Social
News 22/7
Ha Noi
hospital opens new building
The Ha Noi
Department of Health, yesterday, inaugurated a new seven-level building,
constructed under a project to upgrade Duc Giang General Hospital for VND861
billion (US$41 million).
The building, with
a capacity of 500 beds, will be used for the purposes of examination,
outpatient treatment, emergency treatment and administration.
The second part of
the upgrade project, which includes the construction of another building and
other facilities, will be started soon and is expected to be completed by the
end of next year.
Vietjet
disciplines staff over landing error
Vietjet Air has
sacked a flight coordinator and disciplined several crew members who were
responsible for the high-profile wrong landing incident in June.
Punitive measures
include request for re-training, salary reduction, temporary suspension from
work and compensation for the damages caused to the airline.
According to
Vietjet Air, the flight co-ordinator, who is primarily responsible for the
incident, has been fired and requested to compensate the airlines.
The flight, with
nearly 200 passengers from Ha Noi, had landed at
Nursery
school students get free milk
A pilot "Milk
for schools" programme, in the
Under the
programme, all children in 24 local nursery schools were offered 200
millilitres of milk free, three times a week, nine months a year.
As a result, the
rate of stunted children at the schools dropped to 4.37 per cent against the
8 per cent rate reported before the programme, while that of weight
malnutrition among the group was down to 3 per cent, reported the provincial
Department of Education and Training.
Bac Ninh plans to
extend the programme to all nursery schools between 2014 and 2017, with the
number of beneficiaries reaching up to 230,000.
The programme,
which has run from 2013 through 2017, costs nearly VND178 billion (US$8.39
million), of which 50 per cent has come from the local budget, 25 per cent
from the milk suppliers and the rest from children's parents and social
funding.
17
companies fined on food safety violation
The food watchdog
fined seven companies which overemphasized and exaggerated the nutrition
supplements and ten companies for violating food safety and hygiene
regulations. Total fines is VND211 million (US$ 9,917).
Vinh Gia and Ha Tay
Pharmaceutical Company; Trung My; Hiep Phong; Giang Hoai; Hanex; Bao Binh An;
Thuy Ta; V&T, Rodha Dyechem Vietnam in Hanoi; Viet My Chemical
Distributor; An Ky in Hanoi; Brenntag representative office in Hanoi and
Connell Bros Vietnam received penalties for violations.
Along with
financial fines, the food watchdog asked violators to remove all wrong
advertisement in media and to destroy unsafe and expired food and additives.
Regarding to the
news that fast food contain cancer-causing ingredients, tests were soon
carried out to check these foods. Tests results showed that no
carcinogens like Acrylamide and PAHs were found in samples of snacks and
potato chips collected from Nguyen Cao Market, Ba Trieu and Lo Duc streets in
Following the
National Center of Drug Information and Adverse Drug Reactions Monitorings
warning of bad reaction of three drugs, Drug Administration of Vietnam
ordered hospitals nationwide to stop using them.
Medical clinics in
the country should not use Koftazide (Ceftazidime Injection 1g), Klocedim
(Ceftazidim 1g) and Samtoxim ( Cefotaxim 1g). Do Van Dong, deputy head of the
Drug Administration of Vietnam said that there were reports about bad
reactions after injecting these drugs such as anaphylactic shock, breathing
difficulty, convulsion fits, and high fever.
Along with the halt
of these drugs, the health watchdog also asked medical facilities to
report the injection and preservation procedures to verify skills.
Importers and
distributors of these drugs are asked to announce the stop of using the
drugs.
Dyke safety
zone violations increase across capital
Ha Noi saw an 18
per cent increase in the number of violations of its dyke safety zone in the
first six months of this year, according to the municipal Flood, Storm
Control and Dyke Management Department.
The 135 safety code
violations included the construction of houses, shops, brick-kilns, stores
and sand exploitation activities within the dyke safety zone, also known as
the "protection corridor," with the largest number of violations,
48, concentrated in Ung Hoa District.
City authorities
are still yet to hand down punishments to 124 cases, with some of the accused
said to be repeat offenders punished for previous violations.
Violators are said
to have discharged construction waste at the Nhat Tan Bridge's lower section
in Tay Ho District, with a Kinh te&do thi (Economic and Urban)
correspondent reporting the waste had piled up to 6 metres high.
The Nhat Tan Ward
People's Committee has since acted to reduce the waste, which now stands
between 0.7-1.2 metres, but has struggled to contain illicit dumping
activities in the area. Earlier efforts by the district to set up control
stations and assign guards have been unable to crack down on the activities.
Yet, district dyke
protection units in the city remain committed to limiting the number of
future violations. From the beginning of this year, the Thuong Tin and Phu
Xuyen authorities joined hands with the Waterway Traffic Police Department to
monitor sand exploitation activities along the Hong (Red) River.
Inspections this
year saw dozens of ships punished for illegal dredging sand along the river.
Do Duc Thinh,
director of the Ha Noi Flood, Storm Control and Dyke Management Department,
said that during the remaining six months of the year, the department would
ask 18 local protection units to co-ordinate with ministerial bodies to
prevent violation and hand down strict penalties.
Thinh has also
proposed that the Ha Noi Department of Agriculture and Rural Development seek
permission from the municipal People's Committee to build dyke protection
corridors.
The Department of
Transport would also have to set up signs to limit overloaded vehicles from
passing over the dykes, he said.
English
teaching experts discuss Asian classrooms
Trainers
specialising in teaching English as a foreign language and other experts
discussed teaching in Asian classrooms at an annual conference held in
According to
Stephen Faulkner, who has taught English for over eight years in Viet Nam and
works for DTP Online, a company providing supplementary programmes for
interactive English teaching, using technology in classes ensures that
students are both motivated and engaged.
Rapid economic
growth in
Technology needs to
be introduced into the classroom in a measured and appropriate way to ensure
that learning goals are achieved.
The use of
technology in an ad hoc, unplanned manner could distract from the learning
process and complicate the context, he said.
It should also be
clear that technology cannot replace the teacher and teachers are the crucial
link between the students and the technology, he said.
Ian Bosiak, a
teacher trainer specialising in English as a foreign language and author of
English language teaching (ELT) books published by Seoul-based e-future, one
of
For classrooms
without technology, practical in-class activities for motivating students
through interactive and collaborative activities could be used, he said.
These activities
were a great way to turn traditional, teacher-fronted lessons into
environments in which students were taking more control of their learning and
having fun doing it, he added.
Latest language
assessment trends and techniques and assessment to promote better learning
were also presented at the conference.
Teaching English to
Speakers of Other Languages, held by the Viet Nam-USA Society English Centre,
attracted nearly 2,000 attendees from
Deputy Minister of
Education and Training Pham Manh Hung said improving the qualification of
English teachers was one of the main objectives of a 2008-20 national
programme for teaching foreign languages in public schools.
Dalat
Hasfarm opens store in Hanoi
Dalat Hasfarm, the
leading Vietnamese fresh flower grower and supplier in the Central Highland
resort of Da Lat, opened its first retail store in
Dalat Hasfarm
deputy director Bernhard Schenke said it’s time to expand operation in the
north to fully tap this market.
The company has
constantly achieved steady growth in the northern market since it set up a distribution
network in 1998, he said, adding that it expects to supply quality products
and services to
Besides common
varieties, the store, at 73 Hai Ba Trung Street, Hoan Kiem District, markets
Dalat Hasfarm’s unique flowers and those imported from the Netherlands and
Ecuador.
The company
supplies 100 million branches of flower to the market every year.
The HCMC
government’s agencies and departments whose offices are currently in the area
bordered by Le Thanh Ton, Pasteur, Ly Tu Trong and Dong Khoi streets will be
relocated to Building A225 on Tran Hung Dao Street in District 1 this year to
make room for construction of a new administrative center.
According to the
HCMC government, the new administrative center will cover 18,000 square
meters and the old buildings in this area will be demolished in preparation
for the construction, except the City Hall structure at
The HCMC government
is organizing an international design contest for the new administrative
center.
Nguyen Trong Hoa,
head of the HCMC Institute for Development Studies, said as part of the new
administrative center, the façade of the City Hall will be extended to
Hoa said the entire
ground floor of the City Hall building will be upgraded into a public area
for various activities while offices of the HCMC government will be located
on the upper floor and other neighboring buildings.
