Los Angeles Times
Tuesday, March 16, 1999
Protesters Condemn Lam in Vietnam Controversy
By MEGAN GARVEY, HARRISON SHEPPARD, Special to The Times
About 60 demonstrators packed Monday's Westminster City Council
meeting to condemn Councilman Tony Lam and demand that he be recalled.
A defiant Lam said: "They want to crucify me. I stand ready, and
I assure you I'd never quit."
In an emotional showdown, foes denounced the councilman as a
traitor and a communist, and Diedrich Nicholson, a leader of the
effort to recall Lam, was ordered to leave by Mayor Frank Fry for
repeatedly speaking out of turn.
As Nicholson was escorted out by uniformed police, other
protesters followed, shouting "Recall Tony Lam! Recall Tony Lam!"
Meanwhile, Lam's family members, friends and council colleagues
pleaded for an end to angry demonstrations that have rocked the city's
Vietnamese community.
Lam has been under fire for remaining silent during the weeks of
demonstrations over a merchant's display of a Communist flag and
picture of Ho Chi Minh at his video store.
"Where were you when we needed you?" Toby Vu of Westminster asked
Lam. "You were nowhere to be found."
The loudest cheers came when Lam was denounced.
"He gets votes from our people and he promises he will do
anything for our people, but during the protests he didn't show up to
support us," said Frank Le, who came from Canoga Park to attend the
meeting. "He did a lot of damage to our community."
Protesters carrying small yellow- and red-striped South
Vietnamese flags said they are singling out Lam because he is
Vietnamese and should be held to a higher standard than the other City
Council members, none of whom have spoken out during the
demonstrations.
At the very least, they say, Lam could have appeared at some of
the anti-communist rallies at the video store, which is now closed.
Lam's family, many near tears and their voices breaking with
emotion, responded by describing the family's pain. In a statement by
Lam's wife, read by the couple's daughter Jackie, Hop Lam begged the
city attorney to explain to the crowd why her husband's position
requires neutrality.
City Atty. Richard D. Jones had advised all city officials in
February, when thousands were protesting outside the video store, to
remain impartial to prevent possible lawsuits against the city.
Monday's tension in council chambers followed a weekend of
protests at Lam's Garden Grove restaurant, where demonstrators yelled
obscenities at patrons of the Vien Dong restaurant and accused Lam of
being a communist.
Lam, who fled Communist Vietnam in 1975, has said the controversy
has devastated him and his family.
His son Phil said Monday night: "These people have made a mockery
of what my dad has had to do."
To the crowd he said: "You people get a life. You are Vietnamese
Americans. This is America. You live in America now."
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DDO^`NG TA^M GIA?I TRU+` CO^.NG SA?N
HO+.P LU+.C QUANG PHU.C QUE^ HU+O+NG
Freeviet Web Site http://www.freeviet.org
Freedom Democracy for Vietnam http://www.freeviet.org/vntudo/index.html