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		Vietnam picks ex-state security official Chinh as new PM
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		 [April 05, 2021] 
		By James Pearson 
 HANOI (Reuters) -Vietnam's National 
		Assembly confirmed Pham Minh Chinh, a career security official, as the 
		south east Asian country's next prime minister at an official ceremony 
		on Monday.
 
 The move completes the five-yearly renewal of Vietnam's top four 
		positions, as it looks to maintain economic growth, keep the coronavirus 
		pandemic at bay, and balance relations with Beijing and Washington.
 
 China has been asserting its authority in the South China Sea, while the 
		U.S. Treasury Department labelled Vietnam a "currency manipulator" in 
		December due to its trade surplus with the United States and heavy 
		foreign exchange market intervention to hold down the value of its dong 
		currency.
 
 Chinh, 62, was the sole nominee put forward by the ruling Communist 
		Party for the post at a congress earlier this year. He won 96.25% of the 
		vote at Monday's National Assembly vote.
 
		
		 
		
 He was formerly head of the party's Central Organisation Commission, 
		which has a long reach across party ranks, as well as deputy minister of 
		the Ministry of Public Security, the agency tasked with everyday 
		policing, the monitoring of dissent and surveillance of activists, as 
		well as espionage overseas.
 
 Chinh will replace former Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, who was 
		confirmed earlier on Monday as the country's new president, a largely 
		ceremonial role.
 
 Vietnam has no paramount ruler and is officially led by four "pillars": 
		the powerful General Secretary of the Communist Party, the president, 
		the prime minister and the chair of the National Assembly, a largely 
		rubber-stamp legislature.
 
 A new head of the Assembly was appointed on April 1, while Nguyen Phu 
		Trong was elected to a third term as General Secretary of the Communist 
		Party earlier this year.
 
 The main candidates for each post were widely known in Hanoi's political 
		circles, but were officially declared top secret in December to 
		discourage potentially critical debate.
 
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			Pham Minh Chinh speaks after swearing in as Vietnam's Prime Minister 
			at an official ceremony in Hanoi, Vietnam April 5, 2021. Mandatory 
			credit VNA via REUTERS 
            
			 
            The party retains tight control of media and tolerates little 
			criticism.
 Chinh will be the first Vietnamese prime minister not to have 
			previously served as a deputy prime minister since the launch of the 
			country's progressive "Doi Moi" reforms.
 
            CHALLENGES
 "As prime minister, Pham Minh Chinh will face challenges from the 
			South China Sea and domestic issues, including faster and more 
			sustainable economic development as well as political stability and 
			democratisation," said Ha Hoang Hop at the Singapore-based 
			ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.
 
 Vietnam's annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth has averaged 
			6.0% over the past five years, and expanded 2.9% in 2020, despite a 
			pandemic that crushed economies elsewhere.
 
 The country has been lauded globally for containing the virus thanks 
			to a centralised quarantine programme and mass testing. It has 
			reported around 2,600 infections, and 35 deaths.
 
 From 1989-1996, Chinh was posted to the Vietnamese embassy in 
			Romania. He spent the next few decades at the security ministry, 
			where he rose to rank of Lieutenant General.
 
 From 2011-2015, he was party chief in Quang Ninh, which borders 
			China, where he pushed for the opening of one of three planned 
			Special Economic Zones which were eventually scrapped following 
			nationwide anti-China protests in 2018.
 
            
			 
			(Reporting by James Pearson. Editing by Martin Petty and Mark 
			Potter) 
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