Malaysia’s Berjaya Corporation’s unit stand to lose US$ 10 million in Vietnam’s biggest fraud case

Malaysia’s Berjaya Corporation’s unit stand to lose US$ 10 million in Vietnam’s biggest fraud case

The Ho Chi Minh City People’s High Court is expected to rule by Tuesday on whether to uphold a judgment that Huỳnh Thị Huyền Như is responsible for returning some of the stolen 4.9 trillion dong, rather than VietinBank.

Huỳnh Thị Huyền Như has been implicated in Vietnam’s largest financial crime ever. (Reuters pic)
HANOI:
A Vietnamese court is set to make a key ruling in the country’s biggest-ever fraud case, in a trial that has spotlighted Vietnam’s ability to tackle financial crime at a time when foreign banks are heeding government calls to invest.

The Ho Chi Minh City People’s High Court is expected to rule by Tuesday on whether to uphold a judgment that the central perpetrator of a 4.9 trillion dong (RM850 million) theft is responsible for returning some of the stolen money, rather than the individual’s employer at the time, state-controlled VietinBank.

The ruling comes as financial firms such as investment banks and global buyout funds flock to Vietnam, hoping to capitalise on a period of privatisation and capital-raising deals in the fast-growing emerging Southeast Asian economy.

The chief executive of one victim, depositor Saigonbank Berjaya Securities JSC (SBBS), a unit of Malaysia’s Berjaya Corporation Bhd, told Reuters that if the ruling was upheld, she had little hope of recouping her bank’s US$10 million (RM40 million) from the perpetrator, who was sentenced to life imprisonment.

“We can’t afford to lose the case. This represents 70% of our capital. Our business may get suspended,” Josephine Yei said in an interview.

VietinBank, formally Vietnam Joint Stock Commercial Bank for Industry and Trade, and majority owner State Bank of Vietnam – the country’s central bank – did not respond to emailed requests for comment.

In many economies, banks can be liable for embezzlement of depositors’ funds if negligence of the bank is established. In Vietnam, interpretation of liability law becomes more open when the perpetrator goes beyond their responsibility, a lawyer said.

“Different understandings lead to different decisions,” said Nguyễn Thanh Hà, chairman of Hanoi-based SBLAW. “Vietnam doesn’t have case laws for such cases so it depends completely on the mind of the jury.”

Court documents showed indebted Huỳnh Thị Huyền Như  and 22 accomplices were convicted in 2014 for “misappropriation of funds” from 15 victims in 2010 and 2011.

Như used her title as a senior VietinBank manager to encourage customers to deposit funds at a particular branch. She and accomplices used fake official documents to appropriate the funds, according to the indictment.

SBBS’ Yei said her company had 210 billion dong (RM36.5 million) deposited at VietinBank at the end of August 2011, and was shocked when two months later just 1% of the money remained. She said she has spent the intervening years trying to recover the funds and that SBBS and four other victims brought the latest appeal.

The appeal covers only 1 trillion dong (RM170 million) of the broader case.

“It’s judgment day for us,” said Yei, whose firm employs 55 people and has 94 investors, 93 of whom are Vietnamese.

VietinBank is Vietnam’s second-largest listed bank by market value. It is 64.46% state-owned, with its next-largest shareholder Japan’s Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, a unit of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc, with 19.7%.

“This case should be handled under international practices, otherwise it could have a bad effect on Vietnam’s investment and business environment and then investors will lose trust,” economist and former government advisor Lê Đăng Doanh told Reuters by phone. “We have to avoid that. We have to create trust.”

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