Ex-Vietnam premier Vo Van Kiet dies at 85: government

HANOI (AFP) — Former Vietnamese prime minister Vo Van Kiet, a driving force behind the communist country's economic opening-up of the 1990s, died Wednesday in Singapore at the age of 85, a government spokesman said.

"We were informed that former prime minister Vo Van Kiet died this morning, June 11," a foreign affairs ministry spokesman told AFP.

The former Viet Cong revolutionary leader in South Vietnam, Kiet was considered the chief architect of the doi moi (renewal) market reforms of the late 1980s and 1990s that replaced the Soviet-style command economy.

Members of his entourage said he had been admitted to a Singapore hospital several days ago in poor health and with hypertension, and that his remains were being transferred back to Ho Chi Minh City Wednesday.

Born on November 23, 1922, in the southern Mekong Delta, Kiet served as premier from 1991 until 1997 when he stepped down to be replaced by his former deputy Phan Van Khai.