German court rejects appeal in Vietnam kidnapping case | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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German court rejects appeal in Vietnam kidnapping case

BERLIN - A German federal court said Monday it has thrown out an appeal by a Vietnamese man convicted of involvement in a kidnapping case that strained relations between Berlin and Hanoi.

In July 2018, a Berlin district court sentenced the man, who has been identified only as Long N.H. because of German privacy rules, to three years and 10 months in prison. He was convicted of espionage and being an accessory to unlawful detention.

Germany's Federal Court of Justice has now upheld the conviction of the man, who lived in the Czech Republic.

Prosecutors accused the man of hiring a vehicle used to drive the former chairman of PetroVietnam's construction arm, Trinh Xuan Thanh, and a woman accompanying him out of Germany.

Authorities say the pair were snatched off the street in Berlin in 2017 by Vietnamese intelligence officials and other employees at the country's embassy. Berlin accused Vietnam of breaking international law and kicked out the country's intelligence attache.

Thanh was taken to Vietnam, where he was sentenced to life in prison for corruption.

News from © The Associated Press, 2020
The Associated Press

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