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German president visits Vietnam with business delegation
A number of German business leaders joined German President Steinmeier as Berlin looks to diversify its economic activity away from China. The two countries are eying a deal to facilitate the movement of skilled workers. German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier touched down in Vietnam on Tuesday as Germany looks to push   its China de-risking strategy. He was joined in the capital, Hanoi, by Labor Minister Hubertus Heil and a delegation of business leaders from top German industrial firms who will join him on a four-day tour of Southeast Asia. The visit "underlines Germany's interest in looking beyond China and diversifying its economic relations," said Florian Feyerabend, the representative in Vietnam for German think tank, the Konrad Adenauer Foundation.   What's on the agenda for Steinmeier in Vietnam? Steinmeier was welcomed with military honors by Vietnam's President Vo Van Tthuong. He then attended a careers fair at the Goethe-Institut in Hanoi. After touring the capital, the two leaders will have talks and are expected to sign a memorandum of understanding on facilitating the movement of skilled workers from Vietnam to Germany. On Wednesday, Steinmeier is due to visit the economic hub of Ho Chi Minh City. He will then spend two days visiting Thailand.   What German companies joined the trade mission? Among the German companies participating in the business mission is Herrenknecht, which dominates the global tunnel boring machine market and is already selling tools to construct a subway in Ho Chi Minh City. Other participating firms include building materials giant Knauf and adhesive manufacturer Tesa, both of which already have operations in the Southeast Asian country. Wind farm developer PNE AG also joined the delegation at a time when Vietnam is looking to expand its offshore wind sector. The German chamber of commerce in Vietnam said that German companies have invested more than $3 billion (€2.8 billion) into the manufacturing hub, with automotive supplier Bosch being the main investor. Germany is Vietnam's most important trading partner in the European Union, while Vietnam is one of Germany's most important partners in the group of ASEAN states.
23 Jan 2024,20:44

Vietnam reels from historic €11.4 billion corruption scandal
The largest corruption scandal in Southeast Asia's history has shaken Vietnam's anti-graft drive. Experts have warned that the country's economic stability may be at stake. Vietnam has been rocked by its largest corruption scandal to date after authorities last month arrested a prominent real estate developer over allegedly embezzling nearly €11.4 billion ($12.4 billion), the equivalent of more than 3% of the country's GDP. In 2016, Vietnam's governing Communist Party began conducting a sweeping anti-corruption campaign. Since then, it has brought down a national president and senior government ministers, but the scale of the alleged graft involved in the latest scandal it uncovered raised questions about the true state of Vietnam's banking and property sectors. The biggest corruption scandal in Southeast Asian history On November 17, the Ministry of Public Security alleged that Truong My Lan, the chairperson of real estate developer Van Thinh Phat Holdings Group, had embezzled 304 trillion dong (€11.4 billion) from Saigon Commercial Bank, of which she was a majority stakeholder, over several years. According to the ministry's statements, My Lan, who was first arrested last year, operated a vast network of more than 1,000 domestic and foreign subsidiaries as well as further shell companies that took out more than €40 billion in loans from the Saigon Commercial Bank, appropriating about a third of it through "ghost companies" she and her family and associates created. In mid-November, the Ministry of Public Security also recommended the prosecution of a further 85 people, including 24 government officials and associates of Van Thinh Phat Holdings Group and Saigon Commercial Bank. Days later, the Internal Affairs Commission of the Communist Party's Central Committee recommended opening investigations into another 23 state officials, including 12 from the State Bank of Vietnam, the country's central bank. It is arguably the largest corruption scandal in recent Southeast Asian history. By comparison, the well-documented 1MDB scandal in Malaysia in the 2010s, which led to Malaysia's dominant party losing power for the first time ever, involved the theft of €4.1 billion from the country's sovereign wealth fund.    Hanoi's anti-corruption campaign The Communist Party of Vietnam embarked on its "blazing furnace" anti-graft campaign when Nguyen Phu Trong, the party's general secretary, defeated rival Nguyen Tan Dung — Dung was prime minister at the time and seen by many as allowing corruption to thrive. The anti-corruption campaign has resulted in hundreds, if not thousands of party and government officials being dismissed in recent years. In January, Nguyen Xuan Phuc resigned as state president and two deputy prime ministers were sacked over alleged corruption in the government procurement of coronavirus testing kits and the repatriation of Vietnamese nationals during the COVID-19 pandemic.  