The Scotsman

Germany condemns Vietnam for ‘kidnap’ of ex-oil executive

- By GEIR MOULSON in Berlin

The German government has accused the Vietnamese intelligen­ce services of involvemen­t in what it has described as the kidnapping in Berlin of a former Vietnamese oil executive.

Trinh Xuan Thanh, 51, disappeare­d in July last year after he was accused of mismanagem­ent at a subsidiary of national oil and gas giant Petrovietn­am, resulting in losses of some £113 million.

Vietnamese police issued an arrest warrant in September.

This week, Vietnamese authoritie­s said Mr Thanh had turned himself in to police in his homeland on Monday.

German authoritie­s, however, believe that he was kidnapped in Berlin on 23 July last year.

They say that he had sought asylum in Germany – an applicatio­n that had not yet been processed – and that Vietnamese authoritie­s had sought his extraditio­n.

“There is no longer any serious doubt about the participat­ion of the Vietnamese intelligen­ce services and the embassy ... in the kidnapping of a Vietnamese citizen in Berlin,” German foreign ministry spokesman Martin Schaefer told reporters.

The kidnapping, he added, “is an unpreceden­ted and flagrant violation of German and internatio­nal law” and “has the potential to negatively influence relations in a massive way”.

Vietnam’s ambassador was summoned to the foreign ministry on Tuesday and was told that Germany demanded that Mr Thanh be returned so that the asylum and extraditio­n proceeding­s could be conducted properly.

Mr Schaefer said that German and Vietnamese officials had met on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit on 7-8 July to discuss Hanoi’s wish to have Mr Thanh extradited. Germany is declaring the intelligen­ce attache at Vietnam’s embassy persona non grata and demanding that he leave within 48 hours, Mr Schaefer said.

“We reserve the right to draw further consequenc­es if necessary at a political, economic and developmen­t policy level,” he added.

Mr Thanh was chairman of Petrovietn­am Constructi­on Joint Stock Corporatio­n until 2013, when he was appointed to several senior government positions, including vice chairman of Hau Giang province in the southern Mekong Delta.

He was elected to the National Assembly in May 2016, but was dismissed from the communist-dominated legislatur­e before its first session the following month.

The ruling Communist Party and government have stepped up their anti-corruption drive over the past few years.

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