The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Singapore detains fugitive Vietnamese intelligen­ce officer

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SINGAPORE: A fugitive Vietnamese intelligen­ce officer wanted in his homeland for allegedly disclosing state secrets has been arrested in Singapore, his lawyers said yesterday.

Phan Van Anh Vu, who is also a property developer, was detained on Thursday at a border checkpoint as he attempted to cross into Malaysia.

Police in the central Vietnamese city of Da Nang said in recent days that Vu, 42, was being sought for “deliberate­ly revealing state secrets” but gave no further details.

His lawyer Remy Choo told AFP he had met Vu's family, who had confirmed that “apart from being a property developer, he was also a senior officer in the Vietnamese intelligen­ce services”.

“Myclient'sfamilyare­concerned that there is an imminent risk of repatriati­on,” Choo said.

“I can confirm he has applied

My client’s family are concerned that there is an imminent risk of repatriati­on.

for asylum in a European country but I cannot reveal which country this is.”

Another of Vu's lawyers, Foo Cheow Ming, confirmed his arrest. His lawyers have not yet been allowed to see him.

Singapore authoritie­s did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

His arrest follows a year in which Vietnamese authoritie­s jailed or arrested scores of former officials, bankers and state executives as part of a sweeping anti-corruption crackdown which some observers say is also driven by political infighting.

One of the most high-profile cases involved the alleged kidnapping of a Vietnamese former oil executive in Germany.

Trinh Xuan Thanh was snatched from a Berlin park by Vietnamese security agents in July in a Cold War-style operation that stunned many inside and outside the oneparty state. It prompted Germany to decry a “scandalous violation” of its sovereignt­y.

Vietnamese officials insist Thanh, who will go on trial later this month, returned home voluntaril­y.

Observers say the anticorrup­tion sweep, which has echoes of a graft crackdown in Communist China, is being led by a conservati­ve leadership in place since last year.

Many believe it is as much about weeding out political enemies aligned with the former leadership as cracking down on graft. — AFP

Remy Choo, lawyer

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