Social News 29/10
Four people
jailed for exploiting endangered trees
The People's Court
in the central Nghe An Province's Que Phong District yesterday jailed four
people for a total of 19 years for exploiting endangered and precious timber
trees.
Forty-year-old
Luong Van Tam, 36-year-old Vi Van Hoai and 21-year-old Vi Van Binh from Que
Phong District were sentenced to six years, five years and four years in
prison, respectively. Cao Minh Quyet, 29, from Quy Hop District was also
sentenced to four years in prison.
The convicts were
caught in the act while they were illegally exploiting 253cu.m of Viet Nam
conifer (cunninghamia konishii) trees in Pu Hoat Nature Conservation Centre
in Que Phong District on July 3.
The Viet Nam
conifer trees are a genus of one or two species of evergreen coniferous trees
of the cypress family. It is native to northern Viet Nam, China, Taiwan and
Laos.
The Viet Nam
conifer is used mostly for building houses and temples and is known for its
soft and highly durable scented wood.
HCMC has
financial difficulties in anti-flooding
Ho Chi Minh City
has made more efforts to tackle rampant flooding after heavy rains and high
tides, however implemented measures have solved the top not the root of the
issue because of fund shortage.
The statement was
made by deputy chairman of the city People’s Committee Nguyen Huu Tin at a
meeting of the city Economics and Budget Committee under the People’s Council
on anti-flooding progress on Tuesday.
A representative of
the Steering Center for Urban Flood Control Program reported that the city
has set targets to clear inundation over 106.4 square kilometer center area
with about 3.3 million residents, reduce flooding in north Tau Hu and Tan
Hoa-Lo Gom canals including districts 6, 11, Tan Phu and Binh Tan and parts
of districts 6, 8 and Binh Thanh.
The rest area
stretching 457 square kilometers with 3.4 million people must reduce 70
percent of rain-triggered flooded spots and 50 percent submerged spots due to
high tides, and prevent flooding from occurring in new places, according to
the targets.
To obtain these
issues, the city must build 6,000 kilometers of sewer types over 581 square
kilometers but has been able to complete over 43 percent of that.
Installation of the 3,400 remaining kilometers has yet to be implemented
putting many areas in danger of re-flooding.
Deputy Head of the
Economics and Budget Committee Nguyen Van Lam said that not only sewer works
but also reservoirs have been constructed very slowly, such as Khanh Hoi
reservoir in District 4, Bau Cat in Tan Binh and Go Dua in Thu Duc.
In addition,
climate change has worsened flooding in recent years while tide-control dykes
have yet to be built.
Explaining reasons
for the late construction of sewers and reservoirs, deputy chairman Nguyen
Huu Tin said that state budget shortage has not permitted the city to
implement drastic measures to absolutely tackle the issue.
Many parts of HCMC
are located at an average elevation of one meter above the sea level. The
city is also surrounded by three large rivers Dong Nai, Sai Gon and Vam Co
Dong.
Therefore, when a
rain of about 140mm precipitation happens at the same time of high tide, two
thirds of the city will be submerged. Such rains just occurred once every 2-3
years previously but four times a year now during longer time, from 30-60
minutes.
Thousands of
billion of dong have been spent on dredging canals but residents have kept
littering. Some canals have been choked with garbage again within a few months
after being dredged.
The Prime Minister
has allowed the city to build nine big sewers and 68 smaller ones to prevent
high tides and some important dyke sections in crowded areas. However, these
works need about few billion U.S. dollar which the city has been unaffordable
for.
The Government has
permitted local authorities to seek loans from official development
assistance or the World Bank but it has not been an easy measure.
Over 20,000
Vietnamese people die annually due to lung cancer
In Vietnam, two
types of common cancer with the most deaths are lung and liver, said Dr.
Nguyen Chan Hung, chairman of the National Cancer Association, at a forum
themed " Something about lung cancer" held in Ho Chi Minh City
lately.
It is also common
disease in the globe, added Hung. It is estimated that more than 1.8 million
fresh cancer cases are reported per year in the world and nearly 1.6 million
people die due to the disease.
In the Southeast
Asian nations, lung and liver cancer cause most deaths. It is predicted that
there are 22,000 fresh lung cancer cases and this disease kills around
20,000 people per year.
In addition to
encouraging people quit smoking, Vietnam's health sector has applied advanced
treatments of the world to cure patients and help improve their lives.
Six local
properties among the finest in Asia
Six hotels and
resorts in Vietnam are among the finest properties in all of Asia, according
to readers of Conde Nast Traveler magazine.
The prestigious
international travel magazine unveiled the results of its annual Readers
Choice Awards last week, with the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi, the
MGallery La Residence Hue Hotel & Spa, the Sofitel Saigon Plaza Hotel and
the Park Hyatt Saigon Hotel making the “Top Hotels in Southeast Asia
(excluding Bangkok and Singapore)” list and The Nam Hai and Anantara Hoi An
scoring places on the “Best Resorts in Asia” list.
As with last year,
the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi was the highest rated Vietnamese hotel
(3rd), and The Nam Hai the highest rated Vietnamese resort (12th).
Both properties, as
well as MGallery La Residence Hue Hotel & Spa, are members of
Quintessential Collection Vietnam, an exclusive group of hotels and cruises
that recently launched a website (www.quintessentialcollectionvietnam.com) it
hopes will serve as the single most important resource for affluent travelers
in Vietnam.
This year, Conde
Nast Traveler readers also voted for their 30 favorite cities in the world.
Of the five Asian cities to make the cut, none are in Vietnam. Kyoto, at No.
9, was the only Asian city to crack the top 10.
More than 128,000
travelers took part in this year’s Readers Choice Awards — the most in its
28-year history, and up more than 50,000 from last year. Voting is conducted
through a secure website, with responses tabulated by Equation Research.
Readers evaluate candidates on a set of criteria using a Teligible for an
award.
The Sofitel Legend
Metropole Hanoi comes third in the “Top Hotels in Southeast Asia (excluding
Bangkok and Singapore)” list.
US, Vietnam
mark 20 years of medical cooperation
The Ministry of
Health and the US Embassy on October 28 celebrated the 20th anniversary of
Vietnam-US medical cooperation and normalized bilateral relations in Hanoi.
Addressing the
ceremony, Minister Nguyen Thi Kim Tien and Ambassador Ted Osius praised the
tremendous achievements both nations have recorded in the healthcare sector
over the past two decades.
According to
Minister Kim Tien, after the US lifted its embargo and normalized relations
with Vietnam in 1996, the two countries have intensified many new areas of
cooperation such as vaccine research, epidemiology for the prevention of
diseases and HIV/AIDS and training of medical workers.
During the visit to
Vietnam in 2000, US Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala
signed a joint statement on health cooperation between the two countries.
Vietnam-US medical
cooperation has progressed across numerous key areas, principally HIV/AIDS
prevention and control, preventive medicine and science and technology.
Non-governmental
organizations of the US have also considerably contributed to the medical
cooperation between the two countries through medical infrastructure support
programmes at Hue Central Hospital.
They have also
helped expand and upgrade the Central Children's Hospital while providing
medical equipment and training human resources, supporting vaccine production
and providing scientific evidence of disease and mortality for policy making
process in Vietnam.
Their assistance
has also been focused on community-based rehabilitation, medical staff
capacity improvement, voluntary medical examination and treatment, expert
exchange, techniques and advanced healthcare models.
In addition to
bilateral cooperation, Vietnam is considered an active partner at multilateral
cooperation forums in the lower Mekong region initiated by the US such as
Lower Mekong Initiative (LMI)) and Mekong Basin Disease Surveillance
Network (MBDS).
Minister Kim Tien
said she hopes in the next 20 years, bilateral medical cooperation will continue
to grow steadily as a practical contribution to further strengthening the
ties of friendship and cooperation between the two governments and peoples.
Speaking at the
celebration, Ambassador Ted Osius highlighted increased medical cooperation
between Vietnam and the US in many other areas such as prevention of TB,
malaria, harmful effects of tobacco, and infectious diseases, food safety and
supporting people with disabilities.
On the occasion,
the Vietnam Ministry of Health presented “People’s Health” Insignia to seven
US diplomatic staff while 40 Vietnamese staff were awarded Certificates of
Merit by the US Embassy in recognition of their contributions to bilateral
healthcare cooperation activities.
Quang Ninh
to open pilot public administration centre
Prime Minister
Nguyen Tan Dung has agreed to establish a pilot public administration centre
in the northern province of Quang Ninh.
The centre will be
a full legal entity with professional departments. Its headquarters is
located in Ha Long City.
The PM instructed
the provincial People’s Committee to stipulate the centre’s function,
responsibilities, organisational structure, rights and activities with other
relevant authorities.
The centre will
provide guidances on administrative procedures, receive and solve individuals
and organisations administrative documents while proposing solutions to
administrative reforms.
The province’s
administrative procedure reform has made progress. The province cut 196
administrative procedures out of 1,284.
An electronic email
system has been applied at all administrative offices. In the province, 238
units and localities have developed and applied the quality management system
ISO 9001:2008 for the State’s managing offices’ activities.
Vietnam-India
friendship festival held in India
The seventh
Vietnam-India friendship festival took place in Hyderabad in India’s
Telangana state on the night of October 27.
A concert by
Vietnamese and Indian performers made the night memorable.
