Vietnam’s former prime minister Phan Van Khai dies at 84
Described as a ‘a good politician and technocrat’, he was credited with modernising the country’s economy
Phan Van Khai, an architect of Vietnam’s economic rise and the country’s first prime minister to visit the United States after the end of the war, died on Saturday. He was 84.
Khai died in his home district of Cu Chi on the outskirts of Ho Chi Minh City, the government said on its website.
Khai oversaw Vietnam’s fastest and most stable economic growth during his nine years in office from 1997 to 2006.
He signed a bilateral trade agreement with the US in 2000 and oversaw Vietnam’s entry into the World Trade Organisation in 2006. He was also the architect of the Business Law, which was introduced in 1999 and paved the way for private businesses to thrive in Vietnam.
He paid an official visit to the US in 2005.