Social News 26/5
340kg bomb lifted successfully from
a fish lake in Ha Tinh Province
Đức Thọ District’s Military Command in the central
province of Hà Tĩnh successfully removed a 340kg bomb from a local fish
breeding lake yesterday, according to a local source.
The bomb was discovered three days ago by irrigation
workers when they were dredging a fish lake owned by a local household at Đức
Long Commune to construct canal systems for the Ngàn Trươi Irrigation Project.
The bomb, believed to have been dropped by the US Army
during the war, measured 1.5m length and 50cm in diameter.
Workers immediately informed communal authorities and
experts were dispatched to the scene.
The military has now moved the bomb to a safe location
and are preparing to destroy it using a controlled explosion.
Quảng Nam raids illegal gold mining
operations
The police of the central province of Quảng Nam
coordinated with the local police force of Nam Giang District to raid illegal
mineral and gold mining operations yesterday morning.
Over 100 illegal gold miners were arrested at the gold
mining operation near Sông Tranh Nature Reserve. Arrested miners included
both local residents and workers from the neighbouring provinces of Nghệ An,
Hòa Bình, and Thái Nguyên.
Nam Giang District police will receive and manage these
miners, then send them back home.
The police destroyed 22 tents set up to shelter gold
miners and 43 pieces of equipment, including diesel engines and electric
generator, and 1,000 water pipes. All of these items were used for illegal
gold mining.
Police and local authorities are also preparing to fine
thirteen mine owners who hired labourers for illegal mineral mining.
The raid was part of an inspection campaign of all
illegal mineral mining operations. The initiative was launched by the Quảng
Nam Province People’s Committee after the collapse of gold mines killed four
miners in April.
New countryside programme, sci-tech
development under review
The 13th National Assembly (NA)’s Standing Committee
convened its 48 th session in Hanoi on May 25 with the national target
programme on new-style rural area building and science-technology development
policies being the first to come under discussion.
NA Vice Chairman Phung Quoc Hien said the national
target programme, carried out since 2010, has given a facelift to rural areas
with upgraded transport systems and social infrastructure, as well as the
improved material and spiritual life of local residents.
The Government and relevant ministries reported on the
programme implementation to a NA delegation which has also supervised the
work in six out of the 28 provinces inspected.
Looking into a report on the outcomes of the
supervision, many participants said it is necessary to press on with
communications to raise local officials and residents’ awareness of the
programme.
They pointed out the prevalence of untrained labourers
in rural areas, and hence, more attention is needed to provide vocational
training and improve the quality of training. How to retain the achieved
results in communes already recognised as new-style rural areas is also a
problem to be dealt with, so that the national target programme achieves
substantive effects.
The full report on the programme supervision outcomes
and a draft resolution on the issue will be submitted to the 14th NA this
October, Hien said.
A parliamentary delegation also inspected the
enforcement of policies and laws on developing science – technology that aim
to boost national industrialisation and modernisation in six provinces.
Discussing the supervision delegation’s report, some of
the NA Standing Committee members said the report should focus on small- and
medium-sized enterprises’ connectivity with big manufacturers, the domestic
market, and the development of key mechanical industries.
The Standing Committee also mulled over other contents
in the report, including science-technology’s role in promoting labour
productivity and growth quality, improving manpower quality and the
technology market.
It said in the report that the supervision delegation
should clarify the responsibility of the Government, ministries and
localities towards realising the guidelines, policies and laws on
science-technology development. It also needs to devise solutions and suggest
detailed policies supporting development in this field.
Vice Chairman Hien said the NA Standing Committee will
soon issue a resolution on the issue in order to fuel science-technology
development and national industrialisation and modernisation.
In the afternoon of May 25, the committee is set to
scrutinise a draft resolution on the standards and classification of
administrative units, and another stipulating the classification of cities.
The National Election Council will also give a preliminary report about the
recent election of deputies to the 14 th NA and all-level People’s Councils
for 2016 – 2021.
Conference discusses eateries
management in Hanoi
A conference discussing how to better manage street
dining establishments took place in Hanoi on May 25, attracting policymakers,
scientists and eateries’ owners.
This year, Hanoi strives to require 99 percent of
unlicensed street vendors to sign a food safety commitment, and more than 85
percent of licensed vendors be eligible for food safety certificates.
All steering boards for food safety and hygiene in 30
districts, communes and townships will be trained in the field.
According to the municipal Department of Health, 17
percent of facilities have yet to meet food safety requirements.
A representative from the municipal Agency for Food
Safety and Hygiene ascribed the situation to authorities’ lax monitoring and
consumers’ easy attitude to choosing eateries, leading to a number of vendors
showing a lack of responsibility for consumers’ health by using materials of
ambiguous origin and failing to ensure cleanliness in their facilities.
Across the capital city, there are 5,418 registered
dining establishments in 548 wards and communes. An estimated 78-86 percent
of them have records on the origin of their food, and place food at least
60cm above the ground, while 80 percent have access to clean water and 82
percent are trained in food safety.
The conference was hosted by the municipal Department
of Health.
