When Vietnamese prosecutors indicted the leadership of Nam Trieu Company for allegedly inflating the prices of interrogation chairs and other specialized law-enforcement equipment, domestic media predictably focused on the headline figure of more than 18 billion dong (US$710,000) in state losses.
Yet the significance of the case goes well beyond the financial losses alleged in the indictment. According to publicly available information from Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security, Nam Trieu operates under the Department of Security Industry and manufactures specialized vehicles, patrol boats, license plates and technical equipment for law enforcement agencies.
In other words, Nam Trieu operates within Vietnam’s state security sector, from which State President and Communist Party General Secretary To Lam rose to national power.
Its prosecution offers a rare glimpse into an area about which relatively little public information is available, raising broader questions about transparency, oversight and accountability in a sector that has become increasingly important to the Vietnamese state under To Lam.
The Nam Trieu case comes at a time when the Ministry of Public Security’s role extends far beyond traditional law enforcement responsibilities. In recent years, the ministry has assumed growing responsibilities in areas ranging from digital data management and cybersecurity to telecommunications infrastructure and the domestic security industry.
Economic actor
This trend reflects a broader state strategy aimed at strengthening control over critical infrastructure and information systems.
International attention was drawn to this development in 2025 when reports emerged that the ministry was seeking a controlling stake in FPT Telecom, following its earlier assumption of control of MobiFone.
Officials involved in those restructuring efforts argued that stronger state oversight was necessary to safeguard critical digital infrastructure and national cybersecurity interests.
The Nam Trieu case is not directly related to those developments. Nevertheless, it arrives at a moment when the ministry’s expanding economic footprint is attracting increased attention both domestically and internationally.
From a governance perspective, the participation of security institutions in strategic sectors is not unique to Vietnam. Similar arrangements exist in various forms around the world.
Scholars of security-sector governance have long noted that commercial activities undertaken by security institutions require particularly strong accountability mechanisms. Similar debates have emerged in countries where military- or security-linked enterprises play significant economic roles, including China, Egypt and Pakistan.
The challenge for policymakers is how to balance legitimate security considerations with transparency and accountability as institutions with security responsibilities assume broader economic roles.
Procurement beyond public view
Enter the alleged corruption at Nam Trieu. According to prosecutors, Nam Trieu executives inflated the production costs of thousands of specialized products to generate off-the-books funds for what court documents described as “external relations” and “hospitality” activities.
One contract involving interrogation chairs allegedly accounted for nearly 17 billion dong in losses. That’s raised an unusual amount of scrutiny of the ministry’s procurement practices.
Publicly available information provides only a partial picture of the scale of Vietnam’s security industry, the volume of public spending involved and the mechanisms used to evaluate procurement contracts.
It’s thus difficult to assess how pricing decisions are reviewed, how performance is measured and whether existing oversight mechanisms are functioning effectively.
Because many activities associated with security and law enforcement involve legitimate confidentiality concerns, transparency at the ministry will never match that of ordinary public procurement.
Nevertheless, the Nam Trieu case illustrates how limited public visibility can complicate efforts to evaluate accountability and institutional performance. The case therefore raises questions not only about the conduct of specific individuals but also about the effectiveness of existing governance and oversight mechanisms.
Where accountability and rights intersect
The implications of the case extend beyond budgetary oversight. Questions of transparency in the sector also raise broader issues concerning accountability and the protection of rights within systems of detention, interrogation and law enforcement.
Equipment used in detention facilities and investigative processes occupies a unique position in the state apparatus. That is, these are not ordinary government purchases comparable to office furniture or administrative supplies.
They are used in environments where state authority directly affects individuals’ liberty and rights. An interrogation chair, by itself, is not a tool of abuse. However, it forms part of a broader infrastructure associated with detention, questioning and law enforcement procedures in a state globally renowned for abuse.
In democratic countries, the procurement and use of law-enforcement equipment is subject to multiple layers of oversight, including auditors, legislative bodies, inspectors general and, in some cases, independent monitoring organizations.
The objective is not only to prevent waste or corruption but also to ensure that institutions exercising coercive authority operate within legal and rights-based frameworks.
Vietnam has not traditionally had a broad public debate about these issues. However, as the country’s security institutions assume wider economic and administrative responsibilities, questions concerning accountability and rights protections are likely to receive increasing attention.
Credibility on trial
The Nam Trieu case will eventually be resolved in court, and those found responsible may face criminal penalties.
Yet the significance of the case will extend beyond the verdict, offering a rare window into a sector that plays an increasingly important role in Vietnam’s governance, yet remains only partially visible to the public. It will be a de facto trial of whether existing oversight mechanisms are evolving at the same pace as the responsibilities these institutions now carry.
The verdict, of course, will not provide a complete answer. But it will provide a rare view of how transparency, accountability and public oversight operate within one of the least-scrutinized agencies of Vietnam’s security-state economy.
Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Quynh, also known as Mother Mushroom, is a Vietnamese writer, human rights commentator and former political prisoner based in Texas, United States. She is the founder of WEHEAR, an independent initiative focusing on Southeast Asian politics, human rights and economic transparency.
