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Most Vietnamese cower when a cop squeezes them for a bribe. Le Hien
Duc, a 75-year-old grandmother, fights back.
Four-foot-nine and weighing just 88 pounds, she'll take on
anyone, from lowly bureaucrats to high-level officials. She
e-mails, phones, tracks them down at their offices, confronts them
at their homes.
''Corruption is definitely an evil, and it is ruining my
beloved country,'' said Duc, a former school teacher.
Corruption is perhaps the most vulnerable spot in the country's
single-party Communist state -- from the traffic cops who pull
drivers over for $3 bribes to the officials accused of gambling $13
million in public money on British soccer matches.
In Vietnam, where people respect authority, few dare challenge
the system. But many turn to Duc.
''Most of us tremble when we have to deal with police,''
said Doan Van Hung, a delivery man. ''She is incredibly
brave.''
Hung's ordeal was typical -- a policeman stopped him for
speeding and threatened to seize his motorbike unless he paid a $3
bribe.
Duc tracked down the officer who harassed Hung and filed a
complaint with the Hanoi chief of police. The officer was promptly
demoted.
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