HCM City seek ways to engage OVs’ brainpower
Ho Chi Minh City should design more effective policies
to make full use of the huge brainpower potential of the Overseas Vietnamese
community (OV), heard a conference themed “OVs affairs - reality and
solutions” held on May 25 in the city.
At the event, held by the Ho Chi Minh City’s Committee
for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs, Prof. Dr. Dang Luong Mo, a Vietnamese living
in Japan held that many activities for OVs have been organised, but they have
not been effective in linking the Vietnamese community abroad or tapping
their potential to contribute to the development of the city.
At the same time, there remain a number of
administrative procedures that cause inconvenience to OVs, he said.
Currently, Ho Chi Minh City is trying to attract
science and technology experts to hi-tech parks, hi-tech agricultural areas,
and computer technology and biotechnology centres by offering financial and
housing support.
According to Dr. Duong Hoa Xo, Vice Director of the Ho
Chi Minh City Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Director of
the city’s Bio-technology Centre, this is an “open mechanism” to draw talent
to the city.
However, the policy is applicable to experts only, he
said, pointing to a need to design the “open mechanism” to support science officials,
especially young scientists, with a proper income, he said.
Meanwhile, Prof. Dr. Vo Van Toi from the US who has
engaged in Vietnam’s bio-medicine, held that a more attractive working and
living environment, together with competent officials in OV work, are
essential to call for overseas Vietnamese’ brainpower.
He also suggested three important issues to persuade
successful young students abroad to return to their homeland, including a
proper salary and promotion opportunities and especially good working
conditions.
At the same time, Vo Thi Thanh Tuyen, Executive
Director of the Vietnamese Business Association in the US, a State agency is
needed to gather and promote the strength of Vietnamese businesses and
enterprises abroad, helping link them together and supporting domestic
counterparts in seeking investment opportunities and developing an
integration strategy.
Participants at the event also proposed that Ho Chi
Minh City should hold regular meetings with different groups of OVs in
different fields and markets, thus creating links with businesses at home.
A close coordination is needed between the city’s
Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs and related organisations to share
information and diversify activities aiming to connect OVs, they said.
There are an estimated 4.5 million Vietnamese living
and working in countries across the world.
Needy people in southwest region to
receive more support
The Sponsoring Association for Poor Patients in the
southwest region decided to extend its target to poor people in general, at a
session in the Mekong Delta city of Can Tho on May 25.
It has also amended its official name following the
decision.
Chairman of the association (now renamed the sponsoring
association of the poor in the southwest region) Nguyen Phong Quang said ten
months after being established in July 2015, the organisation realised the
need for a larger scale of operations so that aid could reach more people.
The association has so far raised 273 billion VND (12.3
million USD) in funds. It has organised free medical check-ups for more than
5,000 patients and will soon put into operation a clinic to serve poor
patients across the region.
The southwest region has a population of approximately
18 million, of which over 244,000 people have been classified as
impoverished.
180 nurses depart for Japan to work
As many as 180 nurses and orderlies left Vietnam for
Japan on May 24 to work under the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA)
between the two governments.
The EPA programme has opened up the two countries’
cooperation in taking care of patients and the elderly at hospitals and
sanatoriums in Japan.
Since 2012 the department of Overseas Labour Management
Department of the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs has
coordinated with Japan to provide Japanese language training for four courses
of 720 Vietnamese nurses and orderlies. So far, 290 of them have left Vietnam
for working.
It is estimated that Japan will need up to 600,000
nurses and orderlies to take care of its elderly in ten years.
Vietnam is the third country to cooperate with Japan in
this field, after the Philippines and Indonesia.
Nationwide activities to respond to
World Environment Day
A series of activities in response to World Environment
Day (June 5) and Vietnam Sea and Island Week (June 1-8) will be held
nationwide, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment announced at a
press conference in Hanoi on May 25.
The theme of the day was chosen by the United Nations
as: “Go wild for life”.
On June 4, the Action Month for the Environment will be
launched nationwide at a ceremony in the northern province of Lao Cai, during
which the achievements and obstacles to environmental protection since June
5, 2015 will be reviewed, national-level environment events will be
announced, while individuals and organisations at home and abroad dedicating
to environment protection will be honoured.
An environment technology and ecological products expo
2017 is scheduled to be announced.
On the occasion, the Vietnam Environment Administration
in coordination with the Lao Cai provincial People’s Committee will host a
ceremony to release animals into the wild and plant trees.
The Central Committee of Vietnam Veterans’ Association
is due to hold a seminar featuring its role in protecting biodiversity and
endangered species in Vietnam.
According to Deputy General Director of the Vietnam
Administration of Seas and Islands Vu Si Tuan, a meeting ceremony themed:
“For a green planet,” marking World Ocean Day and the Vietnam Sea and Island
Week, will be held in the northern province of Nam Dinh on June 8.
A group of voluntary youths will be deployed to clean
the beaches, hold a bicycle-ride to promote the event and plant trees near
the beaches.
Photos highlighting Vietnam’s world
heritages on display in RoK
Photos of Vietnam’s world heritages are being exhibited
at the Yoondang Arts Hall in the Republic of Korea’s capital Seoul.
