Vietnam News

BBC journalist barred from leaving Vietnam and interrogated repeatedly

BBC ‘deeply concerned’ for journalist’s wellbeing after Vietnamese police withhold their ID card and passport

Vietnamese authorities have barred a BBC journalist from leaving the country and ​subjected them to days of interrogation, in a press freedom case that comes to light during a high-profile visit by Vietnam’s leader to the UK.

The journalist, a Vietnamese citizen who lives and works in Thailand, had returned to their home country in August to renew their passport, according a source with knowledge of the situation.

While their passport was reissued, it was held by police, who interrogated them over a number of days, asking questions about their journalism, said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Friends of the journalist hope their case can be raised by the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, who is hosting Vietnam’s leader, general secretary Tô Lâm, who arrived in the UK on Tuesday.

After being approached for comment, the BBC confirmed that one of its journalists had been “unable to leave Vietnam for several months as the authorities have withheld their ID card and their renewed passport”.

“During this time our journalist was subject to multiple days of questioning by the authorities. The BBC journalist was in Vietnam for a routine passport renewal and to visit family,” the media outlet said in a statement.

“We are deeply concerned about our journalist’s wellbeing and urge the authorities to allow them to leave immediately, providing them with their renewed passport so they can return to work,” it added.

Vietnam remains an extremely restrictive environment for journalists, who cannot operate freely in the one-party state, controlled by the country’s Communist party. Domestic media is highly censored and dissenters are regularly jailed.

In May, the print edition of the Economist, which featured Tô Lâm on its cover, was banned in the country, part of a long series of acts of media censorship by authorities.

Phil Robertson, the director the Asia Human Rights and Labour Advocates, said that when Lâm was in London, he needed to be met “with clear and unrelenting demands” that the journalist be given their passport and allowed to immediately fly out to Bangkok.

“Failure to act now will likely condemn this journalist to face arrest and worse at the hands of Vietnam’s ministry of public security,” he added. “Prime minister Starmer needs to make it very clear to Gen Tô Lâm that the UK-Vietnam relationship cannot be bolstered on the back of blatant violations of media freedom and human rights.”

Officials in Vietnam show little tolerance for dissent and maintain tight control on the media, with the press freedom group Reporters sans Frontières ranking it as among the worst in the world for media freedoms – 173rd out of an index of 180 countries. The group describes Vietnam as “one of the world’s biggest prisons for journalists”.

The Vietnamese government has been approached for comment.

By Oliver Holmes – The Guardian – October 29, 2025

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