Bùi Thanh Hiếu (born February 6, 1972) is a Vietnamese human rights activist and blogger under the username Người Buôn Gió. . In 2009 Hiếu was detained for ten days by the Vietnamese government for "abusing democratic freedoms to infringe upon the interests of the State."[1] As of 2021 he lives in exile in Germany with his son.
Bùi Thanh Hiếu was born in 1972 in a small alley named in the Đồng Xuân Market in Hanoi, in an area, which he called "the street of life, a place containing many elements of Gypsy, Mafia".[2]
Growing up in a dusty street Hiếu had a rough life, earning money to live through theft, gambling, and collecting debt for rent.
In 2005, after noticing corruption in the hospital where his wife gave birth, he came to a realization that it is a persistent problem in society. He started his blog hoping to contribute to bettering the lives of his children and of future generations. His writings have criticized territorial claims within China, as well as Vietnam's handling of land disputes with the Catholic church, and advocated for democracy in Vietnam.[3]
In 2009 Hiếu along with two other Vietnamese bloggers were detained by the Vietnamese government for "abusing democratic freedoms to infringe upon the interests of the State." Hiếu distributed shirts which contained the phrase "Hoang Sa - Truong Sa belong to Vietnam." Hoang Sa refers to the Paracel Islands and Truong Sa refers to the Spratly Islands.[4]
In 2010 his writings were translated into German and was awarded a full scholarship from the German government in 2013. Hiếu was originally supposed to be in Germany for six months to study art. However he would end up staying there for years and continued to write about Vietnamese politics on his wind trader blog and on Facebook.[5] In February 2020 Hiếu announced he would stop producing the Wind Trader blog due to harassment of his family in Vietnam.[6] Including his 86 year old mother who at the time was in a Vietnamese hospital.[7] In February 2021 Amnesty International reported that Hiếu was targeted with 4 spyware attacks by OceanLotus between February 2018 and December 2019.[8]
Hellman-Hammett award-2010[9]