A Vietnamese-American pro-democracy activist returned to the US on Wednesday night after a nine-month detention on accusations of conspiring to overthrow the communist government of Vietnam.
Nguyen Quoc Quan smiled broadly as he was greeted by his wife, children and other family members, who bore balloons and placed leis around his neck shortly as he exited a plane at Los Angeles International Airport.
“I love you a lot, and I feel very near you every minute of jail,” he told his wife, Huong Mai Ngo, in Vietnamese, then repeated in broken English for reporters. He pulled her to his side. “Now even closer,” he said with a smile.
He said he was proud of what he accomplished and would be willing to return, with his wife’s approval.
“The communist government of Vietnam can’t stop you, how can I?” she said.
He would only answer a few questions, promising to share details at a news conference on Saturday, including the contents of a handwritten letter he brought back from another prisoner.
Vietnamese authorities’ decision to release Quan contrasts with the long prison terms given to Vietnamese activists who are members of the same US-based dissident group.
The release came after US diplomatic pressure and removes an obvious thorn in relations between the former enemies. Both countries are trying to strengthen their ties in large part because of shared concerns over China’s emerging military and economic might, but US concerns over human rights in one-party, authoritarian Vietnam are complicating this.
Vietnam’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement that Quan had “confessed to his crime” and asked for leniency to be reunited with his family.
Ngo said prior to his arrival that she doubted this was the case, suggesting that Hanoi was seeking a face-saving way of allowing him to go home.
“I don’t believe it. They say that about everybody,” she said via telephone earlier on Wednesday. “If my husband was prepared to do that [confess], he could have been released nine months ago.”
Quan did not address the issue with reporters at the airport.
Given the diplomatic sensitivities around the case, most observers had expected Quan to be released and quietly deported.
Quan, a US citizen, was arrested at Ho Chi Minh City’s airport in April after arriving on a flight from the US, where he has lived since fleeing Vietnam by boat as a young man.
The 60-year-old is a leading member of Viet Tan, a pro-democracy group that Vietnamese authorities have labeled a terrorist organization. He was detained in 2007 in Vietnam for six months, also on charges relating to his pro-democracy activities, before being deported.
Authorities initially accused Quan of terrorism, but he was later charged with subversion against the state, which carries penalties ranging from 12 years in prison to death. Earlier this month, 14 Vietnamese activists associated with Viet Tan were sentenced to up to 13 years in jail.
Quan’s supporters did not deny that he had come to Vietnam from his home in California to teach non-violent resistance to the Communist government. His lawyer and family members said earlier this month that his trial on charges of subversion was imminent, but then said it had been postponed for unknown reasons.
Vietnam is routinely imprisons proponents of free speech and those who seek to undermine the Communist Party’s monopoly on power. Last year, the country arrested and convicted several bloggers, part of a reaction against Internet-fuelled criticism of corruption, its human rights record and handling of the economy.
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