Social News 19/11
Government
officials to enjoy nine-day Tet
The Ministry of
Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs yesterday officially announced that
government officials and workers would have a nine-day holiday for the
upcoming Tet (Lunar New Year).
The holidays fall
between February 6 and February 14, 2016. The ministry said government
employees would not be required to work over the weekend before the holiday
to compensate for the four additional days off because four days of the Tet
holiday adjoin the weekend.
One tonne
of food with unknown origins destroyed
The market
management teams in northern Quang Ninh province yesterday destroyed more
than 1 tonne of food that had unclear origins.
Earlier, the
management team in Hoanh Bo District, working with other teams, seized three
cars transporting many kinds of products with unknown origins, including
pigeons, fish, grilled cuttlefish, peach and jelly.
All goods were
destroyed as the owners did not have any papers to prove the origin of their
goods.
Last week, the
provincial Customs Department also arrested the drivers of two cars
transporting 16,000 chickens and 76 tonnes of coal of unclear origin.
The goods were
seized by customs officers because the drivers did not display legal
documents for these goods. In conformance with existing regulations, all
illegal goods were destroyed.
Japanese
Volunteers Group donates wheelchairs to handicapped
Dozens of
wheelchairs, donated by the Japanese Volunteers Group, were handed to
disabled people in northern Thai Binh province this morning.
At the handover
ceremony this morning, the first of the 30 out of over 150 wheelchairs were
granted to disabled people in Dong Hung District by the group and Viet Nam
Red Cross.
The envoy of the
Japanese embassy in Viet Nam said he highly appreciated the activities of the
group in the past, and hoped that difficulties in the life of the disabled
people in Viet Nam would be improved, thanks to the help from the group.
The group has
granted more than 600 wheelchairs to the handicapped in a few provinces
across the country.
Volunteers Group is
a non-government organisation of Japan which has sent wheelchairs to overseas
children in over 20 countries.
Ha Noi
stores up essential goods for Tet holiday
Ha Noi People's
Committee has advanced 10 enterprises VNĐ236 billion (US$105,000) to stock
essential commodities for the upcoming New Year and Tet (Lunar New Year)
holiday, a representative of the committee said.
The goods include
rice, pork, chicken, eggs, seafood, cooking oil, and vegetables.
This aims at
stabilising prices and ensuring the adequate supply of essential goods to
meet increased demand during the Tet holiday, the People's Committee said.
The advance will be
implemented from October this year to April next year with no interest rate.
Besides, the city's
Department of Industry and Trade has launched a promotion campaign. Customers
purchasing goods at promotional stores will receive discounts of between 10
and 50 per cent.
One person
dies in crane collapse
One person was
killed and another was injured when a 10m-tall crane suddenly collapsed this
noon at a construction site in the northern Hai Phong City's Le Hong Phong
Street.
The mangled body of
the victim was found after the accident. A building of the Bank for
Investment and Development of Viet Nam is being constructed at the site.
The local police
are investigating the case.
Hotlines to
receive complaints on banned substance use
Hotline numbers
have just been launched to receive complaints about hygiene and food safety
violations, especially the use of banned substances in animal feed.
It is part of the
efforts being taken by the agriculture and rural development ministry to
combat the use of sabultamol, clenbuterol and vat yellow, which are believed
to be harmful for animals and people.
The authorities
will keep the names of the informers confidential.
Once the complaint
is verified and confirmed, the informers will be offered rewards ranging from
VNĐ1 million to VNĐ5 million ($44 to $220)
The hotline numbers
are 08042526 or 0917808113.
Suspected
food poisoning affects more than 100 workers
More than 100
employees of a footwear firm in Bien Hoa City's Long Binh Tan Ward in the
southern Dong Nai Province were hospitalised last night for suspected food
poisoning.
Pham Van Thanh, one
of the workers of Chanh Ich Ltd Co, said some time after they ate rice, eggs
and meat for dinner at their workplace, they started getting headache,
stomach pain, vomiting and dizziness. Some of the workers fainted.
Thanh said he saw
the rice was stale, but many workers still tried to eat it to resume their
work.
The affected
workers were taken to a health centre for first-aid, and then transferred to
the medical centre of an industrial park. Some workers were transferred to
Dong Nai General Hospital after they showed symptoms of serious food
poisoning.
About 30 of them
were given emergency aid for chest pain, convulsions, difficulty in breathing
and vomiting by 8.30pm.
Dr Ngo Duc Tuan,
deputy director of Dong Nai General Hospital, said the examination of the
workers showed symptoms of food poisoning.
At 9pm, doctors of
the hospital and the health centres near the company were still giving
emergency aid to dozens of workers.
Some workers were
discharged later in the evening, while the rest were being kept under
observation.
