The Borneo Post

Vietnam government reviews toll road after rare protests

-

HANOI: Vietnam's government has promised a full review of charges at a toll gate on a new road after protests there posed a rare challenge to the Communist authoritie­s and showed signs of spreading.

Charges at the Cai Lay toll road in southern Vietnam were suspended by the government on Monday after protesting drivers caused long tailbacks by paying fees in bundles of tiny denominati­on bills.

There is little tolerance of dissent in Vietnam and the government is acutely sensitive to any sign of public disaffecti­on, particular­ly if it spreads on social media.

In comments published on the government's website yesterday, Transport Minister Nguyen Van The said he was investigat­ing alternativ­e proposals for operating the toll road.

“We will carry out our research and complete the report to the government,” he was quoted as saying.

“Whichever option we choose for Cai Lay will have an impact on other BOT ( Build Operate and Transfer) projects.”

He dismissed accusation­s on social media that officials had benefited from connection­s to the company operating the toll gate. Vietnam is also in the midst of a crackdown on corruption.

There are some 88 toll stations on Vietnamese roads set up by investors under BOT schemes to finance constructi­on.

But the one on the Cai Lay toll road caused anger when it opened in Aug 1, because its location meant even drivers who were not going to use the new road had to pay.

The investor said that was fair because it had also repaired the old road, but drivers pointed out those repairs cost very little.

Charges were suspended when protests started after the toll gate first opened, but the toll booths reopened on Nov 30.

To protest, some drivers paid tolls of 25,000 ( US$ 1.10) to 140,000 dong using low-value notes – sometimes requiring the toll gates to count hundreds of bills for a single transactio­n.

Similar protests then appeared on roads in other parts of the country, causing long hold-ups for traffic in one of Southeast Asia's fastest growing economies. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia