Social News 28/1
Laborers’ technique initiatives benefits VND170 bil
Emulation movements launched by the city's Labor Union in 2014
have attracted the over 1,500 research projects and 5,900 technique
initiatives which benefitted VND170 billion (US$ 7,962,981), reported the
union in a meeting yesterday.
Nearly 84 percent of enterprises in the city signed labor
contracts with laborers. Labor unions in companies financed 550,000
needy workers by providing capital of VND3 trillion (US$ 140,520,001) to do
business and supported landladies to maintain the rents for workers
Speaking at the meeting, Mr. Le Thanh Hai, Party Committee
Secretary cum a Politburo member of the Communist Party of Vietnam's Central
Committee lauded the achievements of the union, adding that the union should
think of more creative ways to draw attention of workers and promote
creativeness among laborers.
Union activities must benefit workers, he said.
Mr. Hai required the union to urge all enterprises to sign
labor contracts with laborers.
Local governments must quickly build more preschools,
kindergartens and dormitories for workers and their children.
Mr. Hai wanted more workers to be join in to the Party.
On the occasion, Mr. Hai bestowed the Third Labor Medal to
five members of the union. In addition, two teams and four union members
received merit certificates signed by the Prime Minister.
Nearly 50,000 students join 2015 spring volunteer campaign
Ho Chi Minh City Student Association has launched the seventh
spring volunteer campaign on January 25, with the participation of over
17,000 volunteers and 50,000 students, who have studied and worked in the
city.
The annual campaign aims to take care of children without
parents, children with disabilities, poor families and patients, those who
live in island communes, especially, poor students who can not return their
homeland on Tet holiday.
The seventh spring volunteer campaign will run from January 25
to February 18 in five outskirt districts, new rural communes, train
stations, student hostels, bus stations and industrial zones and others.
Within framework of the campaign, the organization board will
hold series charitable activities such as drawing paint portraits of
Vietnamese heroic mothers, donating 3,000 units of blood for poor patients,
offering 1,000 gifts to martyrs' families and 500 gifts for 500 poor
patients, disadvantaged students, and disadvantaged children living in open
house and shelters.
Flight time changed due to upgrade work at Pleiku Airport
The national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines will change the
departure time of flights including Hanoi/Ho Chi Minh City – Pleiku due to
runway and landing area upgrade work at
Vietnam Airlines changes flight time on routes including
Hanoi/Ho Chi Minh City - Pleiku. (Photo: KK)
Accordingly, flights will depart
The carrier will provide daytime flights from Pleiku on
January 12-27; and March 15-28.
In addition, a member of Vietnam Airlines, Vietnam Air Service
Co (VASCO) will operate selected flights of the national flag carrier
including
This transmit aimed to direct VASCO to be an important carier
of Vietnam Airlines in the Mekong Delta region and meet increasing travel
demand of passengers.
Vietjet to carry apricot, peach blossoms for Tet
The low-cost airline Vietjet will transport apricot and peach
blossoms for the upcoming lunar New Year Festival (Tet) on domestic flights
from January 15 to March 5.
A passenger will be allowed to check in with one branch of
apricot or peach blossoms, measuring maximum 150cm x 40cm x 40cm as a special
‘Luggage Consignment Service’.
Transportation fees for this will be VND400,000.
Passengers can register to transport apricot and peach
blossoms by booking on the website www.Vietjet.com and the carrier’s booking
offices or agents nationwide.
Agencies asked to ensure drugs supply for Tet
The health ministry's Drug Administration of Viet Nam has
asked healthcare agencies and drug manufacturers and importers to ensure
adequate supply of drugs for the Tet festival in mid-February.
The supply of drugs must also be adequate enough to cope with diseases
that break out during winter and spring, including A/H5N1 influenza, hand,
foot and mouth disease, dengue fever and measles, besides diarrhoea caused by
rotavirus.
The health departments have been asked to intensify
inspections of the quality of drugs to prevent fake and substandard drugs
from being circulated.
Enterprises involved in the manufacture, trading and import of
drugs are required to formulate plans to supply drugs to prevent increase in
their prices during the Tet (Lunar New Year) festival.
New Lao Cai bus station has shopping centres
The Lao Cai Centre bus station commenced operations on Sunday.
The station is spread over 3.5ha in
In addition, there are restaurants and entertainment and
shopping centres in the bus station.
Deputy Transport Minister Le Dinh Tho said that the Lao Cai
Centre bus station is a successful model of public-private partnership (PPP).
