Vietnam parliament re-elects president
HANOI - President Nguyen Minh Triet, who last month became the first Vietnamese head of state to visit the United States, was re-elected Tuesday by the country's lawmaking National Assembly.
Triet, 64, the sole presidential candidate, won nearly 99 percent of the votes cast by 493 newly elected legislators, said Vu Duc Manh, director of the National Assembly's Information Center.
"This is an honor, but also a heavy responsibility the party, the National Assembly and the people have assigned to me," Triet said, according to the official Vietnam News Agency.
"On the job of the president, I swear to try my best to serve the country and the people," he said during his acceptance speech at the assembly.
Triet also vowed to press ahead with legal reform and fight corruption.
"Legal reform together with the administrative reform must actively contribute to a successful fight against corruption and wastefulness," he said.
Triet, known for his tough stance on corruption, was elected president last year in a Cabinet reshuffle that also saw fellow southerner Nguyen Tan Dung appointed as prime minister.
Last month, Triet became Vietnam's first president to visit the United States, amid a warming of relations between the former bitter foes since relations were normalized in 1995.
Triet was seen as instrumental in transforming rural southern Binh Duong province, where he used to be the Communist Party boss, into one of the most attractive places for foreign investment.
He was then appointed party boss for the southern hub of Ho Chi Minh City before being appointed president in June last year.
In an address to the assembly Tuesday, Triet nominated Dung as the sole candidate for prime minister, Manh said.
Dung's candidacy was scheduled to be confirmed by the assembly Wednesday while his Cabinet was expected to be approved on Aug. 2.
The Asociated Press - July 24, 2007.
HANOI - Vietnam's legislature voted overwhelmingly Monday in favor of maintaining the assembly's current chairman, a widely expected decision because he was the only candidate.
Nguyen Phu Trong, 63, won nearly 98 percent of the votes from 493 new-elected legislators, state-run Radio Voice of Vietnam reported.
Trong, a former Communist Party secretary in the capital, Hanoi, was elected to his current position in a reshuffle last year.
In his acceptance speech, Trong vowed to fight corruption, which the ruling party has identified as one of the dangers that threaten the regime's survival.
"The members of the National Assembly's Standing Committee ... will set an example in abiding by the law, and are determined to fight bureaucracy, corruption and wastefulness," Trong was quoted as saying by the official Vietnam News Agency.
The National Assembly was scheduled to elect a new president Tuesday. A new prime minister was to be appointed Wednesday, and a new Cabinet was to be appointed Aug. 2.
President Nguyen Minh Triet, 64, and Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, 57, were widely expected to be reappointed.
Both leaders, who were elected last year, hail from southern Vietnam.
State media have reported that the Cabinet will likely be reduced to 22 ministers from 26 as part of ongoing administrative reforms.
Speaking at the opening of the National Assembly session last week, Communist Party chief Nong Duc Manh said the assembly will consider cutting its five-year term by one year to match the party's congress.
The Asociated Press - July 23, 2007.
|