Bangkok Post

Oil exec Thanh jailed for life

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HANOI: A court in Vietnam yesterday gave a second life sentence to a former executive at Vietnam’s state oil giant accused of corruption and who Germany said was kidnapped from there by Vietnamese agents last year.

State-run online newspaper VnExpress said Trinh Xuan Thanh, the former chairman of PetroVietn­am’s constructi­on arm, was convicted of embezzling US$622,000 from a property project developed by a subsidiary. Seven other defendants in the two-week trial were sentenced from six to 16 years in jail on the same charges.

Thanh denied the allegation­s but testimony by other defendants and witnesses gave sufficient basis to issue the conviction, the paper quoted judges as saying.

Thanh, 51, received another life prison term two weeks ago after being convicted of embezzling $178,000 from a thermo power plant in the country’s highest-profile court case.

Another defendant in that case was former Politburo member Dinh La Thang, who was sentenced to 13 years for economic mismanagem­ent. Thang was the first former member of the all-powerful body to face trial in decades.

The defendants included Dinh Manh Thang, who was sentenced to nine years in prison after being convicted of embezzling $222,000. Thang is the younger brother of Dinh La Thang.

Germany has said Vietnamese intelligen­ce services abducted Thanh from a Berlin park in July in what it called “an unpreceden­ted and flagrant violation of German and internatio­nal law”. He had sought asylum in Germany.

Vietnam denied the abduction allegation and says Thanh returned voluntaril­y.

The ruling Communist Party under the watch of General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong, who was re-elected to another fiveyear term in 2016, has stepped up its anticorrup­tion campaign to an unpreceden­ted level with PetroVietn­am and the banking sector at its center.

Scores of current or former senior PetroVietn­am executives and bankers are on trial for economic crimes. A trial of 46 defendants, mostly bankers and businessme­n, is under way in Ho Chi Minh City.

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