The project aims to help the province in curbing temporary
stops and unauthorised operation of buses, and improve the transport sector's
service quality.
The construction of the VND150-billion ($US700, 000) bus
station began in May 2013.
A similar project, the Sa Pa Bus Station, will soon be
launched.
Aphrodisiac pills seized in Hanoi
Traffic police in Ha Noi yesterday discovered about 50,000
pills believed to be aphrodisiacs when checking a three-wheeled vehicle
carrying excess cargo in Thuy Khue-Van Cao T-junction. These pills were
packed in sacks with pornographic pictures.
Driver Nguyen Thac Nham failed to show any papers related to
the cargo. He said he was hired to transport the cargo from Hoan Kiem District's
Dong Xuan Market to Cau Giay District.
The cargo was transferred to police in Thuy Khue Ward for
further investigation.
Erosion threatens coastline
Soil erosion threatens the livelihood of more than 50
households in southern
Strong waves and rising seawater levels caused erosion to
speed up in recent years, according to Lam Van O, deputy chairman of Bao
Thuan Ward People's Committee. Local authorities hired contractors to
reinforce the weak parts of the shore with metal nets and stones to protect
major infrastructure, but due to budget limitations, affected households had
to spend their own money to protect their land.
"I've lived here for 21 years but I've never seen the
water this high before," said Nguyen Thi Phuong, who had to borrow
nearly VND50 million (US$2,400) to reinforce the foundation of her house.
Huynh Van Luong, who used to cultivate 0.6ha of agricultural
land, said he lost one-third of his land due to erosion since October last
year. Another 100ha of protective forest in the vicinity are threatened by
stronger tidal waves. Chairman of the Thanh Hai Commune People's Committee
Phan Thanh Tung said erosion also hampered agricultural production in the
region.
The commune requested a solution from the provincial People's
Committee, ministries and agencies but no one addressed the issue, he said.
Home petrol stations pose major danger
Small private household petrol stations are cropping up like
mushrooms in the central
However, many of them in the districts of Dien Chau, Quynh
Luu, Hoang Mai, Nghi Loc and Tuong Duong do not meet licensing requirements,
threatening hundreds of lives and posing risks to the environment, according
to Nong Thon Ngay Nay (Countryside Today).
In the Lach Van harbour in Dien Chau District's Dien Ngoc
Commune, 600 fishing vessels regularly patronise 14 of these illegal petrol
stations.
Only one station on the harbour is said to be operating in
compliance with all the rules. It is the State-owned Nghe An Oil and Gas
Company.
The private refuelling stations are small operations. They are
based on supplying drums of fuel stored within private homes instead of
underground tanks.
Nong Thon Ngay Nay said the storage of large quantities of
petrol in homes posed great risks to the members of Lach Van fishing village.
Nguyen Van Dung, deputy chairman of Dien Ngoc Commune People's
Committee said it was important for authorised agencies to inspect the
storage spaces and advise on ways of minimising the risks of explosions.
Although oil and petrol are not supposed to be sold until all
safety conditions are met, the small traders seem to have no difficulty in
obtaining permission to operate.
This was revealed in a statement by Ho Sy Tam, an unlicensed
private trader in Quynh Lap Commune,
However, Tran Thanh Hai, director of the Dien Ngoc Oil and Gas
Company, a licensed trader who has to compete with unlicensed players, said
this is unfair.
"The authorised agencies must straighten up there
thinking to ensure that not only is business in accordance with law, but also
operates with little or no risk to surrounding residents," he said.
Nguyen Tung Son, leader of a Market Watch Team at Nghe An
Provincial Market said: "We are aware of small petrol stations operating
along the coast, but we have too much to do that we do not have time to visit
them."
Tet assistance to target beneficiaries
Material support is scheduled to be delivered to the poor as
well as beneficiaries of preferential policies for those who rendered
services to the nation as the Lunar New Year is drawing near, said Minister
of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs Pham Thi Hai Chuyen.
The official said the State President decided to give each
beneficiary of preferential policies a Tet gift of VND200,000 or VND400,000,
while relevant agencies and local authorities would also lend their own
support.
Meanwhile, low-income households will benefit from rice or
financial assistance contingent on their specific circumstances, she noted.
Regarding Tet bonuses for workers, Chuyen said almost all
businesses nationwide have developed plans to provide Tet bonuses for their
employees, as the traditional holiday is less than a month away.
The ministry will survey ailing companies and ask local
authorities to provide assistance for the workers of these firms, she said,
while recommending workers to check the terms of their bonuses in their
labour contracts to ensure their benefits are met.
