Vietnam jails former central bank deputy governor for three years

AFP  |  Hanoi 

A former of Vietnam's central was jailed for three years today for negligence after he oversaw a dodgy restructuring scheme that lost the state $600 million.

Vietnam's conservative leadership has targeted the corruption-plagued sector with impunity as its sweeping anti-graft campaign picks up steam.

Both have found themselves in the crosshairs of the campaign but Binh is the first and most senior state to be convicted.

The court said Binh oversaw the restructuring of private Construction Bank (VNCB) in a dodgy deal that caused losses of more than $600 million.

He was sentenced to three years in jail today for "negligence causing serious consequences" over the huge scheme, a confirmed to AFP.

Binh colluded with VNCB boss Pham Cong Danh, who has already been jailed for 30 years for his role.

said Binh knew the restructuring was causing major losses but failed to report it -- or stop it. "knew of the report on mistakes at VNBC but did not provide measures to fix the problem," state-run VNExpress said.

"Binh's actions aided .. to cause losses of $635 million," it continued.

The State Bank of later acquired VNCB for $0 to save it from folding. Binh denied any wrongdoing in the week-long trial in Ho Chi Minh City, which follows the convictions of more than 60 others connected to the case since last year.

Vietnam's notorious sector is plagued by bad debts, corruption and nepotism. Though the communist country has enjoyed strong economic growth in recent years -- GDP expanded by 7.08 per cent in the first half of 2018 -- progress is dragged by endemic corruption.

The country's public debt is soaring and long-promised reforms of bloated state-run enterprises have stalled, leaving the government cash-strapped. The sector has come under fire since a hardline administration took over two years ago.

Harsh sentences have been doled out -- including the death penalty given to the former of Nguyen His misdeeds have been linked to the country's largest firm, (PVN), another high-profile target of the administration's crackdown.

Several former PVN executives have been jailed for corruption, including former politburo member who lost his appeal bid last week and will now serve 30 years on two separate convictions.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, July 02 2018. 20:15 IST