All workers have
been reportedly discharged from hospital today afternoon.
The case is being
investigated further.
Two
arrested for drug trafficking
Lang Son border
guards, in a joint operation with the Anti-Drug Crime Police, have detained
two persons for allegedly smuggling 10kg of drugs from China to Viet Nam.
Be Thi Nem, 33, and
Hoang Van Phong, 39, from the northern Cao Bang and Lang Son provinces,
respectively, were arrested at Huu Nghi border gate in Cao Loc District,
while carrying 10 nylon bags of ecstasy pills on Tuesday.
The two persons
said they had purchased the drugs in China and were returning to Viet Nam to
sell them.
The police are
investigating the case further.
Hanoi works
to ensure enough water for agricultural production
The Hanoi
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development has instructed irrigation
companies and the People’s Committees of districts and towns to implement
measures to cope with prolonged drought caused by El Nino.
Irrigation companies
were asked to implement drought-prevention plans for each area such as
dredging canals; repairing and maintaining electric equipment; getting
equipment ready to establish field bumping stations; and holding water in
rivers, lakes, pools and lowland areas.
According to the
National Centre for Hydro-meteorological Forecasting, El Nino is likely to
continue into 2016 and become one of the longest the region has seen in the
past 60 years, influencing water supplies as far in the future as the
Winter-Spring crop in 2015-2016.
Under the influence
of El Nino, since the beginning of this year, Hanoi has seen a considerably
reduced amount of rain from January to October 31, at 1,377.9mm – 177.5mm
lower than the average over many years and 212.9mm less than 2014.
Hanoi has 95
reservoirs with a combined volume of 200 million cu.m, but at the end of
October, reservoirs were only at 60 percent of their designed capacity.
Japan helps Quang Ninh treat wastewater
Northern Quang Ninh
province launched a wastewater treatment project supported by Japan on
November 16.
The move was marked
by a memorandum of understanding signed by local authorities and a
representative from the Japan International Cooperation Agency.
Under the pact,
between now and April 2018, 20 bio-toilets will be installed on tour boats
and public areas in the locality. Meanwhile, 11 New Johka
wastewater-processing tools will start operating in Van Don district.
Provided by
Japanese firms, these facilities will be monitored for 14 months for
technical adjustments in line with local conditions.
If successfully
implemented, the project is anticipated to cut polluted materials in
wastewater by half.
Previously, the
project had been piloted in Quang Ninh from October 2013 to February 2014,
with seven bio-toilets and seven New Johka devices installed, yielding
positive outcomes.
Youths
encouraged to work for sustainable development of seas
Within the
framework of the ongoing 5th East Asian Seas (EAS) Congress, the 4th EAS
Youth Forum (YF4) themed “Charting the future we want: Engaging young
champions for the ocean beyond 2015” kicked off in the central city of Da
Nang on November 17.
Bringing together
75 young leaders from nine countries in the EAS region, namely Cambodia,
China, Indonesia, Laos, Philippines, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, Timor
Leste and Vietnam, YF4 will empower young generations to be champions for the
oceans and coasts of the region.
The event features
interactions between young leaders and innovators in youth-led environmental
movements and organisations for peer-to-peer learning discussions,
team-building and creative sessions, and activities to enhance the youth’s
skills on project development and management, fund-raising, use of social media
and science and cross-cultural communication.
In the led-off
session, the talent pool of young champions was introduced to the role of the
Partnerships in Environmental Management for the Seas of East Asia (PEMSEA)
in promoting the sustainable development of the East Asian seas, along with
the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
These will serve as
a framework for drafting a collective youth commitment to achieving the SDGs,
which will be embodied in a Da Nang Youth Declaration. The week’s activities
aim to provide the youth with the skills needed to generate implementable
project proposals for the sustainable development of coasts and oceans in the
region.
On the sidelines of
the 5th EAS Congress, an exhibition themed “Building the blue economy and
connecting partners” is being held with the aim of providing visitors an
insight into the regional countries’ efforts and achievements in protecting
the marine environment and developing the sea-based economy. The exhibition
will run until November 21.
Held for the first
time in Vietnam from November 16-21, the triennial congress is a forum for
participants to exchange academic research results and management experience
for the sustainable development of the coasts and oceans, especially the seas
in East Asia.
The congress also
provides a platform for organisations and stakeholders in the EAS region to
determine crucial goals, commitment to establish the Agenda for sustainable
development of the seas in East Asia, approve new targets of PEMSEA after
2015, and adopt the implementation of the plan for a self-sustained PEMSEA.
Antimicrobial
Resistance Week opens in Vietnam
A communication
week on preventing antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is underway across Vietnam
from November 16-22.
The event, the
first of its kind in Vietnam, was organised by the Ministry of Health and the
World Health Organisation (WHO) in Vietnam.
