Viet Khang, Songwriter with a Conscience

Jailed for expressing his patriotic feelings

 Viet Khang, a songwriter currently detained by the public security police without charges, has quickly become the symbol and voice of conscience of the post-war generation of Vietnamese.  His arrest has prompted a movement among Vietnamese artists and intellectuals in Vietnam and overseas calling for his immediate and unconditional release.

Born into a poor family in 1978 as Vo Minh Tri, he grew up and lives in My Tho, Tien Giang with his wife and their four-year old son.  He discovered his love for music from an early age and has made a living as a songwriter under the pen name “Minh Tri”.  He is also a drummer performing with several local bands.  He operates a small recording studio to provide for his family’s livelihood.

As he toured many cities to perform, he increasingly noticed rampant social injustices and widening poverty that affect his people and threaten his country’s future.  Disturbed, he shared his feelings and thoughts with other like-minded young Vietnamese.  In April 2011 they founded “Patriotic Youth,” a loose network of college students, young professionals and young artists, to promote public consciousness about social justice and civic engagement.  Some members created blogs and websites to advocate for the respect of human rights, freedom, and free elections.  Others passed out fliers calling for democratic reforms and the defense of Vietnam’s sovereignty against China’s expansionism.  Under the new pen name of “Viet Khang,” Vo Minh Tri wrote two songs that spread virally through the internet.

His song “Who are you?” questions the conscience of public security police members who brutally assaulted, arrested and detained demonstrators for peacefully expressing concern over China’s territorial ambitions.  In “Where is my Viet Nam?”, Viet Khang confesses disillusionment with a regime that pays little attention to the spreading social injustices, decries the leadership’s lack of resolve to defend the country’s sovereignty, and calls on citizens to assume responsibility for Vietnam’s future.  He personally performed both songs and posted them on the internet.

Soon after their posting, on September 16, 2011 the police arrested Viet Khang and two other members of Patriotic Youth.  The police confiscated Viet Khang’s computer and all equipment at his recording studio.  He was released and then re-arrested on December 23, 2011.  He is currently held in police custody.

* * *

 Act Now:

 Please help free Viet Khang, a songwriter with a conscience, by passing on this appeal for his immediate and unconditional release to elected officials, the media, human rights organizations, associations of artists and musicians, college students and all those who care.


One response to “Viet Khang, Songwriter with a Conscience”

  1. Sometime one person can not make a change on any system so heavy on idealistic like Vietnamese Communist. To change a system like that, it’s require whole country uprising
    with sacrifice of many people, and the help of outside force of international.
    The “Summer Revolution” in Middle East happen, but Vietnamese do not know how to organize and activate. Now will be harder to do, the government already tighten the internet
    and communication means.
    Better if population can be educated and help from main stream media who do not afraid government, calling military personnel defect and get in line with people, calling politician stop helping government draft laws that suppress people, lawyer and judge stop any trial that help government intimidate population.
    For government who want to change system, the first thing is recognizing sacrifice of our
    military who died ( North and South) and stop any propaganda about ideal of Max and Lenin, restore relationship with all religions. Last thing is stop “tham nhu~ng” from top down,
    training government worker be civilized and treat people like “people”.

Leave a Reply


RELATED POSTS

Recent posts

Recent comments

tag cloud

http://www.voanews.com/content/asean-unifies-voice-for-china-talks/1729775.html (1) tìm kiếm dân biểu (1) tìm kiếm thượng nghị sĩ (1)