Arab Times

Top policeman president:

Asia

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Vietnam’s parliament swore in Tran Dai Quang as president on Saturday, elevating the head of a controvers­ial internal security agency to one of the communist nation’s most powerful political posts.

Quang’s approval was a formality since he was the only candidate put forward by the party’s five-yearly congress in January. The outgoing National Assembly is overseeing the transition to a new government three months earlier than scheduled.

Vietnam has no paramount ruler and is officially led by a triumvirat­e of president, prime minister and Communist Party chief, although experts say the presidency is more ceremonial than the other posts. The party runs Vietnam’s complex political system by consensus, with big decisions reached in secret by its 19-member politburo.

Quang, 59, is a police general who hails from the Ministry of Public Security, an organisati­on with broad powers and a remit that includes intelligen­ce gathering and thwarting domestic and foreign threats to the party.

It has been a focus of Western pressure on Vietnam to improve its human rights record and stop arrests, harassment and imprisonme­nt of activists in return for closer trade and defence ties, including the full lifting of a US arms embargo.

A resolution approving Quang’s presidency was backed by 460 of the 465 lawmakers who cast votes on Saturday. He swore his loyalty to the party and people.

Among his first duties will be meeting US counterpar­t Barack Obama in May, the first visit to Vietnam by a US president in a decade. Obama’s trip will cap off a two-year charm offensive by Washington that has coincided with Hanoi’s deteriorat­ing ties with communist neighbour China. (RTRS)

Quang

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