Speaking this month, after the revelations about the latest scandal, Prime Minister Trong said Communist authorities, "need to conduct the anti-corruption fight faster and in a more efficient manner." He added, "We won't stop here but will continue for the long term." Officials under the graft spotlight Tuong Vu, a political science professor at the University of Oregon in the US, said Prime Minister Trong could now have his sights set on some more big-name targets, including the former party boss of Ho Chi Minh City, Le Thanh Hai, who is known as "the most corrupt official in Vietnam." Hai was the political boss of the southern business hub for decades, and although he was given a wrap on the knuckles in 2020, when the corruption-busters found his committee had engaged in improprieties, he has so far avoided any real punishment for his alleged wrongdoings. "It is possible that Hai is next. He's also known to be close to former Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, who may still be a target," said Tuong Vu, referring to the political heavyweight whom Trong defeated in 2016.  Indeed, it had been suggested by analysts that Hai and Dung may have been the two richest people in Vietnam at some point in the 2010s thanks to their alleged oversight of vast graft networks in southern Vietnam.  "There is no doubt that more major scandals and arrests are forthcoming," said Michael Tatarski, a journalist living in Ho Chi Minh City who writes about Vietnamese politics in his Vietnam Weekly blog. "A significant investigation into sand mining is underway," and it appears police are looking closely at the renewable energy sector and Vietnam Electricity, the country's largest power company, he added. However, there are concerns that the scale of graft now being uncovered is denting economic stability. Private sector feels the heat When a number of private sector companies were hit with corruption allegations last year, it was suggested the anti-graft campaign was starting to affect business confidence. Reports leaked in the media claimed local government officials and civil servants were refusing to sign off on much-needed infrastructure investment deals for fear they would later be accused of corruption if the development projects didn't go according to plan. Nguyen Khac Giang, a visiting fellow at the Vietnam Studies Programme at the ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, pointed out that this is not the first significant investigation into a private company, but it is by far the largest. He says that in 2022, Trinh Van Quyet, chairman of property and leisure company FLC Group and its subsidiary Bamboo Airlines, was arrested on charges of stock market manipulation; while months later, Do Anh Dung, chairman of the Tan Hoang Minh property development group, was detained on suspicion of fraudulent appropriation of assets. Tran Qui Thanh, chairman of Tan Hiep Phat Group, the country's largest private-sector beverage producer, was arrested in April over alleged misappropriation of assets. Given what has transpired so far, the latest corruption scandal "might not further deteriorate business confidence in Vietnam, nor instill fear of being investigated," Giang said. Indeed, other sources have made similar arguments, saying business confidence was more shaken by the first investigations into private sector corruption and that the business community in Vietnam has now become somewhat accustomed to the idea that the Communist Party might be staring over its shoulder. 'Total regulatory failure' Among the many allegations against Truong My Lan and her associates were accusations that they had bribed investigators for years to get them to overlook Saigon Commercial Bank's financial discrepancies. This includes bribes reportedly paid to the then-chief of the State Bank of Vietnam's Inspectorate and Supervision Department. "This was a total regulatory failure," said Zachary Abuza, a professor of national security strategy at the US National War College in Washington, who added that it should raise questions about the business practices of other banks, too. "If Lan could bribe regulators with $5.2 million to overlook non-performing loans and other criminal behavior at [the Saigon Commercial Bank], why not other banks?" Abuza queried. The latest corruption scandal also raises questions about political stability. Trong, the party chief, has torn up informal agreements on term limits and retirement ages that the Communist Party agreed to in the 1990s. Trong, 79, is now in his third term in office and seemingly cannot step down as he's unable to find a trusted successor — the reason why he took on a third term in 2021, most pundits say. It remains unclear if he will try to run for a fourth term at the next National Congress in early 2026.  "Anti-corruption has evolved from a means, to an end in itself. Combating corruption is seen as a way to uphold the party's legitimacy," said Giang. "This is the new normal of Vietnamese politics."
