Pubdate: Sat, 25 Nov 2000
Source: Agence France-Presses
Copyright: AFP 2000

VIETNAM COURT SENTENCES US NATIONAL TO DEATH FOR DRUG TRAFFICKING

A court in the commercial capital of Ho Chi Minh City sentenced a US 
national, also wanted by Belgian police, to death for heroin 
trafficking, just days after US President Bill Clinton's landmark 
visit, the official media reported Saturday.

The court found Vietnamese-born Nguyen Manh Cuong, alias Bui Huu Tai, 
who fled to the United States in 1978 at the age of 10, guilty of 
"drug trafficking and storing and organizing the use of drugs," 
official dailies said.

The court convicted Tai of trafficking 1.6 kilograms (three and a 
half pounds) of heroin, most of which he sold to a Japanese dealer, 
the city's Saigon Giaiphong daily said.

Under tougher drug laws introduced in 1997, possession of 100 grammes 
(3.5 ounces) of heroin or five kilogrammes (11 pounds) of opium 
carries the death penalty here.

Police arrested Tai in September 1998 when he was being sought by 
Belgian police for "murder, kidnapping and drug trafficking," the 
official VNA news agency said.

A search of his Ho Chi Minh City home found 1.055 kilograms (2.32 
pounds) of opium and 10.01 grams (0.35 ounces) of heroin, the news 
agency said.

Police told the court that Tai had purchased the 1.6 kilogrammes of 
heroin from Vietnamese national Nguyen Thi Hoa who was arrested with 
him.

Hoa was also convicted of drug trafficking but escaped with a life 
prison sentence because she was pregnant at the time of her arrest 
and now has a young child, Saigon Giaiphong said.

Four other defendants were sentenced to prison terms of between 12 
months suspended and nine years for the illegal storage of drugs at 
the one-day trial Friday, VNA said.

The execution of a Canadian national on drug charges here in April 
sparked a diplomatic row with Ottawa.

Vietnamese-born Nguyen Thi Hiep was the first holder of a Western 
passport to face the death penalty here.

Canadian officials accused the Vietnamese authorities of pressing 
ahead with her execution without taking into account evidence she had 
been set up.

Her mother, who was jailed for life at the same trial, was later 
freed by the Vietnamese authorities in a deal with Ottawa.

Vietnam's widespread use of executions has attracted mounting 
criticism from human rights groups.

More than 90 people have been sentenced to death for drug trafficking 
here so far this year against 76 last year and 58 in 1998.

But the Vietnamese parliament is due to discuss further toughening 
the drugs laws in its current session which ends next month.

The government blames an influx of cheap opium and heroin from 
neighbouring Laos and the other poppy-growing Golden Triangle 
countries of Myanamr and Thailand for the mounting spread of HIV here.

Earlier this month Clinton infuriated the authorities here by keeping 
Vietnam on a list of 24 countries around the world where the transit 
or production of narcotics destined for the United States remained a 
pressing concern.

"Vietnam is not a country that produces or transits drugs and 
psychotropic substances, but one that is suffering the damage caused 
by this disaster," said foreign ministry spokeswoman Phan Thuy Thanh.

Vietnam's communist authorities impose the death penalty for a total 
of 29 different offences, including a string of economic crimes as 
well as murder, treason, drug trafficking, sexual offences against 
children and serious cases of armed robbery.

In all, 194 people were sentenced to death last year.
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