“This is what
leaders of HCMC want in the master zoning scheme for space and architecture
of the administrative center,” Hoa said and stressed that architectural conservation
is one of the priorities in the scheme.
“More attention
will be paid to architectural conservation and close interactions between the
city government and citizens than usable space,” Hoa confirmed.
The city government
has not announced how much will be spent on the new administrative center
project but a source estimated this will cost at least VND1 trillion.
Seminar
gives updates on asbestos-related diseases
The Ministries of
Health, and Science and Technology, in collaboration with the World Health
Organisation (WHO), have held a scientific seminar on asbestos, a kind of
mineral used in construction, and its deadly impact on workers’ lives.
The seminar aimed
at updating and sharing information about asbestos-related diseases in the
world.
Addressing the
event in
According to WHO
estimates, currently about 125 million people in the world are exposed to
asbestos at the workplace and more than 107,000 people die each year from
asbestos-related diseases resulting from occupational exposures. One in every
three deaths from occupational cancer is estimated to be caused by this toxic
mineral.
The Health Ministry
has taken a number of measures to ensure the health of workers and on how to
prevent asbestos-related diseases.
The WHO and
International Labour Organisation recommend that a total ban of using
asbestos be the most effective way to eliminate diseases relating to this
mineral.
Sewage
treatment plant operational in central coastal city
A drainage and
wastewater treatment plant was commissioned in Dong Hoi city of the central
coastal
With a designed
treatment capacity of 10,000 cubic metres per day using environmentally
friendly technology, the plant will benefit 78,000 inhabitants.
The sub-project,
which forms part of the 78.5-million-USD Coastal Cities Environmental
Sanitation Project for
It focused on
building and upgrading drainage and sewage treatment systems and raising
public awareness of keeping the environment green.
Following the
success of these two phases, leaders of the World Bank Vietnam have proposed
pouring more money into the third phase to improve health and environmental
sanitation for city dwellers.
Requiem for
heroic martyrs held in Quang Binh
A requiem for
heroic martyrs marking the War Invalids and Martyrs’ Day (July 27) was held
at
The requiem aims to
honor all those who sacrificed their whole life the country. In
The Dong Loc T-Junction
national historical relic site in Ha Tinh Province received over 1,000
visitors a day in the first seven months this year, according to deputy head
of the management board Vo Cong Tru.
A ceremony marking
the 46th anniversary of Dong Loc T-junction victory (July 24, 1968) will be
held on July 23-24.
The event will
include a requiem for war martyrs at the legendary Dong Loc T-Junction, an
incense offering, camping, and sport games. A special art program will be
broadcast live on VTV2 channel on July 27.
The ceremony will
be co-organized by the People’s Committee of Can Loc District in the central
A ceremony
receiving certificate for a section of the Truong Son – Ho Chi Minh Trail
running across Dong Loc T-junction will be organized on the occasion.
Dong Loc T-junction
played a vital role in transportation of necessary ammunition from north to
south during the war. It is famous for the story of 10 female martyrs who
sacrificed their lives to ensure transportation of important materials on the
Ho Chi Minh Trail on July 24, 1968. From 1965-1968, the
Environment protection fund started in Hai Phong
The Hai Phong
Environment Protection Fund (HEPF) was officially put into operation on July
16 as part of efforts to build Hai Phong into a green, civilised and modern
port city.
Vice Chairman of
the municipal People’s Committee Do Trung Thoai has been appointed as
president of the HEPF Management Council, while the vice president position
went to Bui Quang San, director of the Hai Phong Department of Natural
Resources and Environment.
The HEPF has a
charter capital of VND 30 billion (US$1.41 million) allocated from the State
budget within five years.
It is allowed to
mobilise sponsorship sources and to be supplemented with environmental
protection fees imposed on sewage, solid waste and mineral extraction;
compensations for environmental damages; and fines for administrative
violations of environmental protection.
The fund also
includes deposits by mineral exploitation companies, which will be used to
address pollution and recover environmental quality after extraction
activities conclude.
The HEPF is
authorised to provide preferential loans to organisations operating
programmes to restore the environment and preserve natural resources and
biodiversity in the locality.
