Vietnamese mourn late leader Nguyen Phu Trong with black profile pictures

2 months ago 21

Vietnam has one of most heavily restricted media environments in the world and citizens are often hesitant to express their views online. “A great heart has stopped,” Hoang Quoc Ky wrote on his Facebook page after changing his cover photo to a picture of Vietnam’s national flag flying at half-mast. “He was a bright and perfect communist, a sharp politician… who devoted his whole life for socialism and the happiness of the people,” Ky added read more

Vietnamese mourn late leader Nguyen Phu Trong with black profile pictures

A man reads a newspaper reporting on the death of Nguyen Phu Trong, the general secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam, in Hanoi on July 20, 2024.

Vietnamese social media users changed their profile pictures to black on Saturday in a show of mourning for the country’s late leader Nguyen Phu Trong, whose death was announced the previous day.

Users on Facebook, X and Threads also posted photos and eulogies of the former Communist Party general secretary after Vietnam’s state media announced on Friday that the 80-year-old had died at a military hospital in Hanoi “due to old age and serious illness”.

Vietnam has one of most heavily restricted media environments in the world and citizens are often hesitant to express their views online.

“A great heart has stopped,” Hoang Quoc Ky wrote on his Facebook page after changing his cover photo to a picture of Vietnam’s national flag flying at half-mast.

“He was a bright and perfect communist, a sharp politician… who devoted his whole life for socialism and the happiness of the people,” Ky added.

“Trong was a very enthusiastic patriot in his own manner,” blogger DzungArt Nguyen wrote in a Facebook post.

“(We) acknowledge his passion… may he rest in peace.”

The profile pictures of social media accounts for Vietnamese state media agencies were also changed to black, with companies and NGOs in the country following suit.

Trong’s death was announced a day after the party said he would hand the reins of power to the country’s president and former public security minister To Lam.

At the time, the party said Trong would be focusing on treatment for an undisclosed medical condition, the first time it had addressed long standing speculation about the ageing leader’s health.

There were no further details about Trong’s illness, and the party said it would later make “a special statement on the organisation of the funeral at the national level”.

After arrangements for Trong’s funeral are announced, an official period of mourning will begin, with flags flown at half mast and all cultural and art activities cancelled.

Entertainment and sporting event organisers have already suspended activities.

Trong is the first party general secretary to die in office since the death in 1986 of Le Duan, a brother-in-arms of Ho Chi Minh.

He is also the first leader to have held three consecutive mandates at the head of the party, after the liberalisation of the economy in 1986.

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