The All India Peace
& Solidarity Organisation (AIPSO) Secretary General Pallapb Sein Gupta
reviewed the past six festivals, saying each offered the countries’ people an
opportunity to recall the important milestones in the time-honoured
friendship and cooperation founded by late President Ho Chi Minh and Prime
Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and fostered by generations of leaders and people.
Telangana Finance
Minister Etala Rajender lauded the two nations’ relations and expected more
cultural events and delegation exchanges to be held to facilitate mutual understanding
and stimulate trade.
Vietnam Union of
Friendship Organisations (VUFO) President Vu Xuan Hong said the occasion
could provide participating officials an opportunity to review past bilateral
co-operation and discuss ways to elevate ties.
He said the
festival was held at a meaningful time, just after 70-year celebration of
Vietnam’s August Revolution and National Day and prior to the 65 th founding
anniversary of the VUFO.
The VUFO, the
Vietnam-India Friendship Association and the AIPSO organised the event.
Earlier, Vietnamese
participants met with AIPSO leaders, who reaffirmed love and strong support
for the heroic Vietnamese nation.
Equality
gender initiative launched
On October 28, the
UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in Hanoi and
the Vietnam Ministry of Education and Training co-hosted a ceremony to launch
the initiative “Gender Equality and Girls’ Education in Vietnam: Empowering
girls and women towards a more equal society”.
In a speech, Deputy
Minister of Education and Training Nguyen Thi Nghia said the Ministry of
Education and Training is carrying out radical innovation and comprehensive
education and training. Therefore, promoting gender equality and education
for women and girls in the process of comprehensive education reform will be
a priority of the Ministry in the time to come.
The initiative is
designed to provide technical assistance to ensure gender equality in
curriculum and textbook reforms, train education managers and policymakers,
and design new teaching and learning materials.
Head of the UNESCO
Office in Hanoi Katherine Muller-Marin emphasized that gender equality is a
global priority of the UNESCO coupled with efforts to promote the right to
education and support the implementation of national development goals (SDGs)
in Vietnam.
The Initiative for
gender equality and education for young girls in Vietnam is of great
significance as it will contribute to help the education sector continue
implementing SDGs on education and gender equality. The implementation of
SDGs requires basic skills and knowledge to harmoniously resolve issues
pertaining to society, economics, the environment, protection of natural
resources. Consequently, implementing SDGs heavily depends on the quality of
education, said Katherine.
She also recognized
the private sector’s financial assistance to the initiative and called for
other sectors to get involved, adding that UNESCO is a trusted partner of
Vietnam and willing to aid the country in building a sustainable learning society.
UNESCO is
coordinating with the UN Entity for General Equality and the Empowerment of
Women, the UN Population Fund and the UN Development Programme to provide
technical support for the initiative.
Vietnam,
Belgium enforce educational ties
A five-day
Vietnam-Belgium educational forum was recently held in Brussels to review the
13-year VLIR-UOS scholarship programme in Vietnam.
The VLIR-UOS was
founded by the Flemish Interuniversity Council (VLIR), an overarching
consultative organisation between the Flemish universities and the Belgian
government.
Top Belgian
universities such as Gent, Antwerp and Leuven, and 10 Vietnamese partner
universities and institutes took part in the forum.
Vietnamese Ambassador
to Belgium Vuong Thua Phong underscored the scholarship’s valuable
contributions to Vietnam’s postgraduate education, noting the nation’s high
demand for stronger academic ties in food biotechnology, environment-natural
resources, public health, public policy and judicial reform.
Belgium grants
Vietnam nearly 100 scholarships annually and approximately 2,000 Vietnamese
students are educated in the European country each year.
In late 2014, the
two governments signed a pact to help Vietnam build up its manpower capacity
to create an industry based on intellectual property by 2020.
Next November the
joint cabinet will meet in Brussels to discuss future plans for co-operation.
Exhibition
asserts Vietnam’s ownership over Hoang Sa, Truong Sa
Exhibits affirming
Vietnam’s sovereignty over the Hoang Sa (Spratly) and Truong Sa (Paracel)
archipelagos are being showcased in Nui Thanh district in the central coastal
province of Quang Nam from October 27.
Documents issued
between the 17th and 20th centuries, including a crucial collection of
imperial records from the Nguyen Dynasty (1802-1945), are on display.
Some 95 maps and
four atlases at the event also record the process of establishing, exercising
and staking out border markers on the Truong Sa and Hoang Sa islands.
Notably, 102
publications in English, German, French, Spanish, Italian and Dutch also
provide strong evidence that Hoang Sa and Truong Sa belong to Vietnam.
Relic sites, the
“Le khao le the linh Hoang Sa” (Feast and Commemoration Festival for Hoang Sa
soldiers) and the livelihoods of people on Truong Sa archipelago are also
featured through photos and images.
The exhibition aims
to raise the public’s awareness, and encourage Vietnamese nationals to
protect and affirm national territory.
