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The Financial Express

Vietnam nabs dissident singer Mai Khoi

| Updated: March 28, 2018 11:05:20


Vietnamese singer Do Nguyen Mai Khoi sings at a performance in Hanoi, Vietnam May 21, 2016. Reuters. Vietnamese singer Do Nguyen Mai Khoi sings at a performance in Hanoi, Vietnam May 21, 2016. Reuters.

Vietnamese singer and activist Do Nguyen Mai Khoi, an outspoken campaigner for free speech, was detained in the capital Hanoi on Tuesday after flying home from Europe, her husband said.

Often dubbed a Vietnamese version of ‘Pussy Riot’ or Lady Gaga because of her activism and provocative style, Mai Khoi was among dozens of dissidents on the watch-list of Communist-ruled Vietnam for her strong words against the system.

“When Mai Khoi landed at Noi Bai airport, at 9:15 am this morning, she texted me to say: ‘Love, I just landed’,” Mai Khoi’s Australian husband, Benjamin Swanton, posted on her Facebook page, which has some 46,000 followers.

“At 9:39 am, she texted another message: ‘Detained’.” Swanton wrote.

News agency Reuters quoted Swanton as saying that he had not been able to contact Mai Khoi since. Calls to authorities at Noi Bai International airport and Mai Khoi’s mobile phone went unanswered.

“We have been evicted from our house three times now,” Swanton said. “And the police have raided two of Khoi’s concerts as well”.

Mai Khoi, who last year protested beside US President Donald Trump’s motorcade during his visit to Vietnam by holding up a poster which said ‘Piss on you Trump’, had not yet been subjected to a travel ban by the Vietnamese authorities.

The 34-year-old has courted controversy under a government which, despite overseeing sweeping economic reforms and growing openness to social change, does not tolerate criticism.

In 2016, she was one of a handful of activists who tried and failed to obtain a seat in the Communist party-dominated National Assembly. She met former US President Barack Obama during his visit in Vietnam in 2015.

The title of her new album ‘Bat Dong’, which she had been in Europe to promote, translates to ‘Disagreement’. Her song ‘Please, sir’ pleads with the leader of the Communist Party to allow ordinary Vietnamese people to sing, publish, share and travel freely.

“Right now I’m very worried about my wife and how she’s being detained and until when,” Swanton said in the Facebook post.

“Mai Khoi is an independent artist, one who purely creates and fights to advocate freedom of creation and freedom of thoughts for the artists in Vietnam.”

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