03 Dec 2023,22:54

Biden to visit Vietnam after G20 summit in India
United States President Joe Biden is traveling to Vietnam next month for a meeting with the leader of the ruling Communist Party Nguyen Phu Trong and other Vietnamese leaders, the White House announced on Monday. Biden will arrive in Hanoi on September 10 after attending the annual summit of the G20 leaders in India. The one-day in Vietnam comes as Washington seeks to counter China's influence in the region. "The leaders will explore opportunities to promote the growth of a technology-focused and innovation-driven Vietnamese economy," White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement. The meeting will also focus on "education exchanges and workforce development programs," combating climate change, and increasing peace, prosperity, and stability in the region," the statement said. Building partnership despite difficult past Biden had announced in early August that he would soon be traveling to Vietnam, saying that Hanoi "wants to change our relationship and become a partner." The US, for years has sought to strengthen relations with Vietnam. Biden and Trong spoke by phone in March, and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited the southeast Asian nation one month later. Washington considers Hanoi one of its top partners in the region, especially as the memory of the Vietnam War fades. However, Vietnam must also weigh any reaction by a powerful neighbor, China. Trong last year became the first foreign leader to meet President Xi Jinping in Beijing after the Chinese leader secured a precedent-breaking third term. US and Vietnam share concerns about China In addition to increasingly close trade links, the US and Vietnam both share concern over China's growing strength. Friction has been increasing for years between Beijing and Southeast Asian nations, particularly Vietnam and the Philippines, over China's sweeping maritime claims in the South China Sea. The White House also announced that to mark the the 22nd anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.
29 Aug 2023,11:46

India, Vietnam seek to strengthen ties in building material sector
A visiting delegation of Indian business executives from the ceramic tile, porcelain floor, wall and decoration tile, bathroom sanitary ware, and related industries met with their Vietnamese counterparts in Ho Chi Minh City to compare notes and seek tie-ups, the Vietnam News reported. Speaking at the Vietnam-India business meeting on August 23, Vishal Acharya of Mumbai-based Emerald Worldwide Connections Private Limited said that India was the second largest ceramic tiles producer in the world after China and accounted for 20 per cent of the global production. "India was among the top 10 trading partners of Vietnam, which in turn was considered an important country in India's 'Look East policy,' which is reflected in the multi-faceted co-operation between the two countries in recent years," Vietnam News quoted Deputy general director of the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry Nguyen Huu Nam as saying. India, like Vietnam is a rapidly developing country, with booming construction, which is pushing up demand for tiles and other building materials, according to the businessman. Indian enterprises are very interested in the Vietnamese market, and they want to not only export to the country but also invest and produce there. Trade between the two countries reached USD 13.2 billion last year, up 36.6 per cent year-on-year. India's exports to Vietnam were worth USD 6.95 billion, 56.7 per cent more as compared in 2020, while Vietnam's rose by 19.6 per cent, he said, adding that the two countries target soon to reach USD 15 billion. "To achieve this goal, Vietnam and India need to further strengthen co-operation in fields where the two sides have strengths and competitive advantages and complement each other," he said. Nguyen Huu Nam told that the meeting organized by the VCCI and Emerald Worldwide Connection was among the activities to promote the Ceramics and Bath Industry Show (CBIS) to be held in January 2023 in India, the Vietnam News reported. "After more than two years of disconnection due to COVID-19, the event today will provide Vietnamese businesses with useful information about products, markets, and incentives to attend CBIS in India. Besides, the B2B business networking session offers opportunities to find new partners and strengthen business relationships for businesses from both sides." Acharya invited Vietnamese companies to participate in the exhibition, saying it would showcase the best-in-class products and technologies in the fields and offer business matching, factory tours, and seminars on the latest industry developments. The expo would be a perfect platform for manufacturers to showcase their products and network with the "most influential industry stakeholders and generate business leads," and visitors could source the latest materials and services and meet directly with decision-makers in companies to negotiate prices, he added. Source: ANI  
28 Aug 2022,18:07

Vietnam pushes trade & investments with India