The fund will also
review and classify the local environment projects that have demands for its
financial support based on necessity, effectiveness, expansion prospect, and
payback ability. They are then taken under accounts and the suitable forms of
financial assistance are decided.
Efforts
made to save isolated ethnic minority
Authorities in Ha
Tinh Province have agreed to submit a project plan to the government to build
a road that would link the
The proposal was
made by Tu Van Dien, Chairman of the local Fatherland Front at a recent
meeting of the provincial People’s Council.
If the proposal is
adopted, a 15-km road will be built to link the
Mr. Dien said that
The most serious
problem for the villagers is inbreeding. Up to 60% of local people suffer
from asthma, while the rate of the disabled people has been on the rise.
The construction of
15-km road is expected to give the community access to the outside world and
hopefully help solve this problem.
Local authorities
have shown support for the project and will submit it to the government for
consideration.
Compensation low for guests of delayed and aborted flights
The director
general of the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV), Lai Xuan Thanh,
admitted at a web conference on July 17 that compensation for the passengers
affected by flight delays and cancellations is trivial compared to other
countries.
While the minimum
compensation is 250 euros per person in the European Union, the passengers of
canceled flights in Vietnam can get a ticket refund plus a compensation of
only VND300,000 (US$14). However, they will get no compensation if they are
informed of cancellations 24 hours ahead of departure time.
The reason for
modest compensation, according to Thanh, is to ensure the harmonious
interests of both airlines and passengers.
Le Hong Ha, chief
executive officer of Jetstar Pacific, said currently Decision 10/2007 and
Circular 26/2009 regulate compensation for the affected passengers.
In case of flight
cancellations, passengers will be compensated with VND100,000 for short-haul
flights of under 500 kilometers, VND200,000 for the flights with distances of
over 500 kilometers and VND300,000 for the flights of over 1,000 kilometers.
However, airlines are exempted from the compensation responsibility if they
tell passengers about cancellations 24 hours before departures or fail to
reach passengers via the contacts provided.
Regarding
compensation for the flight delays, if flights are 20 minutes, more than two
hours, three hours and six hours later than scheduled, airlines are required
to announce and apologize, serve drinks, food, and provide accommodation for
the affected passengers respectively. With the delays for more than 12 hours,
airlines have to arrange other flights for passengers.
Leaders of Jetstar
Pacific, VietJetAir and Vietnam Airlines said they strictly follow the
regulations and actually offer more compensation than required.
At Jetstar Pacific,
passengers can claim ticket refunds or change flights if their flights are
postponed for three to six hours and get compensation of VND150,000-400,000
depending on flight distances. Besides, with delays lasting over six hours,
the airline provides hotel accommodation for affected passengers.
Meanwhile, in
addition to compensation ranging from VND100,000 to VND300,000 for domestic
flights, VietJetAir’s compensation levels for the passengers suffering from
delays and cancellations of its international flights are US$25-150, said
Nguyen Duc Tam, deputy general director of VietJetAir.
According to
aviation expert Luong Hoai
Therefore, airlines
should publicly announce compensation policies on their websites, transaction
points and ticket counters at airports,
CAAV director Lai
Xuan Thanh said that CAAV has the responsibility for passengers’ unawareness
of their right to claim compensation. He added that many passengers do not
know whom they should talk to about delays and cancellations.
At the meeting, director
of the Transport Department Khuat Viet Hung admitted slowness in drafting the
amendments to Circular 26 to clarify sanctions and responsibilities in case
of flight delays and cancellations.
Minister of
Transport Dinh La Thang at another meeting on Tuesday told airlines to reduce
the number of delayed and cancelled flights by half in the second half of
this year and ensure 90% of their flights on time next year. However,
airlines responded that having 90% of the flights departing right on schedule
is unlikely as flight operations not only depend on them but other relevant
units.
Seven
bodies found at site of Ha Giang landslide
After a day of
search and rescue operations, seven bodies were found at the site of a
landslide in the mountainous
Landslides in the
area were triggered by torrential rains from Typhoon Rammasun in the early
morning of July 21, killing seven people.
Sen Ngoc Minh,
Chairman of Hoang Su Phi District, said that due to long and heavy rains
along with the severity of the landslides, rescue workers had a difficult
task in finding victims.
The victims bodies
were found that afternoon.
Mud and rocks
blocked the inter-provincial road 177 traversing Hoang Su Phi, causing
serious traffic congestion.
Heavy rains also
caused erosion in fields cultivated by ethnic minority people in many
communes.
Transport
Minister blames Chinese, Korean contractors for slow projects
Transport Minister
Dinh La Thang complained about the slow progress of several transport projects
contracted to Chinese and South Korean firms.
The minister
recently carried out inspections on transport projects in the Mekong Delta
region during his trip to the south.
Thang singled out a
number of projects, including
The project was
contracted to
“All Vietnamese
transport projects taken on by CRBC have proven slow in their implementation.
Initially, they carried out the projects very quickly, but later the pace
grew very slow. We hold no bias against Chinese contractors, but in reality
the projects carried out by Chinese contractors are often slow or even
stagnant,” he added.
Thang cited the Noi
Bai-Lao Cai Expressway as a typical example. A Chinese contractor won the bid
for the project. In the beginning the project progressed quickly, but later
the contractor had various reasons for delays.
The minister also
reprimanded South Korean contractors GS Engineering & Construction and
the Hanshin Engineering & Construction for the slow pace of
He said that GS
Engineering & Construction and Hanshin Engineering & Construction had
been behind consistently behind schedule on the
Landfill
makes life unbearable for Thanh Hoa residents
Thousands of people
in
The Con Quan
Landfill is located in Phu Son Ward,
Residents around
the landfill complain that they have had to live with the pollution of the
site for years and can no longer stand it.
Initially, the dump
included a waste classification area and a fertilizer production facilities.
However, after just a short time, the fertilizer production facility incurred
losses as fertilizer piled up due to a lack of viable markets, affecting the
other works at the site.
In addition, the
city saw a sharp increase in population and Con Quan quickly became
overloaded. Currently, the city produces around 230 tonnes of waste per day. The
increase in volume of untreated wastewater has also become a problem that has
affected the lives of residents as well as their natural resources.
Vu Thi Vinh, a
woman who lives in Phu Son Ward, said, “We’ve been living with this pollution
problem from the dump for years. I know a lot of people have been diagnosed
with serious illnesses and some have even died, mostly of cancer or
tuberculosis.”
Residents have
repeatedly asked for help from local authorities, but no action has been
taken. Last September, a group of residents gathered on Tay Son 1 Street to
prevent garbage trucks from accessing the land fill.
After their strike,
members of the municipal government and the city’s Department of Environment
and Natural Resource along with the chairman of the provincial People’s
Committee to arrange a meeting with local residents. They pledged that they
would ask the site to close for a thorough cleaning treatment, but the
situation has yet to improve.
Since early 2013,
residents have held at least three strikes in an effort to prevent adding
more waste to the site. The latest strike was on July 1 with and was carried
out by residents of Phu Son Ward.
Vu Xuan Nhung, a
local man who lives on Tay Son 1 Street, said, “We’ll try to wait until
August, but we will continue to organise strikes if the site is still in
operation.”
Le Van Hoang, an
official from the site’s management board, said they receive around 250
tonnes of waste per day, roughly double their capacity. "We've taken
some temporary measures to mitigate the problem, but they are unsatisfactory
in the face of such overload," he commented.
In an attempt to
address the overload problem, the provincial government issued a decree in
November, 2010 approving a project to build another waste treatment complex in
Even with new waste
treatment facilities, the municipal government will have to deal with piled
up waste at Con Quan before it can be closed.
Thieu Van San,
deputy director of the Thanh Hoa Urban Works and Environment One-member
limited Company, the new waste treatment project's investor, said, “It takes
some time for site clearance. But if everything goes smoothly, the complex
should be put into use this September.”
People
gamble health to augment their bodies
Many people have
been hospitalised after trying various home methods of augmenting their
genitals.
The
In another case, a
man implanted four balls under the skin of his penis. However, the balls had
some sharp edges and started to pierce the skin. At first, the man refused to
have them removed, but was forced to several days later after infection set
in.
