Lao Government Slaps Wrists of 7 Vientiane Officials for Public Project Fraud

2019-03-13
Email story
Comment on this story
Share
Print story
Laos' State Audit Organization in a file photo.
Laos' State Audit Organization in a file photo.
RFA Photo

Seven high-ranking current or formal officials in Laos’ Vientiane province have been warned and publicly identified for their involvement in several fraudulent development projects.

Dubbed “ghost projects,” the scheme involved pocketing government money for non-existent or overlapping developments, sources say.

“These malpractices happened a long time ago, as far back as 2017 in Vientiane province,” said a member of the Government Inspection Agency who requested anonymity in an interview with RFA’s Lao Service.

The inspector said that about a half million dollars were lost to fraud in these projects.

“These officials just had plans but never carried them out. They just took the money and did nothing,” the inspector said.

The government-controlled Lao Pattana newspaper reported on March 4 that the Personnel Central Party Committee issued a disciplinary warning to the seven officials.

The newspaper also identified each suspect, beginning with deputy governors Singkham Khongsavanh, Daohuang Nanthavong and former deputy governor Bounmy Phouthavong.

Three others were current or former directors of provincial departments—Phouvone Bounvilay from public works and transport, Dethxay Vilayfay from agriculture and forestry, and Soukan Vilaylath of planning and investment.

Also named was the former head of the province’s administration office, Vilath Sisouvong.

According to the announcement, these high-ranking Party members and state employees have been identified but not yet been dismissed, punished or formally charged with any crime.

RFA was unable to reach Vientiane Provincial Administration Office to confirm the current status of the officials, but many state employees have recently been caught in similar schemes and fired.

In one high-profile case on Sept. 6, the ministry of finance fired eight high-ranking officials including the director of the budget department and the general director of the ministry.

In that case, the finance minister did not specify what ghost projects the fired officials were involved in, but in 2014, an official of the ministry told RFA that these eight high-ranking officials were in a scheme to build a $10-million infrastructure project that included an access road to the new stadium in Oudomxay Province.

For that project, the funding was procured but the road was never built.

Transparency International, a Berlin-based global anti-corruption coalition, ranked Laos 132nd among 180 countries for 2018, with a score of 29 on a scale where 0 is highly corrupt and 100 is very clean.

The group said corruption remained endemic among most of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), to which Laos belongs.

“Why is Asia Pacific making little to no progress in its anti-corruption efforts? One of the reasons is an overall weakening of democratic institutions and political rights,” Transparency International said in January.

Reported by RFA’s Lao Service. Translated by RFA’s Lao Service. Written in English by Eugene Whong.

Comments (4)
Share

Hum Hyai

What difference does it make by sacking them??...They already have their childrens or relatives working in their departments as top ranking officials so they will take over the corruption process to continue the corruption.

Jun 02, 2019 11:46 PM

Scapegoats

from Vientiane

TOO LATE NOW MOST OF THEIR CORRUPTS MONEY ALREADY TRANSFERED AND DEPOSIT IN FOREIGN BANK ACCOUNTS JUSY CHECK TO SEE FOR YOURSELF.

Mar 17, 2019 02:03 PM

Superman

from Krypton

Nothing new, move along.

Mar 14, 2019 04:03 AM

Anonymous Reader

7 formal and current high-ranking officials have been sacked. What a joke ! All the members of the politburo and their respective families and friends must be hanged in order to avoid fraud in Lao administration. These 7 " victims " are just followers. When Lao party-state doesn't want to use them any more its sacks them. Luckily they were sacked and not executed.

Mar 14, 2019 01:40 AM

CH. 1: MANDARIN | CANTONESE

CH. 2: VIETNAMESE | BURMESE | KOREAN

CH. 3: KHMER | LAO | UYGHUR

CH. 4: TIBETAN

More Listening Options

View Full Site