The stall owner (R) is pictured at his eatery under the
funny introduction banner in
Nguyen Hoang Anh Dung immediately won the hearts of local
customers and the ‘the coolest in
Dung sells bun bo, or
Vietnamese noodle soup with beef, along the pavement near a condominium in
District 4. His stall is known as “Bun Bo Gan” (beef tendon), as the dish
mainly features that part of the cow.
The 48-year-old put on the nearby wall an introduction
banner and a set of rules, and anyone who happens to read them cannot help
but laughing aloud.
“We only accept banknotes with face value of VND500,000
at most… No foreign currencies are accepted,” one of the lines on the
“restaurant rule” banner reads, which even foreigners would find amusing even
though they must exchange their dollars for the dong to enjoy a bowl of the
typical Vietnamese dish.
The first line of the rules reads, “Do not be talkative
and criticize the store owner on the Internet,” then comes, “This is not
Hue-style bun bo. You are not allowed to complain even it tastes awful. You
are required to empty the bowl. You have to pay even though you cannot eat
it.”
The other rules are no less laugh-worthy.
“In case you cannot pay immediately, please leave your
home ownership or marriage certificates as collateral. In brief, any kind of
paper is accepted, except for the toilet one,” reads the third line.
If customers manage to hold back laughter through to the
first four rules, they will surely burst out laughing with the final one.
“In case you read all the rules and your bowl is now
freezing cold, we are not to blame for any responsibility. Thanh kiu [Thank
you]”
The “Bun Bo Gan” stall has gone viral after
pictures capturing its funny rules surfaced on the Internet earlier this
week.
Most customers found the rules amusing and dubbed the
stall the coolest in
Dung obviously received more customers who came out of
curiosity, and managed to sell out earlier than usual.
But on Thursday night, when Dung was cleaning his
eatery, some officials from the ward-level administration arrived out of
nowhere and removed the viral rule banner without telling him a word, he
recalled.
The act was filmed by some customers, who then uploaded
their videos on YouTube and caused yet another stir regarding “
The videos received positive comments from most
netizens, who wondered why such a hilarious set of rules could be deemed to
have breached the law.
‘Offensive wording’
Dung told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper on Friday
afternoon that he had asked the officials to book the case, “but they said it
was unnecessary and asked me to be present at the ward office the following
day.”
An officer from the ward police unit refused to comment
on the case when inquired by Tuoi Tre.
Dung eventually worked with the ward authorities on
Friday afternoon, after which he received a report saying his banner is
deemed offensive and “caused traffic disorder” as it attracted curious
people, which blocked the way to the condominium.
The banner was thus seized and will only be returned to
Dung when he runs his business on fixed premises rather than on the pavement,
according to officials.
The stall owner agreed to follow the decision, saying he
only wants to “normally do business.”
The wall at his stall now only bears the introduction
banner, which is as funny as the seized one.
Although the stall opens at 3:30pm and closes at 7:30pm,
it will “continue selling in case of poor sales,” according to the banner.
The store will be “off on Sunday by default for
relaxing.”
Dung revealed that he began hanging the banners a few
months ago.
“I made up the content to amuse customers,” he said.
Lawyer Nguyen Van Hau, deputy chairman of the Ho Chi
Minh City Bar Association, said there is nothing wrong with the hilarious
banners and the ward officials did not follow the proper procedure in
handling civil penalties when they removed the signs without booking the
case.
TUOI TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Bảy, 28 tháng 3, 2015
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