HANOI (Reuters) - A Vietnamese court has upheld a key judgement in the country's biggest-ever fraud case, a lawyer for one of the victims told Reuters, 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 ruled on Wednesday to uphold a judgment that the central perpetrator of a 4.9 trillion dong ($215 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 - also confirmed Wednesday's verdict.
Josephine Yei told Reuters earlier that if the ruling was upheld, she had little hope of recouping her bank's $10 million from the perpetrator, who was sentenced to life imprisonment.
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VietinBank, formally Vietnam Joint Stock Commercial Bank for Industry and Trade, did not respond to an emailed request for comment. A VietinBank lawyer said the bank had instructed its lawyers not to comment.
Majority owner State Bank of Vietnam - the country's central bank - could not provide immediate comment.
(Reporting by James PearsonEditing by Christopher Cushing)
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