Overseas Vietnamese bring expertise back to homeland
The lives and fortunes of millions of Vietnamese changed
when they fled their homeland and emigrated from Vietnam following the fall
of Saigon at the end of the Vietnam war 40 years ago this month.
By the tens of
thousands they immigrated to the
Now, many former refugees
and their offspring are reaping the gains of
One of the most notable is
David Duong the founder of Oakland California based Waste Solutions, one of
the most successful Vietnamese businessmen in the US.
Duong, whose father owned
the largest recycling company and paper mill in
The family eventually made
it to the
It was a job his family did
every day for years. The payoff was their first recycling warehouse in West
Oakland, which eventually led to California Waste Solutions a multi-million
dollar company employing 300 people handling recycling in Oakland and San
Jose California.
In 2006, Duong received a
call from the
On this 40th anniversary of
the fall of
Duong openly acknowledges
there are many Vietnamese-Americans who refuse to do business with the
Then there is the case of
Nguyen Van Cong, an engineer, who returned from
Most notably he played a
pivotal role in constructing the
Using their personal funds,
the group has played an important part in replacing nearly 200 outdated
bamboo bridges with modernized concrete and steel bridges in the Mekong Delta
and the south-eastern region.
They currently have plans
to expand their assistance and fabricate and erect more bridges in the
“I will continue to
help people in my homeland,” Cong said. “I travel a lot and see that this is
very important. Local residents are very happy when a safe and solid bridge
has been constructed.”
Meanwhile, a large number
of OVs from
Phan Thi Huong, who
returned from
She was born in an OVs family with three generations residing in
She has always educated her
children to appreciate the homeland. Apart from businesses activities, she
has actively served as bridge to help OVs learn more about new governmental
policies and reared them to faithfully contribute to national construction.
Ms Huong said future
generations should strive to impart patriotism to young OVs and help them
understand
Though their role is often
overlooked, OVs have been a boon for
These remittances remain a
key part of the country's economy, providing a much needed influx of foreign
currency equivalent to about 8% of the nation’s gross domestic product. More
than half of the capital comes from the
VOV
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Thứ Sáu, 1 tháng 5, 2015
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