A series of
activities was launched in 63 provinces and cities on November 16 to respond
to the AMR, including conferences and workshops on antimicrobial resistance
prevention, and meetings in all localities and medical units.
A Facebook fan page
named “AMR Week 2015 Vietnam” was established to increase public awareness
about antimicrobial resistance and commitment to antibiotic usage
responsibility.
Director of the
Medical Examination and Treatment Management Department under the Ministry of
Health Luong Ngoc Khue said the week aims to draw more attention from the
Party, Government, social organisations and health agencies to programmes for
antimicrobial resistance prevention.
It also raises
public awareness about implementing antimicrobial resistance prevention
solutions in the health, agriculture and breeding sectors, contributing to
easing the burden on national health, the economy and society, he added.
Health
Minister hails EU’s support
The European Union
(EU) has always been an important partner of the Ministry of Health (MoH)
over the past 20 years, Health Minister Nguyen Thi Kim Tien said on November
16 in Hanoi.
Addressing a
ceremony marking the 20th anniversary of the Vietnam-EU cooperation for
improved health care, the minister said the two sides have worked towards a
common goal: a health care system toward equity, efficiency and development,
thus improving quality of care for meeting the growing and diverse needs of
all Vietnamese people.
She hailed the
support the EU has provided to Vietnam’s programmes and projects on enhancing
the capability of delivering health care services and on developing,
promulgating and implementing relevant policies at levels.
The minister cited
some examples of effective EU-funded projects, such as the project on health
care system development, the health care project for the poor in the Northern
mountainous and Central Highlands provinces, and project on enhancing capabilities
and performance of the health sector.
She announced that
the EU has decided to provide 114 million EUR to fund the second phase of the
Health Sector Policy Support Programme. The first phase of the Programme was
implemented in the 2010-2014 period with a total budget of 39.5 million EUR.
For his part, Neven
Mimica, EU Commissioner for International Cooperation and Development praised
the achievements Vietnam has made in implementing EU-funded projects on
improving health care services’ quality.
The EU, including
the EU delegation to Vietnam and EU Member States, was delighted to
contribute to the attainment of the health care-related Millennium
Development Goals in Vietnam, he affirmed, highlighting the enhancement of
health care services for the poor and the plunge in the infant mortality
ratio and malaria infections.
On the occasion,
the book “20 years of Vietnam-EU Cooperation to Improve Health Care” by the
EU Technical Assistance Fund made its debut. The book describes the
activities implemented and results achieved in improving health care between
1995 and 2015 with support from the EU and its member states.
EAS
workshops focus on climate change, coastal management
A series of
workshops discussing issues related to managing risks in climate change,
integrated coastal management and scaling up investments in the blue economy
took place on November 17 as part of the 5th East Asian Seas (EAS) Congress
being held in the central city of Da Nang.
Prior to joining
the workshops, panelists attended a plenary session themed “A decade of
partnerships in sustainable development of the seas of East Asia: Synergies
and achievements” under the chair of Vietnamese Vice Minister of Natural
Resources and Environment Chu Pham Ngoc Hien.
The session
explored the progress and achievements in coastal and ocean governance since
the signing of the Putrajaya Declaration adopting the Sustainable Development
Strategy for the Seas of East Asia (SDS-SEA) in 2003 and looked into new
challenges and international commitments, and their impacts on important
coastal and ocean sectors and economies in the region.
In his
presentation, Vice Minister Hien stressed that, with rich natural resources,
high biodiversity and important marine ecological systems, the East Asian
seas have provided goods and services for the socio-economic development of
the regional countries.
However, like other
areas in the world, natural resources in the East Asian seas, especially
fishery resources, are being depleted and environmental pollution is
increasing, while the seas are also suffering from many natural hazards, he
said, adding that the problems are getting worse due to the impacts of
climate change.
According to the
Vice Minister, solving all these problems requires an effective ocean
governance mechanism. For this reason, the role of the Partnerships in
Environmental Management for the Seas of East Asia (PEMSEA) should be
promoted as it has strengthened the closer cooperation between the regional
countries in settling issues regarding the use and exploitation of marine
natural resources, coastal and ocean environment, especially cross-border or
regional ocean environment problems.
He highlighted
achievements since the implementation of the SDS-SEA, which have helped the
regional countries enhance the integrated management of oceans and coasts in
a large scale, reinforce cooperation among United Nations bodies, regional
governance mechanisms, international non-governmental organisations (NGOs)
and donors, while gradually developing the blue economy.
In regards to
Vietnam, Vice Minister Hien said, by implementing the SDS-SEA and with the
help from international friends and its internal efforts, the country
established a system of organisations from the central government to
provincial administrations with the mandate of undertaking the integrated and
united management of seas and islands and a gradually completed system of
policies, laws and regulations for this purposes.
At the later
workshop entitled “Managing risks in climate change and disasters in the seas
of East Asia”, participants reviewed the progress made, including the
challenges, to advance climate change adaptation (CCA) and disaster risk and
reduction (DRR) in the seas of East Asia.
The two-day
workshop will showcase on-the-ground good practices, working models and
innovative solutions and highlighted how an integrated approach has been
helping local governments to adapt, prepare and respond to climate change and
disaster risks. It will also tackle the need for a strategic framework for
CCA/DRR in the EAS region, and how its implementation can be facilitated and
scaled up.
At the workshop on
“Scaling up integrated coastal management (ICM): Innovations and impacts at
local, national and regional levels,” panelists focused discussions on ICM
applications at the local level, national and regional levels, and the
contributions that ICM has made to improving governance and management of
coastal and ocean areas and related resources, as well as sustainable
economic growth and social benefits.
As scheduled,
during the course of the two-day event, they also consider the
transferability of innovations and lessons learned for managing marine and
coastal areas and resources at the national and regional levels to other
sustainable development priorities and programmes in the EAS region, as well
as to other regions of the world.
Meanwhile, a
workshop on “Application of knowledge management in scaling up public and
private sector investments in a blue economy” reviewed the application and
benefits derived from the products and services in various projects.
It then delved into
the potential use of such innovations in other projects and by other sectors,
and how a regional knowledge management platform can serve to improve access
to, and scale up investments in, good practices.
Palliative care eases burden on healthcare system
After being
diagnosed with late-stage ovarian cancer, a 50-year-old native of Binh Thuan
Province went for regular chemotherapy sessions that left her without
appetite and debilitated by nausea.
"It was
terrible for my mother in the last years of her life. Now she has died,"
said the woman's daughter, who declined to be named.
Dr Than Ha Ngoc
The, head of HCM City University Medical Centre's geriatric and palliative
care ward, said that she had a number of relatives who also suffered greatly
after late-stage cancer diagnoses.
She believes that
patients like her family members would profit from palliative care, which she
argues focuses on increasing their comfort and spares them from suffering
unnecessarily painful treatments.
According to the
World Health Organisation, the main goal of palliative care is to treat pain
and other psychosocial and spiritual problems to improve the quality of life
for patients with chronic diseases or late-stage cancers, and their families.
In Viet Nam, about
150,000 diagnoses of cancer occur annually with 70 per cent of them in the
last stage, according to Viet Nam Cancer Society.
Of the 40 million
people worldwide who could benefit from palliative care because of cancer and
other chronic diseases, only 14 per cent receive such care.
The proportion is
even lower in Viet Nam, a developing country with rapid urbanisation and
increasingly unhealthy lifestyles.
The Ministry of
Health tried to encourage the practice by issuing palliative care guidelines
for cancer and AIDS patients in 2006, but so far only 13 hospitals have
palliative care wards or have implemented programmes. HCM City Oncology
Hospital, University Medical Centre and Ca Mau General Hospital are among the
few who have.
Viet Nam ranks 58th
on end-of-life care on the Economist Intelligence Unit's 2015 Quality of
Death Index, which ranks palliative care across the world. The UK ranks first
in the index; it integrates palliative care throughout its national health
service. "There is even evidence to suggest that palliative care not
only enhances quality of life in some cases, such as lung cancer and
end-stage breathlessness, it can even extend life," the index report
said.
The report also
said that such an approach to care eases the burden on healthcare systems,
recommending the practice be adopted worldwide.
Dr Ronald Sand of
Harvard Medical School's Centre for Palliative Care said that modern medicine
had helped cure and prolong life, however finding a cure was not always
possible. Caring for suffering and not just finding cures was vital.
Patients in
palliative care are told how long they have to live and what will happen
before they die, helping them prepare for death and die in better spirits.
At HCM City
University Medical Centre, The said doctors and nurses must be trained to
communicate with these patients.
The palliative ward
at the hospital has 30 beds available for patients in their last stage.
However, The said that ideally palliative care should be provided in
patients' homes. The ward plans to start a programme in the near future.
At the HCM City
Oncology Hospital, an at-home care model was started in 2011. Similar models
are also used at a few other hospitals in Viet Nam.
To Minh Nghi, head
of the oncology ward at Ca Mau Hospital, put his palliative care training in
England to good use. He has trained Ca Mau province health officials in
palliative care at ward and commune health centres, who also go to patients'
homes.
The service reduces
the burden of travel costs on patients and lessens the workload and space
needs on hospitals.
"Nearly 50 per
cent of oncology ward patients [at Ca Mau Hospital] are from rural
areas," he said.
Because of an
insufficient number of beds, patients with incurable diseases were discharged
from the hospital. With the option of palliative care at home, the patients
could spend the remaining days of their life with family members, Nghi said.
The hugs
that keep on giving
Every weekend over
the past 10 months, Nguyen Bao Ngoc has been walking around the Sword Lake in
Hanoi, dressed up as Doraemon, a popular Japanese comic book character that
is half cat half robot.
Stretching his arms
out, he tries to hug as many strangers as possible. Some stop to hug him back
before putting money into one of the boxes that his friends are holding. Some
others walk faster and avoid eye contact with him.
Ngoc, 23, says he
started the “Hug Me” (Om toi di) campaign in February, inspired by the Free
Hugs social movement in Australia.
The difference is
his hugs are not free, because he wants to raise money to help children in
poor and remote areas around the country.
The senior college
student who is studying to become a TV reporter has been doing charity work
for three years. In one of his most successful attempts, he worked as axe om
motorbike taxi driver in his free time and donated all the money he could
earn to poor families in his hometown in Quang Binh Province.
But “Hug Me,” Ngoc
says, is his favorite because with it, he can get the attention of his peers.
“Young people my
age have been more into social media than real life. We may cry over a sad
story on Facebook but when we witness the same story in real life, we can be
indifferent.
“I want to live and
love in the real world, not the virtual world.”
As hugging in
public is not very common in Vietnam, Ngoc said he puts on costume so that
strangers will not feel uncomfortable. Doraemon the cat is in fact famous for
its friendliness and kindness. Sometimes, for a change, he also dresses as a
bee or a puppy.
Many students who
gave him a hug donated more than VND5,000, which is what he hopes to receive,
allowing the campaign to earn between US$50 and US$200 each week. Some also
brought old clothes and books.
Ngoc has organized
two trips to bring gifts and food to children in Quang Binh and the northern
mountainous province of Yen Bai this year. The third has been planned for
December.
Ngoc has been
diagnosed with first stage bone marrow cancer but he says his condition is
"stable."
He says he does not
want to be defined by his illness. Having cancer is not the motivation for
him to help others.
“I’d do it anyway.
I want people to see me as a student doing charity work, not a cancer patient
doing charity work."
His next "Hug
Me" session will be held between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. on November 20 by the
Sword Lake in downtown Hanoi.
Quang Ninh
plans to reduce CO2 gas
Quang Ninh Province
is looking to reduce 7.02 million tonnes of greenhouse gases by 2020 under
its Green Growth Plan by 2020.
The provincial
Planning and Investment Department and the Japan International Co-operation
Agency made the announcement in Ha Long City yesterday.
The reduction is
equal to 22.5 per cent of the total volume of greenhouse gas discharged in
the province for 2010.
The province also
planned to force all industrial parks to have standard wastewater treatment
systems and half of the manufacturers to apply clean technologies by 2020.
Deputy Director of
the department Hoang Danh Son said the general objective of the plan was to
drive the province into reaching sustainable economic development.
Vice Chairman of
the provincial People's Committee Dang Huy Hau said the province recognised
that developing heavy industries, including coal mining, posed huge threats
to the environment.
Thus, the province
integrated environment protection goals into socio-economic development in
order to conduct them soon, he said.
Hau said that the
province was also focussing on protecting the environment in the Ha Long Bay.
In a related
movement, the provincial authority and JICA signed a memorandum of
understanding (MoU) on Monday.
Following the MoU,
20 bio-toilets would be installed on tourism cruises in the Ha Long Bay along
with 11 waste-water treatment plants in Van Don Island District by April 2018
to improve the quality of water in the bay.
English
contest finds winner
The finale of
Echoes 2015, an English-speaking contest organised by Ha Noi University's English
Club, has been held.
The six top
contestants competed in three sections: a talent show, a role-play challenge
and a debate. In the final debate, four students were divided into two groups
to debate on different topics.
Nguyen Phuong Thao,
a student from Nguyen Hue High School, earned the highest score and became
the winner of the seventh Echoes.
In its recruitment
process, the organisation received more than 150 registration forms and 31
videos from students in Ha Noi.
Asian
Superstar title goes to Hung
Singer Dam Vinh
Hung held a press conference in HCM City on Monday to announce his new Asian
Superstar title awarded by the Asian Star Awards.
Lee Sun Ki,
representative of Asian Models Association (AMA), attended the press
conference. He said that the award came after a vote held among the
Vietnamese community living in South Korea.
The award, he said,
recognises Hung's achievements in music and contribution to charitable and
social activities for the past two decades.
Hung expressed
regret that he would not be able to attend the awards ceremony due to
previous commitments.
South Korea's AMA
have organised the awards for 22 seasons, with this year marking the first
time it has looked beyond to regional countries such as Japan, Thailand and
Viet Nam.
Vietnam
sees 44,000 cases of hand-foot-mouth disease
The Ministry of
Health has reported 44,000 cases of hand-foot-mouth disease nationwide this
year, including five fatalities, all in the south.
“The number of
cases is down 30% from last year,” Tran Dac Phu, director of the ministry’s
Centre for Preventive Health, said.
“However, the
fatality threat remains if patients are not hospitalized early.”
HMFD cases have
been reported in almost every locality, with the highest number being in
Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.
Phu instructed
health agencies in southern localities to remain wary of EV71, the deadliest
strain of the HFMD virus.
Last year Vietnam
recorded more than 76,300 cases.
Doctors have urged
people to maintain hygiene at home and in public areas as the disease spreads
through contact with human waste and body fluids.
The disease is
considered highly dangerous as it can quickly give rise to fatal
complications like respiratory decline, meningitis and heart muscle
inflammation.
Treatment requires
the use of respirators and blood dialysis.
TV
mini-series competition kicks off
TV channel View TV
and non-profit organisation VINDIE have kicked off EVO8, a competition aiming
at finding new talent in the TV industry.
By joining the
competition, film teams of at least two members each have the chance to
contribute to a TV mini-series with the length of eight episodes of 45-60
minutes each, with a budget of VND2 billion (US$88,800).
Registrations of
interest will close on November 23. Registrations can be made at .
The pitching
competition will commence on November 24 and the closing date is on January
6, 2016.
Entries received
after the closing date will not be considered for judging but may be
considered for future funding if possible.
Pitch proposals
must include five required items — synopsis for each episode; a pilot script
for the first episode; a five-15 minute film clip created from part of the
first episode script; character profiles; and a basic TV production budget.
The film teams are
responsible for copyright of the ideas.
The prize of VND2
billion will include VND100 million in cash and costs of film production,
broadcasting and marketing.
The winner's
project will be filmed from February to October of next year, and air on View
TV – VTC8 channel in November and December.
EVO8 is an
abbreviation that stands for "Let's make an evolution with your own
8-episode mini series".
Vietnam
court suspends trial of 2 foreigners over deadly scaffolding collapse
A court in the central
province of Ha Tinh on November 16 delayed the trial of two Koreans and two
Vietnamese accused of negligence that led to the deaths of 13 construction
workers in a scaffolding collapse earlier this year.
The suspension was
due to the absence of Nguyen Thai Duc, one of the defendants, and several
witnesses. Duc, 30, reportedly cited health reasons.
The hearing will be
resumed in "a suitable time," the Ha Tinh People's Court said.
Duc and the other
three defendants, Nguyen Anh Tuan, 27, Kim Jong Wook, 43, and Lee Jae Myeong,
62, were charged with "violating labor safety rules" at the
construction site of Taiwanese-invested steel mill complex Formosa on March
25.
They could be
jailed for 12 years, if convicted.
According to the
indictment, Kim was in charged of supervising the construction of a
breakwater, and Lee was tasked with managing 43 workers on site.
Both were then
employees of Samsung C&T, a construction subsidiary of the electronics
giant and a contractor for the US$10-billion project of Formosa Plastics
Group in Vung Ang Economic Zone.
Tuan and Duc were
in charge of controlling the scaffold's lifting hydraulic system, which was
used to adjust the height of a work platform.
Investigators have
concluded that the system failed and caused the accident.
When the work
platform was being lowered from a height of 20 meters down to the ground, it
shook violently, sending many workers running, prosecutors said.
After the shaking
happened twice, Kim and Lee climbed onto the scaffolding to check if there was
any problem, but allegedly did not carry out a proper inspection. They then
ordered the workers to come back to work, according to prosecutors.
Tuan and Duc, on
the other hand, discovered some cylinders of the lifting system breaking
down. But they allegedly failed to inform their managers of the issue and
instead, attempted to fix the problem.
Soon later the
scaffolding tumbled down.
With 13 workers
killed and another 29 injured, the incident is the second deadliest in
Vietnam’s construction history after the collapse of two spans of a bridge
being built in the Mekong Delta in 2007, which killed 55 workers and injured
80 others.
The Can Tho Bridge
between Can Tho city and Vinh Long Province was completed in 2010.
Goethe-Institut
Hanoi hosts European Day of Languages
The Goethe-Institut
has announced that on November 28 people from all over Hanoi and the
surrounding region will celebrate the nation’s linguistic diversity with the
European Day of Languages.
An initiative of
the Council of Europe, the European Day of Languages has been celebrated
every year since 2011 in Vietnam, and every year since 2001 in all of the 47
EU member states.