India is one of the top 8th trading partners of Vietnam while Vietnam is 15th largest trading partner of India and fourth in Southeast Asia. In 2021, bilateral trade turnover reached $13.2 billion for the first time. It is expected to reach the target of $15 billion set by the leaders of the two countries in 2022. The main Vietnamese exported products to India are mobile phones and components, computers, electronic products and components, chemicals, plastics, rubber, coffee, pepper, cashew. The main Indian exported products to Vietnam are iron and steel products, textile materials, fishery, corn, pharmaceutical and pharmaceutical raw materials; auto spare parts. On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam-India Diplomatic relations, the Ministry of Industry and Trade, Government of Vietnam organized a business delegation led by Do Quoc Hung, Deputy Director General of the Ministry and 20 business communities in multi-sectors to India from July 18th to 22nd. The delegation consists of 20 enterprises in the various fields such as agricultural products (Coffee, Rice, Pepper, Tapioca Starch, Desiccated Coconut, Tea, peanut oil, dry instant seed, black flute mist, dried fruits, vegetables); food & beverage (instant canned processed foods, nutritional drink, food supplements); industrial products (electric fans and fan motor, mechanical products and auxiliary industrial equipment); chemicals and chemical products (compound fertilizers, water purification materials and chemicals); building materials (limestone, resin beads, white limestone powder) textile and garment, and textile materials; pharmaceuticals; handicrafts. During the delegation's visit to India, the Ministry and Embassy conducted a series of business forums and meetings in New Delhi, Agra and Jaipur. This platform provides an opportunity to the business men from both the countries to interact one to one in various sectors like food processing, fast moving consumer goods, cosmetics, handicrafts, home furnishings, agriculture products, etc., Both India and Vietnam have great potential in these sectors. There are several initiatives being taken by the Vietnam government to attract investment. The recent changes in the FDI policies will attract investors and are optimistic that many investment-friendly policies will be implemented. The start-up ecosystem with the right direction and reforms has the potential to grow. Source: The economic Times
20 Jul 2022,20:10

India hands over 12 high-speed guard boats to Vietnam
Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Thursday handed over 12 high-speed guard boats for Vietnam Border Guard at Hong Ha Shipyard made under USD 100 million lines of credit by the Indian government. Five out of 12 boats were manufactured at the L&T Shipyard in India while seven were made at the Hong Ha Shipyard. The ceremony was held during the defence minister's three-day official visit to Vietnam. Speaking at the event, the Indian defence minister said this project is a glowing example of our 'Make in India-Make for the World' mission. "We would be greatly pleased if close friends like Vietnam become part of our Defence Industries transformation through enhanced Defence Industry cooperation," Rajnath Singh said in a tweet. "I'm confident that this will be a precursor to many more cooperative defence projects between India and Vietnam," he added.   India and Vietnam on Wednesday signed a "Joint Vision Statement" for Defence Partnership towards the year 2030 to enhance the scope and scale of defence cooperation between the countries. This key vision statement was signed after the Defence Minister's meeting with his Vietnamese counterpart General Phan Van Giang. Wide-ranging discussions on effective and practical initiatives to further expand bilateral defence engagements and regional and global issues were also held between the two sides. The two Ministers also exchanged views on regional and global issues of shared interest. A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was also signed on Mutual Logistics Support to help enhance engagements between the defence forces of the two countries. Rajnath Singh also met the Vietnamese President Nguyen Xuan Phuc, during which he described Vietnam as a key partner in the Indo-Pacific vision. He appraised the Vietnamese president on initiatives to further strengthen the bilateral Defence relations between India and Vietnam. Source: ANI
11 Jun 2022,17:55

Rajnath to visit Vietnam
Indian Defence minister Rajnath Singh will embark on a three-day visit to Vietnam on June 8 for talks with his Vietnamese counterpart General Phan Van Giang to deepen bilateral defence cooperation, the defence ministry announced on Sunday. Singh will preside over the handing over ceremony of 12 high-speed boats to Vietnam at Hong Ha yard in Hai Phong, with the boats built by L&T under India’s $100 million defence line of credit to the south-east Asian country, the ministry said. “This project is significant in the context of the growing defence industry cooperation with Vietnam and exemplifies Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision of ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat’ and ‘Make in India, Make for the World’,” it added. Singh will begin his visit by paying respects to late President Ho Chi Minh at his mausoleum in Hanoi. Singh will hold bilateral talks with General Giang and both leaders will review bilateral defence cooperation and explore new initiatives to further strengthen military engagements, officials familiar with the matter said, adding that the talks will cover regional and global issues of shared interest. Singh is also scheduled to call on President Nguyen Xuan Phuc and Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh during his visit. The defence minister’s itinerary includes visits to training institutions of Vietnam at Nha Trang, including Telecommunication University where an Army Software Park is being set up with a $5-million grant from India, the ministry said. The visit comes at a time when India and Vietnam mark 50 years of establishment of bilateral diplomatic relations. The two countries have had a comprehensive strategic partnership since 2016, and defence cooperation is a key pillar of the relationship. Source: Hindustan Times
06 Jun 2022,14:54

India and Vietnam can work together on defense and nuclear technology, says envoy