Sex workers
given health care, vocational training support
More than four
hundred young female sex workers in Hanoi have received free healthcare
services, and more than 120 have been given vocational training and support
to start their own businesses, a conference recently heard.
These results came
from a three-year-project between the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social
Affairs and Plan International Vietnam.
The project,
targeting 400 female sex workers under 25 in the city, was launched in 2012.
Under the VND9 billion (US$405,000) project, these women have been provided
with health check-ups over the past three years.
Eight vocational
training courses have been organised to help 82 young prostitutes, including
hairdressing, graphic design, bartending, and marketing. Each course ran for
three months and was free of charge. More than 40 women launched careers in
these sectors with monthly income of VND3-5 million (US$135-225).
Those who earned
less than VND2.5 million (US$112) per month or had a child to raise would be
supported VND750,000 during their first three months of work.
The project has
allocated VND500 million (US$22,500) to support 43 women to start their own
businesses. Most of these businesses were reported to earn a profit of at
least VND4 million (US$180) per month.
An ex-sex worker in
central Nghe An Province, who wished to be anonymous, said that she now ran
her own shop after ten years of working as a prostitute in Hanoi. Her life
had been improved, she said.
Phan Thi Lan Huong,
a lecturer at Hanoi Law University who evaluated the project, said that the
project had succeeded in approaching female sex workers, understanding their
difficulties and building supportive programmes for them.
Le Thi Ha, deputy
head of the Anti-Social Evils Department under the Ministry of Labour,
Invalids and Social Affairs said that the ministry hoped that the project
could be applied in other provinces to help more sex workers.
She also encouraged
more non-governmental organisations to join the project.
Unofficial statistics
showed that there were about 3,000 female sex workers in Hanoi.
Chinese-contracted
railway project in Hanoi suffers 57% cost overrun
A Chinese-sponsored
railway project in Hanoi, whose construction is infamous for causing a series
of accidents, has been hit by yet another scandal as it is expected to cost
57% more than first thought.
The Railway Project
Management Unit is seeking approval from the Ministry of Transport to
increase the total investment in the Cat Linh – Ha Dong urban rail project to
US$868.04 million from the previous estimate of $552.86 million.
The $315.18 million
cost overrun is calculated by Transport Engineering Design Inc. and assessed
by the Institute of Construction Economics under the Ministry of
Construction, according to the project management unit.
The total
investment must be hiked because the actual construction of many units under
the project is different from their design, and there are many extra
components, the management unit said.
For instance, while
the project is designed to have two-story terminals, three-story ones have
actually been built, which led to higher construction costs, it elaborated.
The Cat Linh – Ha
Dong urban railway project broke ground in October 2011, with US$419 million
of the initial investment estimate covered by China’s official development
assistance (ODA) loans.
China will add
US$250.62 million to cover part of the US$315.18 million cost overrun,
whereas the Vietnamese side will increase its capital contribution to
US$198.42 million from the previous US$133.86 million.
Vietnam will thus
have to take a massive US$669.62 million ODA loan from China for the project.
The Vietnam Railway
Authority, under the transport ministry, is the project developer, whereas
China Railway Sixth Group, a subsidiary of construction conglomerate China
Railway Group, is the EPC (engineering, procurement, and construction)
contractor.
Under an EPC
contract, the contractor designs the installation, procures the necessary
materials, and implement the project.
The Railway Project
Management Unit said the project has so far had construction work worth
VND5.9 trillion (US$263.39 million) completed, or 66% of the initial
investment estimate.
Construction of
infrastructure for the project will likely finish by the end of this year and
it may officially go on stream in March 2016.
The
Chinese-contracted Cat Linh – Ha Dong urban railway project has been hit by
several scandals since groundbreaking.
The project will
use 13 trains provided by China’s Beijing Rolling Stock Equipment Co. under a
$63.2 million supply contract, which has met with strong objection by local
members of the public as well as experts in the field.
Minister of
Transport Dinh La Thang has said it was “force majeure,” or an unavoidable
circumstance, because Vietnam is required to buy trains made by Chinese
companies as per the contract signed with China.
Also in June, the
project was blasted as locals noticed its rail were 'wave-like' and
comparable to those of a roller coaster.
The wavy parts of
the railway can easily be seen with the naked eye, raising safety concerns
among local experts and members of the public.
In August the EPC
contractor of the project was admonished by the Railway Project Management
Unit for “causing many accidents related to labor safety.”
The warning came
two days after a bar of steel fell from a construction site of the project
onto a four-seat car traveling below, almost killing the driver.
Quang Ninh
aims to boost ICT development
The Department of
Information and Communication of Quang Ninh province and Microsoft Vietnam
signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on information and communication
technologies (ICT) development in the locality on October 27.
With the move, the
northeastern province aims to foster international ICT cooperation in
production, services, education and training in a bid to meet the
requirements of industrialisation and modernisation and draw more
international investment.
Vivek Puthucode,
Vice President of Microsoft Asia Pacific, vowed that the group will support
the province in developing ICT human resources and ensuring information and
cyber security, thus facilitating investment inflows to the province.
Under the MoU,
Microsoft will develop measures to build a smart city in Quang Ninh based on
international experience and local conditions.
Director of the
department Mai Vu Tuan said the locality has implemented a number of
programmes to enhance ICT application in various sectors, including
e-governance development, smart schools and smart traffic systems, among
others.
RoK-funded
upgrades to dilapidated bridges to begin soon
Six downgraded
bridges will get a facelift in the near future with concessional loans of the
Republic of Korea (RoK)’s Government, according to the Ministry of
Transport’s Project Management Unit No 2 (PMU 2).
The facilities
include Ben Moi bridge in northern Nam Dinh province, Doan Hung bridge in
northern Phu Tho province, Da Phuc bridge in Hanoi, Xom Bong bridge in
central Khanh Hoa province, and Song Truong and Nuoc Oa bridges in central
Quang Nam province.
They will be
upgraded at a total cost of some US$60 million.
The PMU 2 said it
will complete verification dossiers on the bridges within this October as the
RoK side said it will provide US$60 million in fiscal year 2015 after the
dossiers are finalised.
The aforementioned
facilities are among 22 big bridges to benefit from a RoK Government-funded
project that provides credits for the upgrade of fragile bridges and
structures on national roads in Vietnam.
The PMU 2 is
striving to complete verification dossiers on the remaining bridges by
December 31 this year so that they could be among the RoK-bankrolled projects
in fiscal year 2016.
The Ministry of
Transport estimates that upgrades to the 22 target bridges will be funded
with roughly US$100 million by the RoK Government and a corresponding sum of
nearly VND640 billion (about US$30 million) by the Vietnamese Government.
Danang
seals cooperation agreements with NGOs
The central city of
Danang will shake hands with non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to
implement three projects in the city between 2016 and 2018 as committed in
agreements signed during a workshop in Hanoi on October 27.
The projects focus
on urban development in Son Tra district, eye care for students, and sponsor
programmes for underprivileged children and those with disabilities across
the city.
From 2010 to 2015,
NGOs pledged around US$7 million annually to realise projects in Danang,
75-80% of which has been disbursed across the fields of health care,
education, poverty reduction, assistance to disabled people, climate change
adaptation, and natural disasters risks mitigation.
Vice Chairman of
the municipal People’s Committee Dang Viet Dung highlighted the growing
cooperative ties between Danang and NGOs over the past six years, noting that
the city has expanded its collaboration with 153 international societies and
NGOs.
The workshop is
expected to create a new step in the cooperation between NGOs and the central
city in the 2016-2020 period, especially utilizing effectively the capital
resources from NGOs to maintain local sustainable growth, he added.
Representatives
from participating NGOs hailed the local active coordination and support,
adding that they hope to receive more favourable conditions to carry out
projects in the city.
The workshop was
organised by the Danang municipal People’s Committee and the Vietnam Union of
Friendship Organisations, with the participation of nearly 100 NGOs
representatives.
Thanh Hoa
to construct boarding schools
Thanh Hoa Province
will spend VND199 billion (nearly US$9 million) to build new boarding schools
and to upgrade old ones for students in its mountainous districts.
The provincial
People's Committee recently approved the project that will be launched next
month and completed by 2020. Under the project, the boarding schools as well
as the kitchen, dining room, toilets and clean water facilities in the
buildings will be upgraded.
The project will
benefit students of 47 secondary schools and high schools in Thanh Hoa's
seven mountainous districts of Muong Lat, Quan Son, Quan Hoa and Ba Thuoc, as
well as Thuong Xuan, Nhu Xuan and Lang Chanh.
Each room in the
boarding schools will be designed to accommodate 10 students (with separate
quarters for girls and boys), with 4sq.m for each student and bunk beds.
The boarding
schools aim to help students who live far away from school. Many have to walk
10km every day from their house to reach their schools.
The province has only
19 schools with boarding for students from mountainous districts. Many
students have to set up tents or temporary houses near their schools to be
able to attend school every day.
Surge in
number of VN workers going abroad
The Department of
Overseas Labour (DOLAB) under the labour, invalids and social affairs
ministry said the target of sending 90,000 guest workers abroad in 2015 has
been fulfilled.
As many as 99,415
workers were sent abroad to work in the first 10 months of this year, a 9.1
per cent increase compared with the same period last year, the DOLAB said.
In October alone,
the number of guest workers who went abroad reached 8,857, of which 2,878
were women.
Chinese Taiwan is
the top destination for Vietnamese workers with 4,415 labourers going there,
followed by Japan (with 2,112 workers), the Republic of Korea, Malaysia and
Saudi Arabia.
