Pubdate: Thu, 01 Jun 2000 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2000 The Toronto Star Contact: One Yonge St., Toronto ON, M5E 1E6 Fax: (416) 869-4322 Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Forum: http://www.thestar.com/editorial/disc_board/ Author: Dale Anne Freed, Staff Reporter TORONTO WOMAN'S FAMILY VISITS HANOI KILLING GROUND Hopes To Rebury Nguyen's Body, Free Her Mother They brought 200 red rosebuds to cover the makeshift grave of a Canadian executed on the killing grounds of a Hanoi prison for drug smuggling. Nguyen Thi Hiep's family had come halfway around the world to pay respects. They wept as they waded waist-deep into the killing ground - temporarily flooded - where the Toronto woman was shot, to place flowers on her shallow grave. Nguyen, 43, is the first Canadian known to have been executed on drug smuggling charges. Her body lies close to the spot where she was bound, gagged and blindfolded before facing a firing squad at dawn, Hanoi time, on April 25. note that Canadian documents list execution date as April 24 -- that's EDT She and her mother Tran Thi Cam, 74, were caught at Hanoi's Noi Bai airport April 25, 1996, carrying 5.4 kilos of heroin hidden in lacquered art panels. Their pleas that they were innocent dupes were ignored. For the past four years, until her death, Nguyen was kept shackled hand and foot in a cell of the Xuan Phuong detention centre. Her mother is serving a life sentence at the Thanh Xuan detention camp near Hanoi. "All my family cried, just cried, as we put 200 red roses on her grave," Nguyen Hung, 36, of Brampton, brother of the dead woman, said in a phone interview with The Star yesterday, a day after his arrival in Hanoi. Nguyen Hung was accompanied on the Toronto-Hanoi flight by Nguyen Thi Hiep's sons Trung Le, 26, and Tu Le, 21, of Brampton, and his sister Nguyen Lien, 46, of Toronto. "She loved red roses . . . red rosebuds," Nguyen's husband, Tran Hieu, 56, said in an interview translated by his brother-in-law Nguyen Hung. Nguyen's family was to meet officials from Vietnam's foreign ministry in Hanoi today to make arrangements to bury her remains. Superintendent Ron Taverner, head of the Toronto police's Special Investigation Services, said police will meet Canadian foreign affairs ministry officials in Ottawa to discuss the fate of Nguyen's mother and to talk about an official visit to Vietnam later this month by the police heroin squad. Toronto police believe that Nguyen and her daughter may have been duped into carrying the drugs by an international heroin ring. Taverner was optimistic about discussing international drug operations with Vietnamese officials. "We see this as opening a door for ongoing dialogue." "Vietnam welcomes co-operation from all countries, including Canada, in the battle against drugs," foreign ministry spokesperson Phan Thuy Thanh said in a recent statement from Hanoi. In response to questions on Tran Thi Cam's possible release from prison, the statement said: "Vietnamese authorities are considering the proposal by the Canadian side in a spirit of humanitarianism" and within the law. Nguyen's family will meet Hanoi officials to arrange for her remains to be removed from the Hanoi prison grounds and, the family hopes, to talk about her imprisoned mother, Nguyen Hung said yesterday. "They're giving the most positive consideration" to releasing the mother, Canadian ambassador Cecile Latour told The Star in a phone interview from Hanoi yesterday. "We have to wait." Latour, who accompanied Nguyen's family, had been recalled earlier. Ottawa says her return is temporary. Although the family had originally requested that Nguyen's remains be returned to Canada, it's now bowing to the wishes of her father Nguyen Cong, 85, who lives in Hanoi. Nguyen Hung said in keeping with Buddhist tradition, the body will rest in a Hanoi burial ground for three years before her bones are removed, washed in wine and transported to Canada. With files from Reuters - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson