Court extradite Ly Tong to Vietnam

The Criminal Court decided on Thursday to extradite Vietnamese dissident Ly Tong, who is wanted in Hanoi in connection with violating airspace after he hijacked a small plane from Thailand to dump 50,000 antiCommunist leaflets over Ho Chi Minh City in 2000.
The Criminal Court decided to extradite Vietnamese dissident Ly Tong, who is wanted in Hanoi in connection with violating airspace after he hijacked a small plane from Thailand to dump 50,000 antiCommunist leaflets over Ho Chi Minh City in 2000.
Thailand's 1929 Extradition Law prohibits returning people accused of political crimes to face punishment in other countries, but the court ruled that Tong was not facing a political charge.
The South Vietnamese air force veteran, who later became a US citizen, flew a twinengine plane from Hua Hin Airport in November 2000. His leafletdropping stunt coincided with a visit to Vietnam by thenUS President Bill Clinton.
Tong, who had hijacked planes before to spread his political message, was arrested after making a forced landing at UTapao air base and later sentenced to five years in a Thai prison for the hijacking.
Hanoi made a request for the dissident's extradition in December 2004 seeking to prosecute him for endangering Vietnamese security.
As long as the prosecutor provided sufficient evidence to show that the Vietnamese government would not punish him for a political charge, it was unnecessary to consider whether Tong's activity was a political action, the court said.
Tong expressed his disappointment with the court's decision and said he would appeal.
"Even I don't want to appeal. I want to go to fight in Vietnam, but my supporters want me to fight in court," he told reporters after the verdict.
Lawyer Worasit Piriyawiboon said his client would appeal within 15 days to argue that territory violation is a political charge, not a normal crime.
"We will make an argument to the appeal court that Tong's action of flying a plane to drop leaflets is a political activity," he said.
Tong was a pilot for South Vietnamese forces before the fall of Saigon in 1975. His antiCommunist activities began in 1992 when he forced Vietnam Airlines to fly over Ho Chi Minh City to allow him to drop leaflets calling for an uprising against the Hanoi government. He then parachuted from the plane before being arrested and jailed for 20 years. He was granted amnesty and freed in 1998.
In January 2000, he flew to drop antiCommunist leaflets in Cuba.
Thailand's 1929 Extradition Law prohibits returning people accused of political crimes to face punishment in other countries, but the court ruled that Tong was not facing a political charge.
The South Vietnamese air force veteran, who later became a US citizen, flew a twinengine plane from Hua Hin Airport in November 2000. His leafletdropping stunt coincided with a visit to Vietnam by thenUS President Bill Clinton.
Tong, who had hijacked planes before to spread his political message, was arrested after making a forced landing at UTapao air base and later sentenced to five years in a Thai prison for the hijacking.
Hanoi made a request for the dissident's extradition in December 2004 seeking to prosecute him for endangering Vietnamese security.
As long as the prosecutor provided sufficient evidence to show that the Vietnamese government would not punish him for a political charge, it was unnecessary to consider whether Tong's activity was a political action, the court said.
Tong expressed his disappointment with the court's decision and said he would appeal.
"Even I don't want to appeal. I want to go to fight in Vietnam, but my supporters want me to fight in court," he told reporters after the verdict.
Lawyer Worasit Piriyawiboon said his client would appeal within 15 days to argue that territory violation is a political charge, not a normal crime.
"We will make an argument to the appeal court that Tong's action of flying a plane to drop leaflets is a political activity," he said.
Tong was a pilot for South Vietnamese forces before the fall of Saigon in 1975. His antiCommunist activities began in 1992 when he forced Vietnam Airlines to fly over Ho Chi Minh City to allow him to drop leaflets calling for an uprising against the Hanoi government. He then parachuted from the plane before being arrested and jailed for 20 years. He was granted amnesty and freed in 1998.
In January 2000, he flew to drop antiCommunist leaflets in Cuba.
Supalak Ganjanakhundee
The Nation
The Criminal Court yesterday decided to extradite Vietnamese dissident Ly Tong, who is wanted in Hanoi in connection with violating airspace after he hijacked a small plane from Thailand to dump 50,000 antiCommunist leaflets over Ho Chi Minh City in 2000.
Thailand's 1929 Extradition Law prohibits returning people accused of political crimes to face punishment in other countries, but the court ruled that Tong was not facing a political charge.
The South Vietnamese air force veteran, who later became a US citizen, flew a twinengine plane from Hua Hin Airport in November 2000. His leafletdropping stunt coincided with a visit to Vietnam by thenUS President Bill Clinton.
Tong, who had hijacked planes before to spread his political message, was arrested after making a forced landing at UTapao air base and later sentenced to five years in a Thai prison for the hijacking.
Hanoi made a request for the dissident's extradition in December 2004 seeking to prosecute him for endangering Vietnamese security.
As long as the prosecutor provided sufficient evidence to show that the Vietnamese government would not punish him for a political charge, it was unnecessary to consider whether Tong's activity was a political action, the court said.
Tong expressed his disappointment with the court's decision and said he would appeal.
"Even I don't want to appeal. I want to go to fight in Vietnam, but my supporters want me to fight in court," he told reporters after the verdict.
Lawyer Worasit Piriyawiboon said his client would appeal within 15 days to argue that territory violation is a political charge, not a normal crime.
"We will make an argument to the appeal court that Tong's action of flying a plane to drop leaflets is a political activity," he said.
Tong was a pilot for South Vietnamese forces before the fall of Saigon in 1975. His antiCommunist activities began in 1992 when he forced Vietnam Airlines to fly over Ho Chi Minh City to allow him to drop leaflets calling for an uprising against the Hanoi government. He then parachuted from the plane before being arrested and jailed for 20 years. He was granted amnesty and freed in 1998.
In January 2000, he flew to drop antiCommunist leaflets in Cuba.
Supalak Ganjanakhundee
The Nation
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