The majority of the
world’s population speaks at least two languages says the Goethe-Institut and
it is believed that bilingualism and plurilingualism improves intercultural
understanding.
However, here in
Vietnam we are still somewhat behind many of our European cousins in terms of
language acquisition.
From 8.30 am -
12.45 pm a conference open to scientists, linguists and teachers of foreign
languages will be held at the Goethe-Institut facilities and in the afternoon
a language festival for all to attend.
The day promises to
be an interesting fun day filled with lively discussion, workshops and much
much more for all those interested in the world of languages says the
Goethe-Institut.
For more
information please contact Mrs Do Thi Thuy at Tel: +84 4 37342251 or email
ThiThuy.Do@Hanoi.goethe.org.
TDC61
Travelling Exhibition: Hanoi
The New York Type
Directors Club traveling exhibition, TDC61, featuring the best graphic
designs of 2015, will go on show this week in Hanoi at the Goethe Institut
located at 56-58 Nguyen Thai Hoc Street.
The exhibition will
hold its opening at 6:00 pm November 19 with the exhibit running 9:00 am -
7:00 pm on November 20-22.
More information
can be obtained by calling the Goethe Institut at +84 4 37342251 or by email
at info@hanoi.goethe.org.
Passengers
cheated, robbed on illegal buses in Vietnam by vehicle owners, drivers
Passengers getting
on buses running from Ho Chi Minh City to Mekong Delta provinces have been
cheated and robbed by bus owners and drivers in broad daylight.
A woman has even
been sexually harassed on a bus by a gangster.
Their trick is to
park their vehicle near the Mien Tay (Western) Bus Station in Binh Tan
District, Ho Chi Minh City, pick up passengers and tell them that they have
just left the station and are about to depart soon after filling up with
petrol.
On boarding the
bus, passengers are then required to pay for their tickets while money
collectors are just gangsters who act as assistant drivers.
After payment, the
bus simply waits for hours and only departs after they have cheated around
ten ‘passengers’ for a trip.
The passengers themselves
are mostly farmers who rarely travel the route. Those who ask about the long
wait time are threatened and so agree to wait until they are robbed out of
money.
To avoid illegal
buses, passengers can simply enter the bus station to buy tickets instead of
obeying the false promises of drivers outside.
Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper journalists went on multiple buses and witnessed first-hand their
tricks to cheat and later rob passengers.
At 8:30 am on
November 10, Tuoi Tre journalists got on a bus numbered 53M-2817 at the
Comeco fuel station, which is opposite the gate of the Mien Tay Bus Station
in An Lac A Ward.
Less than a minute
later, a woman in her fifties named Hoang “Den” (Black), leader of a gangster
ring, hopped on and pledged, “Just take this temporary seat. You all will be
taken to a sleeper bus.”
At this point on
board the bus was driver Liem, assistant driver Dac, and some 10 passengers.
Hoang “Den”
collected VND200,000 (US$9) from one of the journalists to go to Rach Gia
City of Kien Giang Province in the Mekong Delta.
A female passenger
sitting behind said, “I got on this bus over an hour ago. It didn’t run but
just went around to pick up passengers.
“When I asked them
to leave, they verbally insulted me and locked the door. Another passenger
had her bag snatched and robbed out of money.”
The bus departed at
9:00 am but traveled just 15 kilometers and stopped. The passengers were
moved to another bus, numbered 51B-05049 “served” by Tam “Heo” (Pig).
Running for around
100 meters at a time, Tam “Heo” confronted each passenger to demand ticket
payment.
The Tuoi Tre
journalist explained that he paid VND200,000 to a woman, but Tam “Heo”
blatantly denied, saying, “I didn’t collect anything from you.”
After threatening
the disguised journalist, Tam “Heo” asked him to stand up so that he could
search his pockets and bag and seized the last banknote of VND100,000 ($4.5).
Tam “Heo”
threatened the passengers one by one, making gestures that he was willing to
beat them at any time.
The passengers sat
in silence out of fear.
Using the same
trick, drivers Liem and Dac colluded with gangsters of the ring to continue
duping and robbing passengers on another bus the following day, November 11.
A passenger gave
Hoang “Den” a banknote of VND500,000. She kept it and got off the bus and
another gangster came to assure the passenger that she would return to give
her back VND300,000 ($13), but they did not.
On another bus on
November 13, after conning and robbing a passenger on the bus numbered
51S-6445, one of the four gangsters unbuttoned the trousers of a 20-year
woman and sexually harassed her after stealing her money.
She resisted and
was threatened, “Do you believe that I strip you naked here?”
The assault had to
stop because of her fierce resistance and his accessories’ reminder.
The journalists
were also robbed of their mobile phones and given slaps on the face many
times after the gangsters found that they did not have much to steal.
