Pubdate: Mon, 14 June 1999 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Author: Dale Anne Freed and Cal Millar, Toronto Star Staff Reporters AXWORTHY SEEKS AID FOR DEATH-ROW WOMAN Shackled in Hanoi prison since 1997 trial Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy will be demanding answers today in the case of a Toronto woman sentenced to death in Vietnam for smuggling drugs. ``I'll ask our consular people to go back and see what's happening (Monday), Axworthy told The Star yesterday. ``We've already said very clearly in light of the circumstances of the case we really think clemency should be given by the president of Vietnam. That would be the appropriate step.'' Nguyen Thi Hiep, 42, of Toronto has been held in shackles in a Hanoi prison since she was found guilty in 1997 of trying to board a Toronto-bound plane carrying 5.4 kilograms of heroin at Hanoi's Noi Bai airport. Her mother Tran Thi Cam, 74, was sentenced to prison for life. Toronto police say the two were likely duped into smuggling the drugs. Nguyen proclaimed her innocence to a Hanoi court at her three-day trial in March, 1997. Axworthy said he plans to talk to the Vietnamese government about commuting Nguyen's sentence and getting her medical help as early as this week. The plight of the woman was detailed in The Saturday Star. ``Early this year we had a consular visit on several occasions and they said her living conditions had improved,'' Axworthy said, adding that he'd heard now only one leg is shackled. ``We've taken all the legal recourses we have and made sure all her rights were given under the convention as much as we could,'' Axworthy said. ``The problem we had is that the Vietnamese government didn't tell us of her arrest until into early 1997. We did attend her trial,'' Axworthy said. ``She can't walk any more,'' says Nguyen's brother, Nguyen Hung, 35, of Brampton, referring to the shackled leg. The Brampton factory worker said he heard about his sister's condition in a phone call in mid-May from the foreign affairs department. Axworthy said the Canadian government did receive a response from the Vietnamese minister of foreign affairs in 1997 that her execution would be delayed. ``We have no indication when or if they plan to proceed,'' Axworthy said. ``It's shocking,'' said John Hill, a lawyer with the Toronto based Association for the Wrongly Convicted, the same group going to bat for Texas death row inmate Stanley Faulder. ``This requires diplomatic intervention . . . Why is Canada so laid back we let this happen to our citizens?'' Hill demanded. ``We'll try to get her medical help,'' said Rubin Hurricane Carter, executive director of the association. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck