No visas for visitors as Vietnam
island woos investors
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A corner of An Thoi Bay on Phu Quoc Island
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Investors in any sector on tourism-haven Phu Quoc
Island
will enjoy favorable policies previously granted by a 2008 government decree
only to projects at industrial zones, export processing zones and economic
zones.
The move comes as
part of a new decision signed by Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung on December
27 to support local authorities’ plan to transform the island into a major
economic zone.
Accordingly,
foreigners who visit Phu
Quoc Island
for up to 30 days will enjoy visa exemptions, thanks to the decision that
will take effect on March 10.
Visa waivers will
also be implemented for foreigners who transit at any airport or seaport in Vietnam on
their way to Phu Quoc, according to the decision that was posted on the
government website Monday.
In line with the
new decision and the older decree, the
island will get a north-south highway and many more roads, as well as
upgrades to its current airport and seaport and other projects between
2014-1015.
These projects
will use investment from the local budget, the state exchequer and other
sources.
Preferential policies
will also be applied for investors in waste treatment systems, hospitals,
commercial centers, human resource training and duty-free sections at the Phu Quoc
International Airport.
Following a
decision signed by PM Nguyen Tan Dung in May, the Mekong Delta province of Kien Giang will establish the Phu
Quoc administrative economic zone, which is expected to open in 2020.
The province
finished the draft plan for the project in late July, Van Ha Phong, an
official from Phu
Quoc Town,
told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper recently.
Phong added that
officials were also working on a plan to upgrade the island town into the
capital city of Kien Giang
Province by 2015.
According to the
draft plan, the Phu Quoc economic zone will contain the entire island along
with its continental shelf on the south-west side, which belongs to Vietnam,
according to international conventions.
It will be an
administrative unit at the same level as a city directly under the central
government with ten wards and communes.
An undersea
electric cable from Kien Giang’s Ha Tien town to Phu Quoc Island is scheduled for completion in
2014 to provide electricity to the island, where diesel generators now supply
much of the power.
Phu Quoc is a
UNESCO-recognized World Biosphere Reserve off Vietnam’s southeastern coast. As
a district of Kien Giang Province, it has a total area of 574 square
kilometers (222 square miles) and a permanent population of approximately
85,000.
By Thanh
Nien News
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