The four gangsters
quickly halted their robbery after that.
Police hold suspect
for snatching Russian tourist’s bag in Vietnam’s Da Nang
Police in the
central city of Da Nang on Monday said they had arrested a 21-year-old local
man suspected of snatching a handbag containing valuables including a diamond
ring from a Russian traveler earlier this month.
Tran Hong Hieu, 21,
was detained on Friday last week, eight days after he allegedly grasped the
bag from Reviakina Ekarerina, a 30-year-old woman of Russian nationality, on
a Da Nang street on November 5.
Hieu is under
investigation on charges of “property robbery by snatching,” police said.
According to the
case file, at about 5:00 pm on November 5, Hieu traveled on a motorbike
around streets in the city to look for ‘prey.’
When Hieu reached
Hoang Ke Viem Street in My An Ward, he saw Ekarerina sitting in front of a
house taking a drink, with a handbag placed on a chair besides her.
The man then got
close to the foreigner, snatched the bag and sped up to escape.
He returned to his
rented room on Le Duan Street to hide the bag there, while the woman reported
the street robbery to police.
The snatched
handbag contained an iPhone 6 Plus, US$6,900, 20,000 Russian rubles ($306), a
pair of earrings, a diamond ring worth about $50,000, and other personal
papers, the victim told police.
During their
investigation, police officers discovered that the victim’s iPhone 6 Plus was
being used by a Vietnamese woman, N.T.T., of Hai Chau District.
Based on T.’s
testimony related to how she had bought the iPhone Plus from a man, police
tracked down Hieu and arrested him at a discotheque in the south-central city
of Nha Trang on November 13.
After being
captured, Hieu initially admitted to snatching the bag from the foreign
woman.
Vietnam
recognizes foreign NGOs’ contribution
The Vietnam Union
of Friendship Associations hosted a ceremony to recognize the contribution of
foreign non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to the sustainable development
of Vietnam this year in Hanoi yesterday evening.
Chairman of the
Vietnam Fatherland Front Central Committee Nguyen Thien Nhan warmly welcomed
representatives from 45 NGOs attending the event and emphasized its
significance.
Despite having
become a middle income nation, Vietnam has still faced with many difficulties
and challenges such as war consequences, natural disasters and climate
change, hunger elimination and poverty reduction, he said.
Foreign NGOs’
contributions including experiences and human resources have considerably
supported Vietnam to build and implement socioeconomic development strategies.
For the last five
years, they have assisted Vietnam with US$300 million a year, a great source
to the country.
The 45
organizations honored at the ceremony are outstanding ones in the community
of 493 foreign NGOs regularly operating in Vietnam. Of these, 14 have been in
the country for more than 30 years.
Mr. Nhan
appreciated the sentiment, and sincere and effective cooperation and help of
international friends, organizations and especially NGOs to Vietnam.
He believed that
the friendship, cooperation and partnership between Vietnam and NGOs will
continue to be strengthened; contributing to peace, stability and mutual
understanding between Vietnam and other nations in the world as well as boost
the country’s socioeconomic development and global integration.
Ministry
adds Vat Yellow to import ban list
The Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development on Monday provided a supplement to the
circular on chemicals and antibiotics banned from import, production and use
for feed production in Vietnam.
The revised
circular taking effect on the same day adds cancer-causing substances Vat
Yellow 1, 2, 3 and 4 to the banned list in breeding.
In addition,
Auramine used in textile and dyeing technology has also been listed as
forbidden.
Previously on
November 12, an inspectorate from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development and the Ministry of Public Security raided Truong Phu Company in
Hai Duong city and found it use Vat Yellow for making cattle and poultry
feed.
On the spot, the
inspectorate seized 14 kilograms of the substance and took eight samples of
the company’s products, which all have been tested positive to lean-meat
agent Salbutamol far higher than permissible level.
They have decided
to seal off over one ton of feed at the company and fine it for using Vat
Yellow in breeding.
Yan cooks
vegetarian buffet to raise funds
Celebrity chef
Martin Yan, who shot to fame for his Yan Can Cook TV program, came to Vietnam
last weekend to show his cooking talent in a fundraising vegetarian buffet
program at Minh Dang Quang Pagoda in HCMC.
The buffet, which
took place every night from November 13 to 15, is the major part of a series
of activities to raise funds for the pagoda to do charity work.
Speaking at the
opening ceremony of the program on November 13, Yan urged people to have a
healthy diet to keep their body and mind in good condition. Participating in
the buffet cooking program with Yan were 225 local chefs who served 40 vegetarian
dishes a day.
The charity program
also featured a painting auction on Saturday and a conference on the link
between health and vegetarian diet on Sunday.
VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/TT/TN/Dantri
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Thứ Năm, 19 tháng 11, 2015
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