6
railway officials to stand trial in bribery scandal linked to Japan-funded
project
A
railway on
Six officials of
Local media
reported Friday that the officials from Vietnam Railways' projects
management unit RPMU have been charged with "power abuse," a crime
punishable by a 15-year jail term.
The two-day
trial will start in
According to
the indictment, the officials started receiving the money from Japan
Transportation Consultants Inc. (JTC) in September 2009, after they signed a
contract on technical consultancy for
Pham Hai
Bang, 46, the then manager of the project and deputy chief of RPMU, allegedly
told JTC's management that his unit was having financial problems.
The Japanese
company reportedly offered to give him money.
By the time
the case was busted in February 2014, a total of 69.9 million yen had been
sent to Bang and two other officials, Pham Quang Duy and Nguyen Nam
Thai, prosecutors said.
The money
was then used for both official and personal purposes, including
entertainment expenses for partners, according to prosecutors.
Tran Quoc
Dong, 51, Tran Van Luc, 57, and Nguyen Van Hieu, 53, who acted as chiefs of
RPMU between 2009 and 2014, allegedly received VND30-100 million
($1,300-4,400) each from Bang as "Lunar New Year gifts."
After being
arrested last year, all the former chiefs returned the money they had
received. Duy and Thai submitted VND65 million and VND600 million
($2,800-26,500), respectively, in an apparent effort to reduce the gravity of
their crime.
Bang also
surrendered VND970 million ($42,900) and $7,000 in cash and two bank
passbooks with nearly VND1 billion ($44,200) in his relatives' names.
Suspended
funding
Vietnamese
authorities started investigating the case after Japanese media reported
early last year that Tamio Kakinuma, then president of JTC, admitted his
company had bribed civil servants in
In July last
year, Japanese prosecutors pressed charges against Kakinuma and two other JTC
executives for violating antitrust laws by paying kickbacks estimated at 160
million yen ($1.27 million) in total.
The
prosecutors believed that half of the money was paid to Vietnamese officials.
After the
scandal broke out, the Japanese government suspended new ODA funding for
In April
this year the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) said the Japanese
government would not resume funding for the
Responding
to the demand, Vietnamese transport ministry said it will review the contract
to estimate how much it was.
Local media
reported that by the time the bribery was discovered, Vietnamese government
had signed a loan agreement worth over 4.68 billion yen ($37.66 million)
with JICA to fund technical consultancy work and bidding procedures,
according to the reports.
JTC and its
partners won the consultancy contract worth over 2.9 billion yen and VND320
billion (a total of $43.35 million) in 2008.
But due to
changes in design, the contract value rose later to over VND3.6 billion yen
and VND236 billion (a total of $46.33 million).
Funding
problems are likely to affect the deadline.
Thanh Nien News
|
Thứ Sáu, 9 tháng 10, 2015
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