The signing of
labour co-operation agreements with partners during the period opened up
opportunities for Vietnamese workers, the DOLAB said.
The labour, invalids
and social affairs ministry has signed a memorandum of understanding on
sending Vietnamese workers S. Korea under the employment permit system and
has also struck deals with Thailand and Malaysia.
Viet Nam and
Germany have signed a letter of intent regarding Vietnamese citizens working
in Germany as caregivers. This is a good opportunity to increase the number
of Vietnamese workers going to that country to between 500 and 700 per
year.
World
Vision to fund Da Nang development projects
World Vision and the
local government signed a partnership agreement yesterday in Ha Noi.
With a total budget
of nearly US$800,000, World Vision will implement four major projects in Son
Tra District in the 2015-18 first phase. The projects are child care and
education; future opportunities for youths; child sponsorship and protection
and resilience to climate change and disaster risks.
Accordingly, the
organisation will organise a series of activities, such as training sessions
on healthcare knowledge and skills, child nutrition and protection for health
workers, collaborators, teachers and mothers, besides caregivers; improving
nutrition of children under five; and providing youngsters in the 19-24 age
group who live in difficult conditions with vocational training and supporting
them to start their own business.
The second phase
(2018 – 2023) will be carried out based on the first phase's qualitative
assessment results by late fiscal year 2018.
World Vision began
working in Da Nang in 1992. It has implemented a long-term development
programme (2000 – 2016) in Hoa Vang District that has helped more than
100,000 local people, including 15,000 children, in improving their living
conditions in terms of healthcare, nutrition, education and livelihood,
besides capacity building.
Over the last few
years, Da Nang City has promoted co-operation with different foreign NGOs.
From 2010 to 2015, these NGOs pledged to provide the city about US$7 million
each year for their projects in the city related to education, poverty
reduction, helping the disabled and climate change response.
Ha Noi to
build Hong River water plant
The Ha Noi
authority yesterday announced a plan to build a new water plant in a district
on its outskirts, to supply water to the residents of the area.
As per the plan,
the plant will use the water of the Hong (Red) River and will be located in
Dan Phuong District's Lien Hong Commune. The water pipeline will run through
five communes in Dan Phuong District, six communes in North Tu Liem District
and one commune in Tay Ho District.
The Ha Noi Water
Limited Company (Hawaco) said the plant would cost more than VND3.6 trillion
(US$162 million), which would be sourced from the enterprise, organisations
and individuals.
The project will be
implemented in two stages. The first stage will be completed in 2018, and is
expected to allow the supply of 150,000cu.m of clean water daily. The second
stage is scheduled to be completed by 2020 to raise the plant's production
capacity to 300,000cu.m a day.
When it becomes operational,
the plant will provide water to residents of areas to the west of Ring Road
3, north of National Highway 32 in North Tu Liem District and Dan Phuong
District. These areas have reportedly been facing regular water shortages.
The project is
scheduled to begin early next year.
Trinh Kim Giang,
deputy head of the Hong River Surface Water JSC, said the technology that
would be used by the plant would ensure water quality as per the health
ministry's criteria.
In reply to
questions on the quality of pipelines, Director of the municipal Department
of Construction Le Van Duc said the pipelines would be made of plastic cast
iron and installed 1.5m below the surface, instead of 6m under the surface as
the current pipeline of the Da River.
In case the new pipeline
breaks, the repair work will not take much time.
The pipeline design
has been inspected and approved by the ministry, Duc said.
The Da River
pipeline-- the main pipeline supplying Da River water to people -- became
operational in 1997. It has broken 15 times since 2012. Tens of thousands of
households suffered water shortages for days on each occasion. The
construction of the plant is seen as a move by Ha Noi to ease water shortages
and ensure a long-term water source for the city.
Poor not
getting free health insurance
Many people in the
central Binh Dinh province's My Chau commune have yet to receive free health
insurance despite their locality being eligible for free coverage.
Deputy Chairman of
My Chau People's Committee Le Trung Kien said Phu My district's My Chau
commune is a mountainous area that was categorised as impoverished in the
period of 2014-2015 in accordance with the Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung's
Decision 2405/QD-TTg dated December 10, 2013.
The Decree
62/2009/ND-CP issued by the Government said that poor people and ethnic
minorities living in selected mountainous provinces designated as
impoverished localities should be given financial support from the State
budget to buy health insurance.
However, people
living in My Chau commune have yet to be provided with the funds. Tran Minh
Chung, a resident in Chau Truc hamlet said his wife suffering from goitre had
spent a large amount of money on treatment as she hadn't got health
insurance.
Another Chau Truc
resident Bui Van Loan, said he had to pay for his children's health insurance
from his own pocket. Other members of Loan's family are still waiting for
free health insurance.