Localities across
The Cambodian Artillery High Command inaugurated its new
headquarters in Kampong Speu province, funded by the Vietnam Ministry of
Defence.
The 2,500-square-metre facility includes a two-story main
building with 15 fully equipped rooms. It was built at a cost of US$200,000.
At the inauguration ceremony on January 26, Cambodian Defence
Minister Tia Banh expressed his sincere gratitude for
Vietnamese military attaché to
Colonel Dung said the Royal Cambodian Army has working
diligently to implement a protocol on the Vietnam-Cambodia bilateral defence
cooperation , particularly in searching for the remains of Vietnamese
voluntary soldiers who fell down in Cambodia during wartime.
Drastic measures needed to optimise Central Highlands strength
Advising the Government on specific support policies for
regional localities to maximise their strength should be one of the key tasks
of the Steering Committee for Central Highlands in 2015, said Head of the
Committee, General Tran Dai Quang.
General Quang, who is also Minister of Public Security, said
in order to successfully fulfil all the socio-economic, cultural, security
and defence goals for the 2011-15 period, the committee should focus on
designing measures to mobilise resources for stronger transport
infrastructure connection for the Central Highlands and its neighbouring
regions.
Regional localities should continue effectively implementing
socio-economic plans approved by the National Assembly and Government, he
said at a conference of the committee to review its 2014 performance and
launch key 2015 tasks in Dak Lak province on January 26.
He also requested strong efforts to ensure the progress of a
number of projects, including the upgrade of Pleiku airport and the Ho Chi
Minh road.
Last year saw complicated developments both domestically and
globally, especially in the East Sea, but the nation and the Central
Highlands region still made remarkable achievements across sectors, he noted.
The region recorded an economic growth of 8.74 percent, with
industrial production rising 11 percent. Total social investment in the
region hit VND65.7 8 trillion, up 11.53 percent, he reiterated.
Meanwhile, total exports of the region exceeded US$2.51
billion, a substantial 49.3 percent increase from the previous year, with the
average per capita income reaching VND34.9 million (US$1,640), an annual
increase of 13.6 percent, he said.
During 2014, 61,000 local labours were underwent vocational
training with a resulting 99,000 locals employed, he said, adding that 34,600
households rose out of poverty, reducing the region’s poverty ratio to 10.12
percent.
At the same time, regional security and defence were ensured,
especially in border areas, while the political system reform was
accelerated, he stated.
However, General Quang also pointed out a number of existing
problems in the region, including the slow progress on a number of transport
projects and poor local living conditions, especially among ethnic minority
groups.
Looking forward, regional localities should roll out more
drastic measures to enhance their linkage, including forming a Vietnam coffee
fund, reshuffling State-run farms and making preparations for natural
disasters, he asked.
The official also underlined the need to ensure farm land for
people from ethnic minority groups and improve healthcare programmes and
access for locals in the region.
The committee also presented 16,000 gifts valued at VND8
billion (US$376,000) to beneficiary households in the region and neighbouring
localities at the conference.
VFF
President meets overseas Vietnamese
President of Vietnam Fatherland Front (VFF) Central Committee
Nguyen Thien Nhan on January 25 met with representatives of overseas
Vietnamese (OVs) from 11 countries, including the US, Australia, Poland,
Germany, Republic of Korea and Laos.
The OVs told the VFF President that they have led a stable
life and enjoyed overall support from the government of their residing
countries.
However, they showed their concern about how to develop an OV
community and hoped that the Vietnamese government will provide relevant
training for students studying abroad to have better community connectivity.
They also wished to be supported in the teaching of the
Vietnamese language to their children in order to preserve and promote
Vietnamese cultural tradition and identities.
To deal with OVs difficulties, Nhan urged OVs associations to
make regular reports to VFF, proposing specific support policies,
particularly those on teaching the Vietnamese language to children living abroad.
Overseas Vietnamese resources contribute to national
development
The Overseas Vietnamese community have made major
contributions to Vietnam’s development, especially after the implementation
of a resolution of the Political Bureau on overseas Vietnamese (OV) affairs a
decade ago.
In an interview granted to Vietnam News Agency reporters,
Deputy Foreign Minister and Chairman of the State Committee on Overseas
Vietnamese Affairs (COVA) Vu Hong Nam said the Party and State work
diligently to ensure the overseas Vietnamese community is always considered
during policymaking, such as the Politburo’s Resolution No. 36 in 2004.
To facilitate the realisation of the resolution, a number of
legal documents have been developed and enforced to protect the legitimate
interests of Vietnamese people abroad.
The OV community currently consists of roughly 4.5 million
people across 109 countries and territories, Nam noted, adding that they have
been establishing firm footholds in these foreign lands, helping to elevate
Vietnam’s stature in the global arena.
About 10-15% of the OV community, or more than 400,000 people,
hold graduate or higher degrees.
Thanks to policies encouraging their return, more than 300
Vietnamese intellectuals from developed countries such as the US, France,
Germany, and Japan
return to their homeland every year. Many of them specialise
in economics, mathematics, healthcare, education, and nuclear and information
technology, and intend to stay in Vietnam long-term, the official said.
In the time ahead, the COVA will conduct various activities to
connect overseas and domestic intellectuals, including workshops and
dialogues. It will also collaborate with the Ministry of Science and
Technology to implement the Fostering Innovation through Research, Science
and Technology (FIRST) project calling on OVs to engage in the country’s
science and technology development, Nam added.
Meanwhile, overseas remittances to Vietnam exceeded US$70
billion from 2003 to 2013, with an annual growth rate of 10% and reaching US$12
billion last year, the Deputy Minister said, noting that Vietnam is now among
the top 10 countries receiving overseas remittances in the world.
He cited the Central Institute for Economic Management as
saying that remittances were the second largest source of capital in the
country between 2007 and 2013, following foreign direct investment.
Nam said remittances play an important role in stabilising the
macro-economy, maintaining trade balance, and fortifying investment and
national reserves. They also help spur spending and foster private economic
activities, ultimately contributing to unemployment reduction and poverty
alleviation.
Favourable regulations such as removing caps on remitted money
or facilitating OVs’ visits, property acquisitions, and investments in
Vietnam have increased remittance inflows, he said.
The official also attributed the rise in remittances to the
growing number of Vietnamese individuals going abroad to work, study, or
reunite with their families as well as convenient banking services and a
stable exchange rate between VND and USD. Promising investment opportunities
in securities, real estate, insurance, education, and healthcare in the
country are also magnets for overseas funds.
Vietnam promotes sending guest workers to key markets
Vietnam looks to encourage sending citizens to Taiwan (China),
Malaysia, and the Republic of Korea (RoK) to work as domestic workers, and to
Japan and Germany to work as orderlies and nurses, in 2015. It plans to
export 100,000 workers for the year.
Minister of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs Pham Thi Hai
Chuyen said Vietnam’s key markets for guest workers are Taiwan, Japan, the
RoK, Malaysia, and Saudi Arabia.
Data from the ministry’s Overseas Labour Management Department
showed that compared to 2013, the number of Vietnamese guest workers sent to
Taiwan increased from 46,000 to 60,000 with the number in Japan rising from
9,600 to 20,000 in 2014.
A total of 7,000 guest workers were sent to the RoK, 5,000 to
Malaysia, and 4,000 to Saudi Arabia, and 1,000 to Qatar. Compared to 2013,
the number of workers in these four markets dropped by about 5,000.
Thailand has begun to stand out as a promising market, with
agreements between the two nations to coordinate their labour exports in
2015.
Meanwhile, existing problems with guest workers between
Vietnam and Taiwan are expected to be resolved this year, as the system
returns to full function after the lift of the Chinese territory’s suspension
on receiving Vietnamese labourers, she noted.
Responding to reports of mistreatment in the Middle East, the
official said the region is a good market with about 16,000 Vietnamese
labourers, including 4,000 domestic workers.
She explained these markets have specific regulations, and
some of the recruitment companies did not help labourers prepare adequately,
causing several workers fail in their attempts to adapt to the local
environment.
The ministry worked with the Vietnamese Embassy in Saudi
Arabia to resolve the issues, including examining recruitment businesses to
ensure proper operation.-
Dong Thap looks for 3.7 trillion VND for climate change
response
The Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap is calling for an investment
of 3.7 trillion VND (176 million USD) for climate change response projects
between 2015 and 2020.
The intended projects include developing an embankment system
in Tram Chim town in Tam Nong district to counteract rising sea levels, and
building erosion-proof dikes around the Tien River in Thuong Thoi Tien town
in Hong Ngu district, among others.
The projects aim to enhance local capability to adapt and
respond to climate change and prevent and mitigate natural disasters to
ensure sustainable socio-economic development.
They will also cover training on the rehabilitation of
production and business activities in areas prone to flooding as well as
rescue and relief work.
In 2014, as many as 33 communes close to the Tien River
suffered from severe landslides and erosion due to climate change, according
to the provincial Committee for Flood and Storm Control and Natural Disaster
Mitigation.
As a result, more than two hectares of land were washed away
with nearly 2,000 households evacuated.
Mekong Delta targets 49 percent of workforce trained labourers
The Mekong Delta—encompassing Can Tho city and 12
provinces—aims to raise the proportion of trained workers to 49 percent in
2015, a 2.5 percent increase from 2014, said the Steering Committee for the
Southwest region.
To achieve the target, the localities will restructure their
education systems and develop training styles relevant to local conditions,
such as opening short-term courses in residential areas or publishing job
skill knowledge through mass media.
They will publish communication activities to encourage locals
to enrol in vocational courses and offer training on business demand, the
committee said.
It added that local authorities will prioritise vocational
trainings and job openings for ethnic minorities, impoverished individuals,
and households whose farmland was reclaimed.
About 187,000 people, including 121,000 from rural areas,
attended vocational trainings in the Mekong Delta last year.
The region currently has 181 establishments specialising in
vocational training, with 186 other facilities also offering vocational
courses such as universities, junior colleges, job centres, businesses, and
associations, according to regional statistics.
The Mekong Delta covers a total area of about 40,000 square
kilometres with a population of 18 million, and is a major aquaculture region
and the largest rice production hub of Vietnam.
Health insurance cards for “near-poor” households in Central
Highlands
The Ministry of Health and the Vietnam Social Insurance Agency
on January 26 presented three Central Highlands provinces of Dak Lak, Dak
Nong and Kon Tum with donations from philanthropist enterprises and
individuals to buy health insurance cards for households living just above
the poverty line.
The money, which came to nearly two billion VND (93,680 USD),
will be used to take out 10,585 health insurance cards.
Minister of Health Nguyen Thi Kim Tien said the action would
help all ‘near-poor’ households in three provinces gain access to health
services.
The ministry will continue calling for more donations from
philanthropists to expand the programme to the whole country, she said.
More than 90 percent of households living near the poverty
line in Dak Lak, Dak Nong and Kon Tum are not covered by health insurance.
Border district Tra Linh turns to tangerine in fight against
poverty
The bordering district of Tra Linh in the northern border
province of Cao Bang has successfully turned the native tangerines into a key
commodity, helping lift local residents out of poverty.
Tra Linh tangerine has long been famous for its quality and
thus fetching high prices. One hectare of Tra Linh tangerines could bring in
one billion VND (46,830 USD) in revenue.
According to Duong Van Lam, Vice Chairman of Tra Linh District
People’s Committee, the district along with the provincial Department of
Science and Technology developed the “Restoring, preserving and developing
Tra Linh tangerine” project to assist locals with techniques of caring and
preventing diseases for the trees.
Lam said currently the district, which borders China to the
north, has around 70 hectares of Tra Linh tangerines, mainly located in
communes Cao Chuong, Quang Han and Hung Quoc town but the area is expected to
increase to 100 hectares in 2015.
According to Lam, Tra Linh tangerines are sold for around
30,000 VND (1.4 USD) for each kilogram at the gardens and the price can reach
as much as 100,000 VND (4.68 USD) per kilogram in the days approaching Tet.
Another project to develop a collective brand for Tra Linh
tangerines is underway in order to help raise the value of the fruit.-
Gifts for OV Buddhists, poor Cambodians
A delegation from the Vietnam Buddhist Sangha (VBS) offered
500 gift packages worth 25,000 USD to Vietnamese Buddhists and impoverished
Cambodians living in Phnom Penh on January 25 in honour of the upcoming Lunar
New Year (Tet) festival.
Attending the event were representatives from the Vietnamese
Embassy in Cambodia, the General Association of Cambodian-Vietnamese and the
Bank for Investment and Development of Cambodia.
Speaking at the event, Great Supreme Patriarch Tep Vong
praised the mercy of the VBS toward disadvantaged Cambodians.
He also highlighted the valuable assistance of Vietnamese
volunteer soldiers in saving Cambodians from the genocidal regime in the
past.
Most Venerable Thich Duc Thien, General Secretary of the VBS
Executive council, said the VBS will continue coordinating with the Cambodia
Buddhist Sangha in implementing additional humanitarian activities to support
impoverished Buddhist followers in Cambodia, thus fortifing the friendship
and relationship between the two countries.-
Source: VNN/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/ND
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Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 1, 2015
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