Vietnamese
President Resigns, Criticized for Major Scandals
·
He joined the Politburo, the
highest-ranking party body, in 2011, and was prime minister from 2016 to 2021,
when he was elected president by the National Assembly
·
His hallmark has been a long-running anti-corruption
campaign, which in his second term targeted two former Cabinet ministers and
Hanoi’s former mayor.
·
As prime minister, Phuc
led Vietnam as it became further integrated in the global economy and sustained
7% economic growth until COVID-19 hit the world.
Vietnamese President Nguyen
Xuan Phuc resigned Tuesday (17 January, 2023),
becoming the most senior member of the government to step down after a series
of high-profile corruption scandals for which he was held responsible.
The state Vietnam News
Agency reported that he had resigned at a session of the ruling Communist
Party’s Central Committee that was held “to consider and give opinions on
Comrade Nguyen Xuan Phuc’s wish to stop holding
positions, quit work and retire.” The language of the announcement strongly
suggested that he was forced to step down.
Phuc,
68, began serving in government at the provincial level in 1979 and took his
first position in national government in 2006. He joined the Politburo, the
highest-ranking party body, in 2011, and was prime minister from 2016 to 2021,
when he was elected president by the National Assembly.
The post of president in
Vietnam is largely ceremonial. The most powerful position, Communist Party
general secretary, is currently held by Nguyen Phu Trong, who in 2021 won a rare third five-year term in
office. His hallmark has been a long-running anti-corruption campaign, which in
his second term targeted two former Cabinet ministers and Hanoi’s former mayor.
It added, however, that he
bore political responsibility as the country’s top executive for serious
scandals involving his subordinates, including two deputy prime ministers and
three other ministers. The statement noted that the two deputy prime ministers
had resigned from their positions and criminal proceedings had been launched
against two other ministers and many other officials. Several of the scandals
involved corruption related to pandemic control measures.
As prime minister, Phuc led Vietnam as it became further integrated in the
global economy and sustained 7% economic growth until COVID-19 hit the world.
With strict measures
including a nationwide lockdown, Vietnam managed to contain the spread of the
virus in the first year of the pandemic and quickly resumed business and
manufacturing. It was among a handful of countries in 2020 that recorded
positive economic growth.
However, as in several other
Asian nations that initially staved off serious outbreaks, cases shot up after
mid-2021 with the spread of more highly transmissible variants.