Pubdate: Fri, 02 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/ Page: A2 Authors: Dale Anne Freed and Alan Barnes, Staff Reporters VIETNAM TO FREE GRANDMOTHER Family Thanks Ottawa For Help Gaining Amnesty The family of a 74-year-old grandmother imprisoned in Vietnam for the past four years on a drug smuggling conviction is overjoyed that pressure by the Canadian government has led to a promise of amnesty. "We have great news," grandson Trung Le, 26, said in a telephone interview from Hanoi. "My grandmother will be set free. It is our big hope, our wishes come true," he said yesterday. "We would like to thank the Canadian government for helping us." The family has not been given a date yet. "It could be next week, next month or Sept. 2, at the latest," Trung Le said. Le's grandmother, Tran Thi Cam, has been kept at the Thanh Xuan detention camp outside Hanoi for the past four years, spending her days weeping and avoiding the rats, which her grandson says are large as cats. Tran's family got the news about her upcoming release in a telephone call late yesterday from Cecile Latour, Canada's ambassador to Vietnam. "We were so happy. We were all crying," said Le, who led a prayer for his mother at a shrine in his grandfather's Hanoi home. Tran has been held there since she and her daughter Nguyen Thi Hiep were arrested at Hanoi's Noi Bai airport on April 25, 1996, after they were caught carrying 5.4 kilos of heroin hidden in decorative lacquered panels. The women claimed they were simply carrying the panels back to Canada for a friend, and didn't know drugs had been secreted in the panels. But their pleas of innocence were ignored by a Hanoi court and, last April 25, Nguyen, 43, was bound, gagged and secretly executed by a firing squad. Now the family is hoping Toronto police can exonerate the two women as innocent dupes. "We want to do the right thing. We want to make it clear to people that our mother and grandmother are innocent," Le said. "We want people to understand the circumstances, why they carried the panels." Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy said in an interview yesterday the Vietnamese government reacted to an "extraordinary set of measures" taken by Canada after Nguyen's secret execution. Punitive measures taken by Canada included the withdrawal of our ambassador, the cancellation of a program to help Vietnam gain admission into the World Trade Organization, and boycotting the 25th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War. "Clearly, I think the message got through," Axworthy said. Tran's family had met with Vietnamese officials and a representative of the Canadian embassy just hours earlier to discuss plans to move Nguyen's body from the execution grounds to a Hanoi cemetery in accordance with the wishes of Nguyen's father Nguyen Cong. When Tran's family visits on Saturday they plan to let her son-in-law Tran Hieu, Nguyen's husband, give her the news of her early release. The elderly woman, who still doesn't know her daughter has been executed, won't be told of her death until she's released, her son Nguyen Hung, 36, of Brampton, said in a telephone interview from Hanoi yesterday. Although Axworthy said he would prefer to see the woman released earlier, he noted a general amnesty is set for Sept. 2 in Vietnam, adding "we'll take that as it is." But he said he's already instructed Latour to work for an earlier release. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea