Former Vietnam Health Minister Gets 18-year Prison Sentence In COVID-19 Test Kits Bribery Scandal

January 12, 2024
Former Vietnam Health Minister Gets 18-year Prison Sentence In COVID-19 Test Kits Bribery Scandal

Vietnam’s former Health Minister Nguyen Thanh Long has been handed an 18-year prison sentence by the Hanoi People’s Court on Friday, following his conviction in a major COVID-19 test kits bribery scandal. Local news outlet, VNExpress reported.

Long, who served as Deputy Minister of Health from 2011 to 2018 and later resumed the role in 2020 and became Minister of health in that same year, until his expulsion from the Communist Party of Vietnam in 2022, was found guilty of accepting bribes amounting to $2.25 million. The charges were related to his alleged involvement in allowing the medical technology company Viet Á to inflate the prices of COVID-19 test kits by approximately three times their actual cost.

Join our WhatsApp Channel

The scandal unfolded against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam, with Viet Á Technology Corporation colluding with government officials, including Long, to sell COVID-19 RT-PCR test kits. Subsequently, the company imported rapid test kits falsely marketed as locally made and sold them to provincial health departments and hospitals at a substantial mark-up during the years 2020 and 2021. The revelation of this corruption in late 2021 led to the dismissal of several high-ranking officials, including Nguyen Thanh Long, who was praised for being the Chief strategist who helped Vietnam fight COVID-19 effectively.

The implications of the scandal extended beyond the health sector, resulting in a major political shakeup. Deputy Prime Ministers Pham Binh Minh and Vu Duc Dam were removed from their positions, and President Nguyen Xuan Phuc resigned in 2023 amidst growing public dissatisfaction.

The aftermath of the scandal triggered a series of investigations and legal proceedings starting from 2021, ultimately resulting in the conviction of Nguyen Thanh Long and other 37 officials in the government and the officials of the company who got sentences ranging from 3 years to 29 years.

According to the prosecutors, the defendants’ actions were extremely serious, violating public order, economic management safety, and eroding the reputation and prestige of the related agencies.

+ posts

Featured Stories

Latest from World News

ISIS Dares Trump: ‘Act On Christian Genocide!’

The Islamic State (ISIS) has issued one of its clearest acknowledgments to date of orchestrating widespread killings of Christians in Africa, framing the violence as a religious duty and directly challenging President Donald Trump’s warnings of possible U.S. intervention. The claims were

CAR Court Sentences European NGO Worker to 10 Years for Espionage

The Court of Appeal in Bangui, capital of the Central African Republic (CAR), has sentenced Martin Joseph Figueira, a Belgian-Portuguese employee of U.S.-based humanitarian organisation FHI 360, to 10 years of hard labour after convicting him of espionage and multiple state-security offences.
Africa Global Logistics (AGL) partners with the Africa AIPS award for African journalism
Previous Story

Africa Global Logistics (AGL) partners with the Africa AIPS award for African journalism

Gov Otti, Retired Judges Agree On Payment Of 16 Years Outstanding Pensions, Gratuities
Next Story

Supreme Court Affirms Alex Otti’s Election As Abia Governor

Don't Miss

Miss Nigeria 2021

18-Year-Old Hijab Model, Shatu Garko, Wins Miss Nigeria 2021

EIGHTEEN-YEAR-OLD Shatu Garko, a hijab model, has emerged winner of
Mele Kyari

Kyari Promises To Declare First NNPC Dividends To Nigerians Soon

As the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation prepares to release its