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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
World

Vietnam: Millions paid in pandemic rescue flight bribes

A Vietnam Airlines attendant disembarks from a flight returning from Taiwan at Noi Bai International Airport in Hanoi in March 2020. (AFP File Photo)

Vietnamese authorities are seeking to charge 54 individuals following a yearlong investigation into alleged bribes tied to repatriation flights during the Covid-19 pandemic that led to dismissals of high-level government officials.

Police are asking the Supreme People’s Procuracy to prosecute former government officials, including an ex-vice minister for foreign affairs and a former ambassador to Japan, according to a statement posted on the website of the Ministry of Public Security.

Twenty-one people are facing charges of taking bribes and 23 with paying bribes, it said. Four others are charged with “abusing titles and powers”.

The investigation led to the resignation in January of former president Nguyen Xuan Phuc, who assumed responsibility for the “violations and shortcomings” of some of his cabinet members involving graft cases related to a manufacturer of Covid test kits and the rescue flights. The National Assembly also dismissed two deputy prime ministers following the anti-graft campaign.

The government organised about 800 repatriation fights that brought home more than 200,000 Vietnamese from over 60 countries and territories, according to the VnExpress news website.

The alleged bribes totalled millions of dollars, according to Bloomberg calculations based on local media reports, citing conclusions made by police investigators.

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