Shipbuilders allegedly buy silence as poor-quality
fishing boats inspected in central Vietnam
Many shipbuilders in central
Vietnam, whose steel-clad fishing boats proved to be of poor quality shortly
after delivery, have been accused of paying local fishermen to buy their
silence ahead of an inspection into their substandard products.
An inspection team is pictured aboard
one of the affected boats in Binh Dinh, south-central Vietnam. Tuoi Tre
As
many as 18 steel-clad fishing boats in the south-central province of Binh
Dinh, built by Nam Trieu Co. and Dai Nguyen Duong Co., had to lie dormant
ashore as they were damaged shortly after being handed over to fishermen.
A
representative of one of the shipbuilers has said the damages were caused by
"too salty seawater".
Binh
Dinh has formed an independent inspection team to examine the boats following
complaints from their owners.
“This
is a serious matter,” the province’s deputy chairman Tran Chau said at a
meeting on Friday.
Chau
added that the problem has grown even dodgier after some fishermen had
demanded that authorities cease the planned independent inspection into their
boats.
“This
is unreasonable,” Chau said, implying that the shipbuilders had somehow encouraged
the fishermen to withdraw their petition.
Also
on Friday, many boat owners have denounced that the shipbuilders had indeed
offered to pay hundreds of millions of dong (VND100 = US$4,405) to have them
withdraw the call for inspection.
Tran
Van Phuc, deputy director of the Binh Dinh agriculture department, said seven
fishermen had asked to withdraw their complaints, saying they did not want
their boats to be inspected by authorities.
However,
on Friday, six of them told the agriculture department that they would not
pull the complaints. The only fisherman who did not want his boat to be
inspected is Le Hoai Thanh, who said he had received VND250 million ($11,013)
from the shipbuilder to fix the ship’s damages.
The
constant changes of mind of the fishermen had angered Chau, the provincial
deputy chairman.
He
requested that the panel formed to independently appraise the fishing boats
in question must do their duty, even when the affected fishermen withdraw
their complaints against the shipbuilders.
“I
have also asked the Binh Dinh police department to call for intervention from
the Ministry of Public Security,” he said.
Chau
demanded that the case be properly handled and “any heartless shipbuilders
with deliberate violations must be strictly sanctioned, even criminally
punished.”
Tran Chau
Myriad violations
Citing
a preliminary inspection, Phan Trong Ho, director of the Binh Dinh
agriculture department, said the 18 poor-quality fishing boats have been
found to be built with Chinese-made steel, instead of South Korean product as
contracted.
The
quality of the boats’ paint cover was also below standard, Ho told Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper.
He
underlined that the boat engines, supposed to be supplied by Japan’s
Mitsubishi, are not authentic products.
“Many
of the engines are meant to use for means of road transportation, not fishing
boats,” the official said.
Teddy
Truong Thuong, a Mitsubishi representative based in Singapore, has confirmed
that the engines and power generators installed on eight of the fishing boats
in question “show signs of being altered.”
“The
machines may have been altered for use in maritime environment and there are
signs that the generators are not our authentic products,” the Mitsubishi
representative asserted.
A fisherman points to a row of affected fishing boats.
Buying silence
Tran
Dinh Son, one of the owners of the poor-quality boats, said that Nam Trieu
executives had tried to persuade him to withdraw his complaint against them.
According
to Son’s account, the shipbuilder director Nguyen Hoang Tan and his deputy
Bui Huu Hung came to meet him on June 5, two days before Binh Dinh
authorities started inspecting his boat.
“Tan
and Hung gave me VND100 million, asking me to withdraw all petitions I had
filed to Binh Dinh authorities,” he said.
The
shipbuilder bosses even gave him a petition withdrawal letter prepared by
their own, but Son refused to sign.
“Even
so, they submitted the letter to authorities without my consent and
signature,” Son said.
On
June 7, Son returned VND100 million to Tan.
Another
boat owner, Thai Van Duyet, also said Tan had offered to give him VND200
million ($8,800) to buy his silence.
“My
boat costs VND20 billion [$881,057] and its poor quality had given me
hundreds of millions of losses, so I did not accept the offer,” he said.
“I
want the issue to be resolved by authorities.”
Tan
told Tuoi Tre on
Friday that the company did not want to use money to persuade fishermen to
withdraw their petitions.
“The
money is to help them fix the boats’ damages,” he said.
TUOI TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Bảy, 10 tháng 6, 2017
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