Japan
pledges over $800 million for Vietnam's infrastructure projects
Japanese government
will lend 95 billion yen (US$811.53 million) in official development loans
(ODA) for three transport infrastructure projects and one climate change
response plan in Vietnam, the government website has reported.
The loans, whose agreements were signed in Hanoi on
Friday, were part of a package of over 300 billion yen ($2.56 billion) Japan
pledged for Vietnam in its fiscal year 2015, it said.
Japanese ambassador to Vietnam Hiroshi Fukada was quoted
as saying at the signing ceremony that the countries expect to sign loans
agreements for another three transport projects by the end of the fiscal year
which will be this March 31.
Bui Quang Vinh, Minister of Planning and Investment,
said it was "remarkable" that Japan raised its ODA pledges to Vietnam
this fiscal year three folds from the previous year.
In the fiscal year 2014, Japan's ODA loans to Vietnam
hit a record low of around 100 billion yen, following a graft case linked to
Hanoi's first urban railway system funded by Japan, Vinh was quoted as
saying.
Six Vietnamese railway officials was found having
received VND11 billion in bribes from Japan Transportation Consultants Inc.,
a technical consultant for the project.
The Vietnamese officials, including three people who
were chiefs of Vietnam Railways' project management unit between 2009 and
2014, received sentences ranging from five and half years to 12 years for
"abuse of power" at a hearing in October last year.
As Vietnam's biggest sponsor, Japan has pledged 2.6
trillion yen ($22.21 billion) in ODA to the country since 1992, according to
official figures.
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Chủ Nhật, 17 tháng 1, 2016
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