Social
News Headlines 27/6
Two-year
imprisonment kept for blogger infringing State interest
The appeal court of
the Supreme People’s Court, during its hearing in central Da Nang city on
June 26, rejected the appeal lodged by blogger Truong Duy Nhat and upheld his
two-year imprisonment sentence for the charge of "abusing freedoms to
infringe upon interests of the State, legitimate rights and interests of
organisations and/or citizens."
The charges are
stipulated under Clause 2, Article 258 of the Penal Code.
According to the
indictment issue at his initial trial on March 4, Nhat, 50, a resident of
Twelve of the items
reportedly contained untruthful information that distorted the Party and
State’s guidelines, policies and laws.
The indictment said
the articles had offered a one-sided perspective, causing public concern and
undermining the public trust in the leadership of the Party and State.
The articles
attracted more than 34,000 views and received 483 comments.
Nhat was found to
have persisted in publishing the articles, despite repeated requests to stop
the offences.
Two people
buried as stone pit collapses
Two people were
buried along with an excavator when a stone pit collapsed on Wednesday in Thu
Cuc Commune, Tan Son District, in the
The two victims
were identified as Ha Van Dien, 30, and Vi Tien Luan, 29.
The local
authorities are searching for them. However, the rescue efforts are being
hampered because the large amount of gravely soil at the site is posing a
danger. The stone pit is managed by the Tran Phu Company Ltd.
The reasons for the
collapse of the stone pit are being investigated.
Demand for
experienced, professionally skilled candidates has risen in the
Since early this
year, jobs like accountancy, trading, marketing, sales, public relations,
human resources, administrative tasks, information technology, transport,
logistics and import-export have attracted candidates who wanted to change
jobs. Nearly 82 per cent of them had experience.
Labour demand has
remained stable, with growth of only 0.75 per cent in the second quarter,
compared with the first quarter, the centre said.
"This means
that enterprises have focused on retaining human resources," according
to Thoi bao Kinh te
Recruitment demand
has increased for professional and technical skills rather than for manual
workers.
Demand for manual
labourers accounted for 35 per cent of the total, a drop of 22 per cent
compared with the same period last year.
The reports also
revealed that processing and production enterprises, which have the biggest
number of manual workers, have retained their existing workforce.
Demand for manual
labourers in the first six months of this year dropped 13.5 per cent
year-on-year.
In addition, demand
for workers who have primary vocational training certificates was 8.5 per cent
of the total demand, a growth of 1.5 times compared with the same period last
year.
The demand for
university graduates was 15 per cent of the total.
Job growth in the
finance and banking sector fell by nearly one-fifth, and only 40 per cent of
the jobs were for official (managerial) positions.
The need for
technical workers in the electronics and electricity sectors remained high,
while demand for human resources staff was 30 per cent of the total.
Demand for
professional and technical skilled workers is expected to increase in the
last six months of this year and in 2015 when the country officially
integrates with the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) labour
market, in which workers from member countries will be allowed to take jobs
in other ASEAN member markets.
The centre predicts
that, to the end of this year, the city will need 150,000 employees, of which
40,000 will be seasonal.
Recruitment demand
will focus on trading, services, garments and textiles, shoe making, tourism,
consultancy – insurance, real estate and mechanics.
Of the total
demand, manual workers will comprise 36.5 per cent; labourers with vocational
certificates, 22.5 per cent; and university graduates, 12.5 per cent.
For the rest of the
year, more graduates, students and workers who have lost their jobs will be
looking for jobs, an increase of 10 per cent over the first six months of the
year.
However, employees
will not be jumping from job to job as much as they have in the past, as they
prefer to have a stable job.
Asbestos
use in construction a labour hazard: experts
The use of asbestos
in construction should be stopped as it poses serious health risks to
workers, said experts at a conference in Ha Noi yesterday.
The conference,
which was hosted by the Viet Nam Union of Science and Technology
Associations, heard a World Health Organisation (WHO) report claimed that
exposure to asbestos, a set of six naturally occurring silicate minerals used
in construction, can cause serious illnesses including lung cancer and
asbestosis.
WHO has warned that
an average of 1.25 million of workers worldwide die each year due to direct
exposure to asbestos and more than 107,000 deaths each year are caused by
illnesses related to asbestos.
So far, 54
countries have banned the use of asbestos, and experts said those still using
the material, are mostly traditional producers of asbestos and developing
countries.
In
According to Mai
Anh's study,
Dr Le Van Trinh,
Vice Chairman of the Viet Nam Labour Safety Science and Technology
Association said that asbestos should be removed in both production and civil
use, and it was not impossible to ban the material in
He said that the
technology of producing non-asbestos roofing sheets at a price 10-15 per cent
higher than those made from asbestos is now available, and mass production of
such products could help reduce costs.
According to the
Ministry of Health's research, not only workers who are regularly exposed to
asbestos at work, but also people living near an area where asbestos is
exploited, or those living under a roof made from asbestos can be affected.
Appeals
court hears plea in insurance theft case
An appeals court
yesterday began hearing leniency pleas made by a former insurance advisor and
13 accomplices found guilty in a huge swindling case.
At the first
hearing held in October 2013, the Quang Ninh Court of First Instance had
sentenced Bui Thi Thu Hang to life in prison, while her accomplices
receivedjail terms ranging from three to 13 years.
They were found
guilty of stealing VND 230 billion (US$10.9 million).
Hang was ordered to
return VND211 billion (more than 10.04 million) that she had taken from
clients.
According to the
indictment, Hang created false receipts and applications for various types of
VIP insurance packages to sell to customers.
A representative
from the Prudential Life Insurance Company Viet
The court had also
ordered other defendants to repay hundreds of millions of dong each.
The hearing is
scheduled to end today.
Three Vietnamese cited in World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds
Three Vietnamese
scientists – Dam Thanh Son, Nguyen Son Binh and Nguyen Xuan Hung – have been
listed in the World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds 2014 by Thomson
Reuters.
Professor Dam Thanh
Son currently teaches physics at the University of Chicago (USA). Prof. Dr.
Nguyen Son Binh is a member of the chemistry faculty at Northwestern
University (USA) and Associate Prof. Dr. Nguyen Xuan Hung is a professor at
They are listed
among the 3,000 most influential scientists in the world by Thomson Reuters.
Thomson Reuters is
a leading organization in the world specializing in monitoring and releasing
information on experts globally.
Conference
seeks to improve resource management in Asia
Domestic and
foreign experts discussed ways to increase the effectiveness of resource use
and management at a regional workshop hosted by the central city of Danang on
June 25-26.
The event is part
of the ongoing Integrated Resource Management in Asian Cities: Urban Nexus
project implemented by the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ)
with financial support from the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation
and Development (BMZ).
Participants
reviewed the progress of realising urban nexus initiatives in participating
cities and the sharing of experience in the field. They also mentioned the
importance of State management to the urban nexus and discussed next steps of
the project.
Participating in
the project, Danang has been assisted by GIZ experts in improving the
capacity of treating wastewater and managing urban agriculture.
The city’s
representatives voiced hope that Asian cities will further enhance advanced
technology transfer and sharing of management experiment to heighten the
efficiency of managing and using resources towards a sustainable
Many said the
Pacific-Asia region faces rapid urbanisation which causes serious impact on
the resources, especially water, energy and food.
The majority of
regional cities are managing separately their sectors, which makes them
unable to optimise collaboration.
Ten cities in six
Asian countries, including
5,100
tonnes of metal ore and coal seized
Coastal Quang Ninh
Province's Customs Department announced that on Tuesday, they seized two
ships transporting about 5,100 tonnes metal ore and coal worth VND5.1 billion
(US$242,000).
The ships HP-3555
carrying about 2,300 tonnes of coal and HP-3632 carrying 2,800 tonnes of
metal ore, were found in the sea near the province's Van Don District. The
sailors manning the boat failed to show any documents proving the origin of
the ore and coal.
The case is under
further investigation.
Lam Dong
religious followers active in caring for the poor
Religious followers
who account for 60% of the population of the Central Highland
Since 2009, local
Buddhists have raised more than VND30 billion (US$1.4 million) to give free
eye surgeries, build philanthropic houses and upgrade traffic infrastructure
in remote areas.
They have also
engaged in communication drives to raise public awareness of HIV/AIDS
prevention, erase discrimination, and assist the patients.
During the period,
Catholic people have spent over VND6.7 billion (US$319,000) on helping
disaster victims and raising the funds for the poor, children and Agent
Orange victims.
They also aided
ethnic minority people’s effort to escape from poverty and access clean
water.
At the same time,
Protestant priests and believers have given hundreds of millions of VND to
charitable funds and HIV/AIDS prevention programmes, while those of Cao Dai
sect have spent VND1.4 billion (US$66,700) on similar activities.
Lam Dong has a
population of more than 1.2 million, 22% of them of ethnic minority groups.
Five men
burnt by boiling steel
Five workers in a
steel recycling workshop in central Nghe An Province suffered serious burns
yesterday, when a pan with boiling liquid steel overturned and fell on them.
The accident
occurred at the workshop in Van Tien Commune,
Vice Chairman of
the commune People's Committee, Nguyen Hong Hai, said a worker allegedly
pressed the wrong control button, causing the pan to overturn and the boiling
liquid to fall on the cold water below, spraying the people working around.
Three victims are
in the district hospital while the two others were transferred to Ha Noi to
treat more serious burns.
The Health
Department of northern mountainous Cao Bang province and the Luxembourg
Agency for Development Cooperation on June 25 inaugurated a new health centre
in the Dam Thuy commune, Trung Khanh district.
The centre, spread
over an area of 950 sq.ms, was built with an investment of more than VND2.2
billion (US$104,000), from
It is expected to
provide better healthcare to about 5,000 people, mostly from the
The healthcare
centre is part of
Under the project,
the construction of other 11 healthcare centres, worth VND26.8 billion
(US$1.25 million), is scheduled to finish next month in the two provinces.
Crackdown
on container truck fraud
The Ministry of
Transport will set up eight inspection teams to crack down on container
trucks using oversized cargo tankers to carry excessive loads around the
country.
These teams will
focus on heavy container trucks that operate at mines and quarries, traffic
construction projects and ports. Overloaded trucks on national highways will
also be targeted.
Nguyen Xuan Cuong,
deputy head of the ministry's Viet Nam Road Administration, said that many
container trucks had illegally expanded their containers to carry more cargo
than their capacity.
During recent
registrations, inspectors found that drivers used the original containers to
register their vehicles, and then switched to larger ones .
This had caused
difficulties for registration inspectors trying to get the trucks off the
road, he said.
Cuong said
authorities should issue stricter penalties for vehicles that violated the
law and damaged roads and bridges, causing traffic accidents and unhealthy
competition among transport businesses.
"For first
time offenders, authorities should seize stamps and certificates of
registration until the oversized containers ar converted back to their
original size. Drivers will also have their licences revoked if they are
caught a second time," he said.
The administration
has asked transport departments to set up permanent teams to crackdown on
offenders.
The administration
will also co-ordinate with the Viet Nam Register Department, ministry
inspectors and local transport authorities to organise inspections of
container trucks.
Statistics from the
Viet Nam Register Department showed that more than 61,170 container trucks
operate nationwide, 75 per cent of which have been expanded to carry more
cargo. Some have even been modified to carry three times more cargo than they
are supposed to.
Central
Highlands steps up religious policy popularisation
Leading officials
from the Steering Committee for the Central Highlands on June 26 worked with
authorities from the region and southern Binh Phuoc province to step up the
populiration of State regulations on belief and religions, especially among
ethnic minority people.
The session, held
in Buon Ma Thuot city of
However, local
authorities have managed to deal with the phenomenon.
Officials have
intensified the State management work on religions and created all favourable
conditions for followers and dignitaries to practice their folk belief.
The Central
Highlands, in particular, counts over 2 million followers, accounting for 36
percent of the total population, with nearly 500,000 from ethnic minority
groups.
Up to 98 percent of
Vietnamese families practise some kind of worship at home.-
Underprivileged
kids get swimming lessons
The
The one-month
course, to end on July 26, will provide basic skills to primary school
children in the province to save them from drowning.
It is part of the
national programme on drowning prevention for children.
According to the
Provincial Department of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs, 60 children had
drowned between 2010 and 2013.
New asphalted
roads, cemented lanes, schools, and healthcare centres have breathed new
lives into 25 communes in southern Tay Ninh province that have been selected
for implementing a national rural development programme. A report by radio
The Voice of Vietnam (VOV).
As well as upgraded
infrastructure, the local people there are enjoying much better living
standards thanks to joint efforts of the local authorities and people in
making use of every possible resource for local community development.
In 2014 alone, a
total of 30 million USD from the state budget and contributions from local
businesses and people has been invested in nine targeted communes of the
national new rural development programme in Tay Ninh. One of these communes,
Thach Dong received an investment of up to 5 million USD, mainly to upgrade
the local infrastructure.
Up to now, nearly
100 percent of households in Thach Dong have been connected to the national
electricity grid. Roads, schools, healthcare centres, cultural houses, and
other public works have been built or upgraded.
People's living
conditions there have been improved. The commune now has only 35 poor
households, accounting for 1.6 percent of the total local households, and is
doing its best to become the first in the province to achieve all 19 criteria
of the national rural development programme.
Pham Vu Tung,
Chairman of Thach Dong communal People’s Committee, said the commune has
achieved 11 out of the 19 criteria of the national programme of new rural
development.
"It’s possible
for us to complete all the 19 criteria by the end of this year thanks to a
high consensus among the local authorities and people to achieve the
programme’s set targets," Tung affirmed.
People in Tay Ninh
have invented a number of new models of effective husbandry while applying
advanced technology in planting sugarcanes and cassava for higher
productivity.
Ta Hoang Thanh in
Phuoc Ninh commune in Duong Minh Chau district, owns a 2 ha farm where he
raises pigs and fish, and has planted some crops. His farm earns him an
annual revenue of 150,000 USD. His farming model is being widely applied in
his community.
As part of
implementing the national new rural development programme, Tay Ninh has
carried out a project to provide vocational training for rural labourers.
Around 360 classes have been organised across the province to train 11,000
local people.
This year, Tay Ninh
province has invested 350,000 USD in vocational training for 5,000 local
rural labourers. It aims to have 20 percent of its communes completing the
national rural development programme by next year.-
Health
sector to expand coverage of medical insurance
The health sector
will focus on improving the quality of medical services and benefits for insured
patients.
These would be part
of the efforts to increase the country's health insurance coverage to 75 per
cent by 2015 and 80 per cent by 2020.
Speaking at a
meeting yesterday to mark the Viet Nam Health Insurance Day which falls on
July 1, health minister Nguyen Thi Kim Tien said that positive changes in the
revised health insurance law that was adopted by the National Assembly on
June 13, would be important steps to achieve the goal of health insurance for
all.
"Changing from
voluntary to compulsory payments would help in handling the shortcomings in
the current health insurance policies and in increasing the health insurance
coverage of the population," said Tien.
The insured
patient's benefits would be improved by efforts to simplify the health
insurance procedures and by upgrading the examination and treatment services,
especially for the poor, ethnic and minority people or those living on
islands and in difficult areas, according to the minister.
Tien said that the
country still faces many challenges such as access to medical services and
the quality of examination and treatment, which need to be resolved for
meeting the increasing demand for healthcare. More than 30 per cent of the
population is not covered by medical insurance and the inadequate awareness
of people regarding health insurance laws and regulations were also problems
in achieving universal health insurance coverage.
The health ministry
statistics shows that the number of medically insured people increased by 15
million after five years of implementation of the health insurance law. The
country had 61.7 million medically insured people, totaling nearly 70 per
cent of the country's population by end of 2013.
The health
insurance fund has paid more than VND42 trillion or US$2 billion for
examination and treatment during 131 million visits by insured patients in
2013, compared to more than VND19 trillion or $900 million during 102 million
visits by insured patients in 2010.
Park Noh Wan, envoy
and Consul General of the
Addressing the
awards ceremony, DAV President Dang Dinh Quy congratulated Park on his
success and highly appreciated the practicality of his research project
entitled "Vietnam-RoK Strategic Co-operation Partnership and the
prospects for change in the context of global governance in the 21st
Century".
Quy emphasised that
Park’s doctoral thesis significantly contributes to boosting bilateral
cooperation ties between the
Duong Chi
Dung gets paid during two-year imprisonment
The former chairman
of Vietnam National Shipping Lines (Vinalines) received his salary from the
company during the two-year imprisonment before he was sentenced to death.
According to a
representative of the Ministry of Transport, during the period between his
arrest in September 2012 and his sentencing, Dung had still been collecting
his pay. His monthly salary was more than VND5 million.
The salary was in
line with the government’s regulation, which say that suspended officials
could still collect half their pay if they are suspended, pending
investigation.
Recently, the
Ministry of Transport decided to officially fire Duong Chi Dung after the
court announced his death sentence.
Minister of
Transport, Dinh La Thang, commented that the ministry’s decision for
dismissal was too cautious, going so far as to say it was a bit “ridiculous”.
National Assembly
Deputy, Nguyen Sy Cuong, former Chief Inspector of the Ministry of Internal
Affairs, said that there are still no clear regulations about when to dismiss
an official who is accused of violations, causing agencies to wait for the
court’s final verdict.
Cuong, however,
said that the case of Dung, who fled abroad and arrested, was grounds for
immediate dismissal.
Le Hong Son,
Director of the municipal Department of Education and Training, said, “We’ve
held discussions with the British Department of Education concerning the
creation of an integrated education programme. These talks have been ongoing
since December 2011. It’s time for us to start piloting the programme after a
three-year preparation period.”
According to Son,
the new programme has been designed to be in line with Vietnamese culture
while still ensuring international standards.
“We’ll allow
primary and secondary schools in the city to register for the integrated
programme, along with carefully preparing the content, documents and teaching
staff for the pilot project,” he noted.
Concerning the
teaching staff, he said that they planned to intensify teacher training to
make sure that by 2020 half of the city's teaching staff takeing part in the
programme would be Vietnamese. At present, they will employ native speaking
teachers to carry out the programme.
The British
Department of Education would provide support for diplomas, certifications
and other document issues. Tuition fees are estimated to be the same as the
Regarding the
cooperation halt between CIE Cambridge and EMG Education, he said that all
students who have pursued the CIE Cambridge programme in
“We’ve requested
CIE to provide an integrated programme in
VND300
billion for building suspension bridges
Hundred Eighty six
suspension bridges across the country will be constructed by Ministry of
Transport, worth VND300 billion (US$ 14,097).
The Ministry of
Transport has finished design of suspension bridges and it is planned to be
completed within nine months.
12 bridges will be
built in the
The construction of
bridges across rivers in
The country has
currently 2,335 operational suspension bridges. 1,421 of them are in good
repair, 638 others need to fix and the remaining are in poor repairs. 128
bridges are out of service as they are described as ‘waiting to collapse’,
said ministry.
Source: VNN/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/ND
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Thứ Sáu, 27 tháng 6, 2014
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