"Farming is
just enough for us to make ends meet and pay for our children's tuition fees,
I can not afford health insurance," Loan said.
Head of Chau Truc
hamlet Bui Xuan Bo said the residents complained many times about this in
local meetings but every time they were told they had to "wait for
higher authorities".
"2015 comes to
an end soon, it is not sure that My Chau commune will be in the list of poor
localities next year. So who will be responsible for the rights of the poor
people?," Bo said.
Kien said the
People's Committee in September sent a report to Phu My district's Division
of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs, hoping to resolve the problem but
there has been no response.
"About 70 per
cent of My Chau people have to pay for health insurance from their own
pocket, the rest are still waiting for support," Kien said.
According to the
Deputy Head of Phu My district's Division of Labour, Invalids and Social
Affairs Nguyen Thi Thanh Nga, the division had not received any instructions
about the support for My Chau commune from higher-levelled authorities so
they can not arbitrarily give support to the commune.
"If I receive
instructions from higher authorities, I will immediately ask the My Chau's
People Committee to make the list of beneficiaries and provide people free
health insurance," Nga said.
Vice Director of
the Binh Dinh Province's Department of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs,
Phan Dinh Hoa said the commune's People's Committee is responsible for
building the list of beneficiaries of health insurance support.
"The
provincial department is only responsible for giving instructions to the
commune so it is the commune's People's Committee that are to blame for the
slow procedure," Hoa said.
VN to push
for public finance modernisation
Viet Nam is
committed to building good governance, improving public financial management
and fighting corruption, according to eputy minister of finance Huynh Quang
Hai.
"Enhancing the
efficiency and effectiveness of limited resources to foster economic growth
and improve public services requires an effective and comprehensive public finance
management system," said Hai during a ceremony yesterday to kick start a
project aimed at modernising the Government's public finance management.
The EU Public
Finance Modernisation Project (EU-PFMO) aimed to support the Vietnamese
Ministry of Finance to enhance its capacity in public finance management as
well as to support macroeconomic stability and the strengthening of the
government's ability to implement its economic and social policies through
the efficient, effective and transparent planning and execution of the state
budget.
Hai added that the
Government must strive to improve institutional mechanisms, law
implementation, supervision, inspection and auditing to ensure that resources
are used appropriately, effectively and in a transparent manner.
"The
improvement of public finance is even more demanding as Viet Nam is becoming
more integrated in the international economy," said EU Minister
Counsellor and Head of Co-operation and Development Section, Alejandro
Montalban Carrasco.
He said that it
would play an increasingly important role with the new generation of Free
Trade Agreements (FTA), such as the EU-Viet Nam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA)
and Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
He noted that the
implementation of said commitments poses many challenges, particularly to
improve the business climate and to reduce and remove obstacles to
international trade and investment.
The EU-PFMO
project, which was signed between the Government of Viet Nam and the
Delegation of the European Union to Viet Nam in December last year, aimed to
contribute to the alleviation of poverty and inclusive growth across the
country.
Da Nang
branch planned for VNASMA
Viet Nam
Association for Supporting Unexploded Ordnance/Mine Action (VNASMA) in
co-operation with the Da Nang's People's Committee has announced plans to
establish a Da Nang Association branch.
Bombs and mines
left from wartime have killed over 42,000 people and injured another 62,000,
according to the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs.
The amount of
unexploded bombs and mines is estimated to be around 800,000 tonnes. As many
as 9,200 communes are contaminated by unexploded ordnances, accounting for 21
per cent the country's area.
1,500
children receive free heart examinations
Children in
northern Hoa Binh Province received free heart examination by the province's
General Hospital and the Ha Noi-based Hospital E's Cardiovascular Centre last
weekend.
Of the 1,500
children examined, doctors found heart problems in 76 of the children, 40 of
which may require heart surgery.
Hospital E director
Le Ngoc Thanh said that the rate of children with heart problems was high.
A preliminary study
conducted by the provincial hospital found high rates of innate heart
problems among children and that many failed to receive timely intervention
and treatment due to financial difficulties, he said.
The free health
examination in Hoa Binh is part of the Heart for Children charity organised
by Viettel and Viet Nam Television (VTV).
Since 2011, the
programme has offered free checkups for over 20,000 children in poor
provinces and diagnosed almost 500 children with innate heart problems. It
has also raised funds to pay for several heart surgeries.
Heart
disease is major cause of adolescent death
Heart disease
accounts for 30 per cent of total deaths caused by non-transmitted diseases
in Viet Nam, according to recently published statistics.
The Viet Nam
National Congress of Interventional Cardiology was held by the Health
Ministry and Interventional Cardiology Association Branch on Sunday in Ha
Noi.
Cardiovascular
disease and cancer are among the major causes of adolescent deaths in the
country. The congress said that many of the deaths were attributed to a lack
of timely intervention.
