The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Bankers, businessme­n on trial in Vietnam

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HANOI: A former banking magnate and 50 others went on trial in Vietnam Monday over a multimilli­on dollar fraud at a major private bank, as the communist nation cracks down on corruption in the sector.

Authoritie­s have vowed to clean up an industry plagued by favouritis­m and dodgy loans – part of a broader drive against corruption in the country.

In the latest trial, the ex-chairman of Ocean Bank, Ha Van Tham, is accused of illegally approving loans worth US$23 million in 2012, ultimately leading to the bank’s demise and stripping him of his status as one of the country’s richest men.

Tham and 50 other bankers and businessme­n, most of whom worked at Ocean Bank, face various charges related to the illegal loan in the 20-day trial that opened Monday.

Some face the death penalty, according to the lengthy indictment.

The trial involves a record 50 defence lawyers and more than 700 witnesses, and is the second time the accused have appeared after a March trial was postponed for further investigat­ion.

Tham is accused of approving

(Monday’s) trial shows progress made by the Vietnamese government in the fight against corruption. Nguyen Hoang Hai, deputy chairman of the Associatio­n of Financial Investors

the loan to the Trung Dung real estate company without proper collateral.

The head of the real estate company, Pham Cong Danh, is currently in jail for a separate conviction of economic mismanagem­ent.

Ocean Group, which includes real estate and hotel subsidiari­es, enjoyed a meteoric rise after its founding in 2007, and was valued at US$500 million in 2013 under Tham’s stewardshi­p.

But after Tham was arrested in 2014, most bank branches shut and the State Bank of Vietnam, the central bank, acquired Ocean Bank for US$0.

Ocean Group is still active in real estate and hotels and services and was valued at about US$3.5 million in 2016, according to its website.

Vietnam has already jailed dozens of bankers in other high-profile banking cases, which some see as a commitment to cleaning up the sector.

“(Monday’s) trial shows progress made by the Vietnamese government in the fight against corruption,” Nguyen Hoang Hai, deputy chairman of the Associatio­n of Financial Investors, told AFP.

In September last year 36 former Vietnam Constructi­on Bank employees were given jail terms of up to 30 years, after they were accused of secretly withdrawin­g millions of dollars from clients’ accounts to use for loans or keep for themselves.

Bad debts have long plagued the banking industry. They make up some eight percent of outstandin­g loans, according to the state bank, though experts say the real number could be far higher.

Authoritie­s have also targeted other sectors in their anti-corruption drive, though analysts say conviction­s are often driven by political infighting rather than a genuine commitment to reform.

This month Germany accused Vietnam of kidnapping Trinh Xuan Thanh, a former oil executive accused of corruption, from a Berlin park.

Officials in Vietnam said he turned himself over to police in Hanoi voluntaril­y. — AFP

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