to search the temple where he resides.

It was not immediately clear why the temple was searched and the motives for the monks’ resistance.

Reuters was not immediately able to contact the monks’ lawyers.

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“What was really on trial was the Khmer Krom people’s right to practice their religion, language and culture without interference from Vietnam’s ruling Communist party,” said AHRLA director Phil Robertson, referring to the Khmer ethnic group living in Vietnam‘s Mekong Delta, most of whom are Buddhists.

Vietnam’s foreign ministry didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

He said the sentences showed the government was intolerant of the freedom of religion and belief outside strictly controlled official structures.

“The international community should publicly condemn these blatant rights violations and demand that these monks and activists be immediately and unconditionally released,” Robertson said.

The U.S. Department of State included restrictions of religious freedom among a long list of “significant human rights issues” in a 2023 report about Communist-run Vietnam.

(With inputs from Reuters)