Rare
macaque handed over to Quang Binh Park
A resident of this
province yesterday voluntarily handed over a bear macaque, a species listed
as vulnerable by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, to a
national park.
Mai Van Dinh, who
lives in Bo Trach District, handed over the mammal to Phong Nha - Ke Bang
National Park in the central province after keeping it captive at home for a
long period.
The park's
veterinary staff are taking care of the macaque, weighing about 5kg, to
improve its health and to help it regain its natural instincts before it is
released into the wild.
Bear macaques, with
the scientific name Macaca arctoides, are native to southwest China,
northeast India, Bangladesh and South East Asia and are vulnerable to hunting
and habitat loss from deforestation.
In Viet Nam, the
hunting, caging, killing and transport, besides trade of wild animals are
prohibited by law. However, some residents keep mammals as pets at
home.
Urgent
action needed to offset Mekong Delta climate change
The Mekong Delta,
one of the most vulnerable deltas in the world in regard to climate change,
must begin to take urgent measures to deal with the continuing consequences
of changing weather patterns, experts at a seminar held yesterday in Can Tho
urged.
The seminar on
urban planning and climate change adaptation was organised by the Urban
Development Department under the Ministry of Construction and Can Tho City's
People's Committee in Can Tho City.
As temperatures
increase, storms, floods and landslides are occurring more regularly under
the impact of global climate change. With such change, creating cities
resilient to climate change is critically important.
During the seminar,
experts and officials discussed climate-change adaptation in Can Tho City and
other areas in the Mekong Delta.
Experts said that
unplanned urbanisation would enhance the negative impact of climate change.
Viet Nam is one of
five countries and the Mekong Delta one of three deltas in the world most
vulnerable to climate change.
Between 2015 and
2030, floods are expected to be a major problem in Can Tho and the Mekong
Delta.
Besides landslides
and clean water insufficiency, the consequences of drought will affect the
economy and people's health as well.
Dao Anh Dung,
deputy chairman of Can Tho City's People's Committee, said about 66 per cent
of the city was now urban, and the infrastructure had been built under
current living standards.
However, pollution
and floods had threatened the sustainable development of the city and delta,
he added.
During the seminar,
10 reports about climate change and urban zoning in Can Tho and the Mekong
Delta were presented.
New-style
rural areas prioritise underprivileged communes
Deputy Prime
Minister Vu Van Ninh asked ministries and branches to quadruple central
budget allocations to disadvantaged border, island and coastal communes for
the building of new-style rural areas in 2016.
Speaking at a
meeting of the Steering Committee for the National Target Programme on
building new-style rural areas in Hanoi on October 27, the official said
adjustments to the programme’s criteria needed to be characterised as
compulsory and flexible.
He required
relevant ministries and branches to issue documents guiding the
implementation of the criteria.
The Ministries of
Planning and Investment, Finance, and Agriculture and Development were tasked
with reviewing resources for the programme.
Localities were not
allowed to mobilise public financial contributions during the process, and
those involved in building new-style rural areas would receive financial
assistance to their incomes, Vinh said.
The Deputy PM told
ministries to study how many new-style communes in mountainous provinces
needed.
He said the country
aimed to recognise half of communes nationwide as new-style rural areas
within the next six years.
The national target
programme on new-style rural areas, initiated by the Government in 2010, sets
19 criteria on socio-economic development, politics and defence, aiming to
boost the development of rural regions.
The list of
criteria includes the development of infrastructure, the improvement of
production capacity, environmental protection and the promotion of cultural
values.
As many as 185
communes achieved all 19 criteria, and nearly 600 others met between 15 and
18 criteria. On average, each commune fulfilled 8.47 criteria compared with
4.7 in 2011.
Red River's
food street growing in popularity
A food street by
the Red River in Hanoi is becoming popular among local people for its nice
views and good food.
Ngoc Lam Food Street
is just 100 metres from Ngoc Thuy Street, between the Chuong Duong and Long
Bien bridges. There are some 20 restaurants, and the main dishes are
freshwater fish, local grilled food and traditional wines.
With the view of
the bridges and cool air by the river, the restaurants are popular at night
and the weekend. Large spaces and good views also enable these restaurants to
provide outdoor party services.
Locals have known
about the restaurants for some time, but the secret has leaked out and more
city dwellers are discovering the area. Said one local, who asked not to be
named, "I'm not sure I want to share them with outsiders."
Hai, a customer
from Ba Dinh District, said, "I prefer the fresh air here than crowded
rooms. The food is good and the prices reasonable."
Representative of
the management board said the area went into operation in 2011 and has grown
busy in evenings and on national days, such as Women's Day on October 20,
when customers had to be turned away because eateries were overbooked by office
parties.
VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/TT/TN/Dantri
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Thứ Năm, 29 tháng 10, 2015
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