Sunday, December 15, 2024
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Police chief becomes Vietnam’s new president

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New Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang takes the oath of office after being elected as the head of state in Hanoi, Vietnam, Saturday on April. Vietnam’s  National Assembly has elected Public Security Minister Quang to be the  country’s new president, the second-highest post in the country. (PTI)
New Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang takes the oath of office after being elected as the head of state in Hanoi, Vietnam, Saturday on April. Vietnam’s
National Assembly has elected Public Security Minister Quang to be the
country’s new president, the second-highest post in the country. (PTI)

Hanoi: Lawmakers in communist Vietnam approved a top police general for the role of president on Saturday, making the head of a controversial domestic security force one of the country’s most high profile politicians.
Tran Dai Quang won 91.5 per cent of the votes during a ballot at the rubber stamp parliament early on Saturday, having been nominated by party officials for the largely ceremonial role during the five-yearly Communist Party Congress in January.
Vietnam is in the midst of a leadership handover, with communist leader Nguyen Phu Trong reelected in January as party secretary general in a victory for the party’s old guard.
One of President Quang’s first duties will be to receive his US counterpart Barack Obama, as Hanoi seeks closer ties with its former wartime adversary in the face of Beijing’s rising assertiveness within the contested South China Sea.
“I sincerely thank the National Assembly for electing me,” Quang said as he was sworn in according to a media officer at the parliament, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Authoritarian Vietnam is run by the Communist Party and officially led by a triumvirate of party secretary general, president, and prime minister, with key decisions being made by the 19-member politburo.
Reformist Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung lost out in internal party elections and is due to step down next week, when the National Assembly will vote on his replacement.
This is expected to be Nguyen Xuan Phuc, currently a deputy prime minister, state media said.
In the past, the leadership handover was decided at the party congress but took up to six months to be confirmed by the National Assembly.
Analysts say this year things have moved more quickly, partly because several top leaders are retiring from politics, and also because of an upcoming visit by Obama in May.
Quang, 59 and a career policeman, rose the ranks within the country’s Ministry of Public Security. (AFP)

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