Many women hire
unlicensed practitioners get silicone injections to various parts of their
bodies, despite the dangers. One woman decided to go with an unlicensed
practitioner for injections to her breasts, cheeks, temples and various other
places. She soon showed symptoms of a blood infection and septic shock.
Doctors say that they were unable to save her due to a pulmonary embolism.
Some men, too,
choose silicone injections. Recently, 40 men in Ca Mau Province decided to
use silicone to enlarge their penises. The silicone was said to be made in
Dr. Le Thi Kim Dung
from Lao Dong Health Centre said, "Many people think that these things
are harmless. But you must think that even wearing a ring that is too tight
on your finger can prevent blood flow and lead to necrosis. Now just think of
what that could do to a more sensitive part. Anything that is inserted under
the skin should absolutely have been tested for quality."
Dung went on to say
that silicone which is directly injected, will spread to other tissues and
trigger an automatic immune defense. White blood cells will seek out the
foreign substance and cause inflammation. This can lead to infection and
other complications.
Bus
advertising seen hard to attract clients
A pilot bus
advertising program in HCMC is not expected to pay off as advertisers are
tightening their spending in the current tough economic conditions, said
industry players.
Talking to the
Daily, Nguyen Quoc Dai, general director of Pacific Outdoor Company Limited,
said he has no intention to use commuter buses as a medium to reach the
public due to the company’s financial constraints.
Nguyen Quy Cap,
vice chairman of the HCMC Advertising Association (HAA), told many members of
this organization had shown no interest in the new medium for advertising
because it has not translated into reality after long-drawn-out debates.
Cap described the
Advertising Law and the draft rule on bus advertising as unclear. To attract
companies to bus advertising in tough times, he said, it is necessary to set
more affordable prices.
“If the city’s
Department of Transport keeps sky-high rates, customers will not opt for this
kind of advertising. As such, the target of creating a new source of income
to subsidize bus operations could hardly be achieved,” said Cap.
Regarding
advertising charges on buses, Duong Hong Thanh, deputy director of the HCMC
Transport Department, revealed rates would be similar to those in
Currently, the
highest bus advertising rate for one year in
Meanwhile, if the
rates at bus stops and terminals are triple those in
HAA suggested the
prices be aligned to the actual needs of enterprises in different periods.
The authorities and advertising enterprises should sit down together to
figure out the most possible solution for mutual benefits.
After years of
delay, HCMC approved a pilot scheme to put ads on 156 buses before its
expansion.
Dang Van Son,
director of Phuoc Son Advertising Company Limited, considered bus advertising
a new option for advertisers. Compared to other advertising media, bus
advertising has lower cost but greater impact thanks to the widespread
presence of this means of public transport on the street.
According to the
HCMC Public Passenger Transport Management and
Subsidies for
commuter bus services in HCMC rose from VND1.36 trillion in 2011 to over
VND1.4 trillion in 2012 and VND1.47 trillion in 2013. As of last year, public
transport had met only 10.7% of commuter demand.
Fishermen
to get small loans for fishing trips
The Government has
issued a decree on aquaculture development policy, which states fishermen
will be provided with working capital for each fishing trip.
Speaking at a
meeting with the media last week, Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural
Development Vu Van Tam said Decree 67/2014/ND-CP would free fishermen from
relying on loan sharks. Therefore, the fish they catch can be sold to those
offering higher prices rather than to the lender, he added.
In addition to this
encouraging credit policy, fishermen will be assisted in building steel
boats.
According to Tam,
24 designs of boat have been developed to meet different demands of
fishermen. The designs are expected to be available for fishermen by August
25.
To assist fishermen
in building new boats without depleting marine resources, the ministry is
inspecting the fishing grounds, with results expected to come out late this
year, to formulate a fishing boat development plan. In the plan, the maximum
catch should be less than 40% of the maximum reserves and the number of
fishing boats allowed will be corresponding to the permissible catch.
Any fisherman
wanting to take out loans to build steel boats must register with the
grassroots authorities first before seeking approval from the provincial
governments, according to Tam.
In addition, the
State will cover costs for training in sailing, designing and maintenance of
steel boats.
Tam added the
ministry plans to issue a guiding circular for Decree 67 on August 25.
Source: VNN/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/ND
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Thứ Ba, 22 tháng 7, 2014
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