In this file photo, a train is
running on the north-south railway system in
Vietnam and Japan have agreed to
establish a joint committee to handle a case in which the leader of Japan
Transportation Consultants, Inc. (JTC) admitted to paying over US$780,000 in
kickbacks to win an ODA-funded project in
The agreement was reached at a meeting held on Friday between Transport Minister Dinh La Thang and Japanese Ambassador to Vietnam Fukada Hiroshi to deal with the alleged corruption scandal and discuss measures to prevent similar cases in the future.
At the event, the two sides also agreed that the joint
committee will convene its first meeting in
A day earlier, the Vietnamese Ministry of Transport set
up a team, along with a hotline, to look into the alleged bribery.
The team is comprised of eight members led by Nguyen
Van Huyen, chief inspector of the ministry.
The unit will investigate a recent accusation that JTC
paid kickbacks to become the consultant for the Yen Vien-Ngoc Hoi railway
route project, a Japanese ODA-funded project in
The accusation came last week, when the Yomiuri Shimbun
newspaper reported that Tamio Kakinuma, JTC’s president, confessed his
company had paid ¥80 million ($782,640) in bribes in return for an ODA
(official development assistance) project order worth ¥4.2 billion
($41,088,600) in Vietnam.
A hotline, at (+84) 0986 093 979, has also been set up
to receive information related to the alleged scandal, Huyen added.
The chief inspector also said that transport ministry
inspectors already began inspecting all JTC-related projects on Thursday.
In a report to the ministry on Wednesday, the Vietnam
Railways Corporation (VRC) said that it has reviewed the process of the implementation
of the Yen Vien-Ngoc Hoi railway route project but has yet to find any
abnormal signs.
Four contractors, including JTC, took part in the bid
for the project, but three of them eventually quit, so JTC later became its
sole consultant contractor, the report said.
Since 1993, JTC has engaged in 14 projects in
Meanwhile, Transport Minister Thang has requested that
VRC halt disbursements expected to be made under a contract signed with JTC
for this project and suspend other planned financial negotiations connected
to it with the Japanese firm.
So far fourteen Vietnamese officials and ex-officials
have been ordered to write reports on their responsibility in the suspicious
project, with four of them even being suspended.
Tuoitrenews
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Thứ Bảy, 29 tháng 3, 2014
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