(Reuters) -
Farmer Le Dung and his fellow villagers stockpiled rocks and petrol
bombs to battle police trying to take over their land for a luxury
property development near Vietnam's capital city.
But their most powerful weapon
turned out to be the equipment they had set up with the help of
Internet activists to record and broadcast the confrontation, which was
ignored by state-controlled media.
Within
hours of the fight on a clear April morning, video of several thousand
police firing tear gas and beating farmers in the Van Giang district
just east of Hanoi had gone viral.
The
unlikely alliance between farmers and urban Internet activists
illustrates a rapidly evolving challenge to the Communist government's
authority as Vietnamese grow bolder in their protests over issues
ranging from land rights to corruption and China's expanding regional
influence.
Vietnam has responded
with a crackdown on bloggers that has earned it the title of "Enemy of
the Internet" from media freedom group Reporters Without Borders, which
says only China and Iran jail more journalists.
Censors
in the one-party state routinely block Facebook and other social
networking sites, although a nimble Web activist community often finds
ways around them, illustrating the enormous challenge facing the
government in a country where a third of the 88 million population is
online.
"At first we didn't
understand how it could help us but now we see the value. Our struggle
was published to the world," said Le Dung, who fought in Vietnam's 1979
war against China, as he sat under a framed picture of late Communist
leader Ho Chi Minh.
"If we hadn't used the Internet the authorities may have killed us; now they know they have to be careful."
The
Van Giang incident and other land disputes covered by bloggers have
triggered an unusually heated national debate over how the government
should reform Vietnam's land laws before the expiry of farmers' 20-year
public land leases in 2013.
Rapid
economic growth has put pressure on farmers as industrial estates,
houses, and roads have expanded, leading to a rash of violent land
conflicts. Farmers complain the compensation offers for their land are
far too low from companies that often have ties to influential
politicians.
Fish farmer Doan Van
Vuon was catapulted to hero status early this year after he organized
armed resistance to local authorities trying to take over his land near
Hai Phong city, a case that was covered by official media as well as
bloggers.
CHINA RESENTMENT SPURS BLOGGERS
Bloggers
are linking land with other causes they say have a common theme -- a
government that is beholden to powerful economic interests and
unresponsive to popular demands.
"The
blogging movement is growing stronger," said Nguyen Van Dai, a lawyer
and rights activist who was jailed for four years for using the
Internet to call for democracy and who remains under a loose form of
house arrest in Hanoi.
"The government can't keep secrets like it could before."
One
influential activist, who goes by the pseudonym Boris and works at a
state-owned firm, helped educate the farmers at Van Giang about their
rights and taught them how to send pictures and videos through
cellphones. Although about 1,000 families there have so far failed to
stop the 500-hectare Ecopark project, Boris said wide publicity from
the incident had prevented other land developers going ahead with
similar plans.
Boris, who boasts
he could bring 1,000 people onto Hanoi's streets at a day's notice,
said he had also played a key role in organizing regular protests
against China's territorial goals in the South China Sea -- a claim
backed by other bloggers. The government allowed anti-China protests to
go ahead last year, but soon clamped down on them after it became clear
they could be a lightning rod for broader discontent.
Some
activists exhibit a boldness that is startling, considering the stiff
jail terms that have been handed down to others for "anti-government
propaganda".
Alfonso Le, a
42-year-old blogger who writes the "Homeland Arise" blog, spoke to
Reuters at a tiny Hanoi cafe within earshot of a green-uniformed police
officer across the room.
"Now that
social networks are more popular, it's not so easy for the police to
arrest people," said Le, using his Facebook nickname. "If the police
make trouble, I just send a status message on Facebook and a lot of
people will come."
His activism
has come at a price. He said he has been arrested three times and
divorced his wife after she gave information to the police.
Another
blogger, who asked not to be identified, also occupies the world of
tolerated blogging. She believes she is safe as long as her writing
stays within certain "red lines". In her blog, a protest march might be
described as a "parade" or a "walk".
Still,
she is sometimes followed by police and was arrested at an anti-China
protest this month and kept for a day at a rehabilitation camp for
"drug users and prostitutes".
"They (the authorities) are scared to death after what has happened in Burma and the Arab Spring," she said.
Former
military officer Le Thanh Tung became the latest online activist to be
punished this month, receiving a five-year sentence after a trial that
lasted an hour, according to Reporters Without Borders. That came less
than a week after blogger Dinh Dang Dinh was handed a six-year sentence.
The
trial of three other high-profile bloggers was postponed this month
after the mother of one of them committed suicide by setting herself on
fire.
FUTILE CRACKDOWN?
Washington
has voiced concern to Vietnam over a proposed new decree that would
require Internet users to register with their real names, enabling the
government to track its online critics more easily.
But
Carl Thayer, a Vietnam expert at the Australian Defence Force Academy,
said the government's attempts to control the Internet were probably
futile given the web's deep penetration and bloggers' talent for
sidestepping technological barriers.
Vietnam has among the world's fastest-growing rates of Internet use, according to market-research firm Cimigo.
Internet penetration in Hanoi and the southern commercial capital Ho Chi Minh City has risen above 50 percent.
"It is a battle I don't think the Vietnamese government is going to win," Thayer said.
The
thorny problem of land rights, which goes to the heart of the Communist
Party's legitimacy in its traditional power base of more than 10
million farmers, is where the bloggers have had the biggest impact.
In
the wake of the Van Giang and Hai Phong violence, some lawmakers and
academics have called for private land ownership to help protect
farmers -- an unthinkable proposal until recently in a country where
the state's ownership of all land is enshrined in the constitution.
Nguyen
Duc Kien, the vice chairman of the National Assembly's economic
committee, told Reuters the country's Land Law would be revised and
that farmers would be allowed to remain on their land after 2013.
Literally interpreted, the current law allows the state to take back
farms without any compensation at the end of the lease period.
"Land is an issue that is a potential cause of tension in society," he said.
Nguyen's
and other comments from officials have convinced blogger activists that
the leases will be extended, although that in itself will not resolve
the problem of land grabs by private developers backed by the state.
"The
bloggers were a big part of that," said the blogger Le. "We told a
different side of the story. We showed that the ruling party's words
don't match its actions."
(Editing by Jason Szep and Paul Tait)
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