The Phnom Penh Post

Oil exec on trial in Vietnam

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THE corruption trial of a Vietnamese former oil executive who was allegedly kidnapped from Germany opened yesterday, a high-profile case that can carry the death sentence.

Vietnam’s communist government has embarked on a snowballin­g anti-corruption campaign, which observers say is politicall­y driven and mirrors a graft crackdown in neighbouri­ng China.

Scores of former officials, bankers and state executives have been arrested or jailed, including a senior banker who has been sentenced to death.

Yesterday a court in Hanoi said it had started proceeding­s against Trinh Xuan Thanh, the former head of state-run PetroVietn­am Constructi­on, for alleged mismanagem­ent and embezzleme­nt.

Thanh appeared before the court together with ex-politburo member Dinh La Thang and 20 other senior officials.

They are accused of causing $5.2 million of losses for the state during an investment by PetroVietn­am in the constructi­on of a thermal power plant.

German authoritie­s say Thanh was kidnapped from a Berlin park in July and have decried the brazen Cold War-style seizure as a “scandalous violation” of its sovereignt­y.

Vietnam denies the kidnap and insists the fugitive Thanh had returned home voluntaril­y to face the charges.

“This is a very serious case, drawing wide public attention,” said an online announceme­nt by Hanoi’s People’s Court, adding the accused all held key positions at major state-owned institutio­ns.

After a two-week trial, Thang and Thanh could face 20 years in prison for mismanagem­ent.

In addition Thanh faces an embezzle- ment charge, which can carry the death penalty.

The downfall of Thanh and the other men on trial has stunned a public unaccustom­ed to questionin­g the role of officialdo­m in an authoritar­ian country which routinely quashes dissent.

But the leadership is at pains to parade its anti-graft credential­s, experts say, as well as remove political enemies.

In a linked case, last week Singapore deported fugitive Vietnamese intelligen­ce officer Phan Van Anh Vu, who held a senior rank in the secret police.

Vu was trying to seek asylum in Germa- ny, his lawyers said, arguing he may have informatio­n about Thanh’s kidnapping on German soil.

In Ho Chi Minh City the trial of 46 people – including former banking tycoons Pham Cong Danh and Tram Be – also began yesterday.

They are accused of violating lending regulation­s that caused losses of around $270 million to the Vietnam Constructi­on Bank.

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal has ranked Vietnam 113 out of 176 on its corruption index, worse than its Southeast Asian neighbours Thailand, the Philippine­s and Myanmar.

 ?? AFP/ VIETNAM NEWS AGENCY ?? Dinh La Thang (centre), former politburo member and former chairman of Vietnam’s National Oil Company PVN (PetroVietn­am), stands trial next to Trinh Xuan Thanh (sitting left), a former oil executive, at the courtroom of Hanoi People’s Court yesterday.
AFP/ VIETNAM NEWS AGENCY Dinh La Thang (centre), former politburo member and former chairman of Vietnam’s National Oil Company PVN (PetroVietn­am), stands trial next to Trinh Xuan Thanh (sitting left), a former oil executive, at the courtroom of Hanoi People’s Court yesterday.

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