Vietnam ex-banker sentenced to death
in fraud saga
His co-accused got life in a blockbuster trial involving 51
bankers and businessmen
A Vietnamese former banking executive
was sentenced to death Friday in a massive fraud case, while his co-accused got
life in a blockbuster trial involving 51 bankers and businessmen.
The sentences were delivered at the
end of a month-long trial as Vietnam's leadership wages an anti-corruption
sweep, targeting ex-officials, bankers and executives accused of graft and
mismanagement.
Former Ocean Bank general director
Nguyen Xuan Son was sentenced to death for embezzlement, abuse of power and
economic mismanagement.
Fellow kingpin and ex-Ocean Bank
chairman Ha Van Tham, once one of Vietnam's richest men, was jailed for life
on the same charges, as well as violating lending rules.
Both men left the courthouse
stone-faced after the verdict was handed down.
The trial targeting high-flying
executives accused of losses worth millions of dollars has captivated
Vietnam.
The charges cascaded down the ranks,
targeting accountants, branch managers and scores of others in one of the
country's largest-ever banking trials.
The other sentences announced Friday
ranged from 22 years in prison to 18-month suspended sentences and
re-education outside of prison.
"Tham and Son's behaviour is
very serious, infringing on the management of state property and causing
public grievances, which requires strict punishment," said judge Truong
Viet Toan.
Tham, Ocean Bank's founder, was
convicted of illegally approving a $23 million loan in 2012 and economic
mismanagement causing major losses.
Also included in the indictment was
PetroVietnam's acquisition of a $35-million stake in the bank in 2009. It was
later written off.
Son, director of the bank at the
time and who later became chairman of the powerful state oil firm
PetroVietnam, was sentenced to death for embezzlement, abuse of power and
wrongdoing.
The scandal sparked the demise of
Ocean Bank.
It had been part of Ocean Group,
which takes in real estate and hotel subsidiaries and enjoyed a meteoric rise
after its founding in 2007. It was valued at $500 million in 2013 under
Tham's stewardship.
Ocean Group is still active in real
estate, hotels and services and was valued at $3.5 million in 2016, according
to its website.
Vietnam's banking scandal-hit
banking sector has long been plagued by dodgy loans and favouritism, which
observers say risks hampering the country's solid economic growth.
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Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 9, 2017
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