Vietnam officials go on trial over bribes for seats on COVID-19 repatriation flights
The Hindu
More than a dozen Vietnamese officials went on trial in Hanoi on Tuesday for alleged corruption over repatriation flights during the COVID-19 pandemic, a scandal that saw 54 people jailed last year.
More than a dozen Vietnamese officials went on trial in Hanoi on Tuesday for alleged corruption over repatriation flights during the COVID-19 pandemic, a scandal that saw 54 people jailed last year.
The case is part of a major anti-graft drive that has led to the resignation of a President and two deputy Prime Ministers in a country where political changes are usually carefully orchestrated.
Last year, 54 officials and businesspeople were found guilty of receiving, offering, or acting as the go-between for bribes that state media said totalled $9.5 million.
They included four former senior officials at the Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Health, and Public Security, who were handed life sentences. Among the 17 facing court on Tuesday on charges of bribery, power abuse, and hiding of criminals are Transport Ministry and provincial officials, as well as travel company employees.
Tran Tung, a former official for northern Thai Nguyen province, told the court he had accepted around $3,00,000 in bribes and commission for organising quarantine facilities.
“I did it as I saw a chance to earn money and benefit myself,” he told the court, according to the state-run Vietnam Law newspaper.
The trial is expected to last about a week.