Japan has
temporarily suspended official development aid to Vietnam over a bribery case,
officials said Tuesday, dealing a possible blow to Tokyo's efforts to shore up
its relationship with Hanoi.
Fresh
yen-loans and and funding for an ongoing urban railway project have been halted
after six Vietnamese railway officials were detained over allegations of
corrupt payments, the foreign ministry said in a statement.
The scandal
emerged in March when Japanese media reported that the national tax agency had
flagged up 100 million yen ($100,000) -worth of payments that could not be
properly accounted for.
Japan
Transportation Consultants Inc. (JTC) which is involved in several official
development aid programmes, is suspected of having paid the money to officials
in Vietnam and Uzbekistan and Indonesia, the reports said.
Vietnamese
investigators later arrested six people, including Tran Quoc Dong, a deputy
general director of Vietnam Railways, reports said.
On Monday,
Japan said development aid would be resumed following an investigation in
Vietnam, and if measures are put in place to avoid a repeat, a foreign ministry
official told AFP.
Japan has
also suspended official aid to Uzbekistan over the same case, and is in
discussions with Indonesia, the official said.
The
suspension of aid from Vietnam's biggest donor country comes as Japan's ties
with Vietnam are warming, with Tokyo offering support to Hanoi in its
escalating standoff with China over disputed waters.
The
relationship-building, spearheaded by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, is
aimed at forging a regional counterweight to China, which many local actors see
as being increasingly aggressive in its various territorial claims.

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