The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Vietnam hunts former state-oil exec for ‘mismanagem­ent’

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HANOI: Vietnam has issued an arrest warrant for a scandalhit senior official accused of mismanagin­g a unit of government-run oil giant, the latest executive targeted in Hanoi’s attempt to clean up the corrupt state sector.

Trinh Xuan Thanh, one of the highest ranking officials to be sought by police in the communist nation in recent years, has not been seen in public since he left the country last month, according to state-run media.

His arrest warrant came just one day after four of his former colleagues at the PetroVietn­am Constructi­on (PVC) subsidiary were arrested for allegedly costing the firm nearly US$150 million during his time as chairman.

Vietnam’s Public Security Ministry said on its website late Friday it was seeking Thanh for “intentiona­lly violating state regulation­s on economic management causing serious consequenc­es”.

Thanh was removed as PVC chairman in 2013 but has since shuffled through a number of senior government postings, including most recently as deputy head of Hau Giang province.

He left the country in midAugust for medical care and was stripped of his Communist Party membership last week to pave the way for a criminal investigat­ion, according to staterun VNExpress news site.

He has been a marked man ever since he was spotted driving a pricey Lexus with a state license plate, sparking public outrage over inappropri­ate use of public funds.

Vietnam’s powerful Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong vowed in June to launch an investigat­ion into Thanh.

Vietnam has been struggling to clean up its vast and inefficien­t state-run sector for years, and the new communist administra­tion in power since January has vowed to tackle corruption.

There have been a string of high profile arrest sand prosecutio­ns of wealthy businessme­n and executives in recent years, but analysts say they are the result of political infighting rather than a genuine commitment to reform.

Last week, a Vietnamese court convicted the former chairman of Vietnam Constructi­on Bank and 35 other employees for stealing more than $400 million from the joint-stock bank.

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal ranks Vietnam 112 out of 168 on its corruption index, worse than its Southeast Asian neighbours Thailand, the Philippine­s and Myanmar. — AFP

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