Vietnam shares highly cordial relations with India because of shared values that promote peace, stability, and an environment of dialogue, and both the countries can work together in "sensitive areas", Ambassador of Vietnam to India Pham Sanh Chau said Friday. "All nations are friendly but we share a highly cordial relation with some countries and India is among them," Chau said at an interactive session organized by the Merchants' Chambers of Commerce & Industry. "Vietnam and India have chosen the 'middle way' of peace, stability and dialogue, the path of Buddha," he Chau stressed that Vietnam looks towards India for cooperation in areas like defense and peaceful use of nuclear technology. "Only India can help Vietnam in sensitive areas like defense and nuclear technology for peaceful use...they don't share such technologies," he said. Last month, India and Vietnam complimented each other on the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and general secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Nguyen Phu Trong had, during their telephonic conversation, expressed satisfaction over the rapid pace of a wide range of cooperation under the India-Vietnam Comprehensive Strategic Partnership which was established during Modi’s visit to Vietnam in 2016. Apart from bilateral and regional issues, including Ukraine and the situation in the South China Sea, both leaders agreed to promote closer cooperation in economic, trade, and defence engagements. Iterating the strong ties, Chau said the top four leaders of India, including President Ramnath Kovind, Prime Minister Modi, Vice-President Venkaiah Naidu and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla have visited the southeast nation. Chairman of Vietnam National Assembly Vuong Dinh Hue, along with a high-level parliamentary delegation visited India last December and all the top leaders of the ASEAN country have also come to India from time to time. Chau said bilateral trade between India and Vietnam is expected to reach $15 billion by 2022 or 2023 from $13.2 billion in 2021. He noted that Vietnamese exports to India have increased and the its earlier trade deficit has been balanced with both countries now having an almost equal share in bilateral trade.  With a population of 98.15 million people, the highest among the ASEAN nations, Vietnam offers a great opportunity for the Indian pharma sector for further expansion, he said. With labor cost as low as $3 per hour and 95 percent literacy, Vietnam has the potential to be the biggest manufacturing hub, replacing China where the labour cost is $6-$7 per hour. Due to the country's small size and long coastline, ports are accessible from all industrial parks approximately within half an hour. Further, Vietnam's close proximity to other ASEAN countries makes it suitable as an export hub, it was noted. Source: India Blooms BM
16 May 2022,15:27

India and Vietnam will define the future of Asia: Kurt Campbell
India will be a key fulcrum player on the global stage in the 21st century, and successive American administrations have been united in that assessment, said Kurt Campbell, the National Security Council's coordinator for the Indo-Pacific, at an event hosted by the Washington-based United States Institute of Peace. "I'm very bullish about the future with India. I think we all recognize that the critical, crucial member in the Quad is India," Campbell said, referring to the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue among the U.S., Japan, India and Australia. Japan has agreed to host the next Quad summit in 2022, he said, There, the four countries will discuss ways to further deepen cooperation. India's traditional position of nonalignment, or strategic autonomy, has kept the Quad from shifting to something like an Asian NATO or the recently launched AUKUS partnership of Australia, the U.K. and the U.S. But Campbell said: "This is a moment for thinking creatively and strategically about what's possible between the United States and India." He said India, along with Vietnam and a few others, tops the list of critical countries that will define the future of Asia. "I believe that whoever is in office in Washington, Democrat or Republican, will do what's necessary to help build that relationship," Campbell said. The veteran Asia hand said the 2020 border clashes with China in the Himalayas have had a profound impact on Indian strategic thinking. "The border disputes in the disputed territories in the Himalayas, in these ungodly conditions, in which a number of Indian troops were killed last year, and a real sense of heightened tensions between China and India, it would be difficult to exaggerate the strategic significance that has had in Delhi," he said. The resulting "new strategic paradigm" has encouraged India to "reach out and to build, not just with the United States, but other countries, stronger bonds to signal that India is not alone and is working with other countries," Campbell said. Meanwhile, he described Vietnam as a "swing state" in the Indo-Pacific. Pointing to the many high-tech and manufacturing companies increasingly looking in that country "to diversify their holdings, investment, patterns of trade in Asia," Campbell noted Vietnam's "remarkable growth in its technology sectors and the like." "They are raising their diplomatic game," he said, soon after noting Vietnam's more active role in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Campbell said American and Vietnamese leaders need to become more familiar with one another, with their meetings less scripted and more about "sharing true strategic purpose." "This is going to be a critical swing state, not just strategically but commercially and technologically," he said. "Even though we have different kinds of government, different overall values, I believe, fundamentally, the ability to work closely with Vietnam will be decisive for us going forward." On AUKUS, Campbell said there will be more British and Australian sailors serving on U.S. naval vessels, as well as more forward-deployed U.S. assets in Australia. He called the near "melding" of the services as something "we couldn't have dreamed about five or 10 years ago." Such cooperation with allies and partners "is going to be the most essential feature of an effective strategy in the Indo-Pacific," Campbell said. nikkei asia    
01 Dec 2021,18:41
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