The May 23-30 exhibition, introduces to Korean people
about 100 photos featuring 16 of Vietnam’s UNESCO-recognised heritages,
including the complex of Hue monuments, Ha Long Bay, Phong Nha-Khe Bang
National Park, Hue royal court music, and the Central Highlands Cultural
Space of Gongs .
The event is coorganised by the Korean Cultural Centre
in Vietnam (KCCV) and Vietnam’s Department of Fine Arts, Photography and
Exhibition under the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
KCCV Director Park Nark Jong said this is the first
time his centre has brought photos of Vietnam to the RoK, adding that more
similar events will be held in the near future to boost cultural exchanges
between the two countries.
Heavy rain brings relief to Kiên
Giang Province
The heavy rain that began yesterday afternoon and
continued until this morning has brought some relief to southern Kiên Giang
Province, creating better conditions for crops and shrimp farming.
The rain helped water more than 125,500ha of
summer-autumn rice crop across the province.
In particular, the province’s three key rice-growing
areas - U Minh Thượng, Long Xuyên Quadrilateral Region and the western part
of Hậu River - received sufficient water, enabling farmers to start working
on the soil to sow new crop.
The rain also helped reduce salinity of water in the
shrimp farms, saving more than 102,000ha of area. Increased water levels in
the local rivers and canals not only revive fish and other marine creatures
used in aquaculture, but also reduce the risk of fire in the U Minh Thượng
Forest and the Long Xuyên Quadrilateral Region.
In the middle of March and early last month, two
unusual heavy downpours in the province were called the “golden rain” for the
area that has suffered from drought and little rainfall for months.
According to the southern weather forecaster, the
monsoon will begin next month. The heavy rain in Kiên Giang Province in April
was an unusual phenomenon.
NA Office, JICA strengthen
cooperation
The National Assembly Office and the Japan
International Cooperation Agency (JICA) discussed how JICA can support the
development of the e-NA Office and the NA’s e-library.
The issue formed part of a meeting between Chairman of
the National Assembly Office and Secretary General of the National Assembly
Nguyen Hanh Phuc and Chief Representative of the JICA in Vietnam Yasuo Fujita
in Hanoi on May 24.
Phuc spoke highly of the agency’s support for the
office and the NA at large over the past years.
In return, the JICA’s chief representative
congratulated Vietnam on its successful elections of deputies to the 14th
National Assembly and all-level People’s Councils for the 2016-2021 tenure.
The officials discussed NA-related works,
telecommunication equipment for NA deputies, communication skills between NA
deputies and voters, and methods to handle voters’ complaints and
accusations.-
Jetstar offers “Pay to go and Return
for Free”
Budget carrier Jetstar Pacific Airlines will launch a
promotional program “ Pay to go and return for free” on 26 local routes
and 4 international flights on the occasion of its 8th Anniversary.
Starting at 11am on May 23-24, passengers only have to
pay for one-way fares at VND340,000-VND360,000 and are able to receive a
return ticket free of charge. The promotional airfares do not include taxes,
fees and surcharges.
The special price will be applied for domestic flights
from September 6-October 31 and international flights from August 17-October
31.
Passengers can book and pay for a plane ticket at
www.jetstar.com and booking offices throughout the country.
The low-cost carrier will also offer 8 free return
tickets every week to passengers on May 23-June 23.
The budget carrier has operated 16 domestic flights
connecting Vietnam’s main airports in HCMC, Hanoi, Danang, Vinh, Haiphong,
Hue, Buon Ma Thuot, Nha Trang and Phu Quoc Island, and international routes
from HCMC to Singapore and Thailand; Hanoi-Bangkok, Hong Kong (China).
7th anniversary of Cham Island
Biosphere Reserve celebrated
Many cultural and sports activities will be held on the
Cham Island to celebrate the day it was recognised as a World Biosphere
Reserve by UNESCO on May 26.
Visitors will be able to enjoy dragon dance, diving
competition, bai choi singing and other events. Visitors can learn more about
the daily life and traditions of the people on the island via Cu Lao Night
Programme. A canoe art performance will also be featured.
The reserve has more than 311 hectares of coral reefs,
with 300 species, about 50 hectares of sea-grass, 76 types of seaweed, more
than 270 species of fish and 97 species of molluscs.
The island has become a famous attraction after it was
recognised as a global Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO on 26 May 2009.
EUR2.5 million project launched to support shrimp value
chain development in Mekong Delta
Oxfam and the International Collaborating Centre for
Aquaculture and Fisheries Sustainability (ICAFIS) on May 24 launched a
project to support sustainable and equitable shrimp production and value chain
development in the Mekong Delta region.
The project worth EUR2.5 million, funded by the
European Union (EU) under the SWITCH-Asia programme, aims to promote
sustainable economic prosperity and poverty reduction in Vietnam through
improving social and environmental impacts of shrimp value chain development.
Vietnam's shrimp production provides a living for over
a million of people and improves incomes for small scale producers who
account for more than 80% of Vietnam's shrimp production.
The project targets small and medium enterprises (SME),
shrimp producers and inhabitants in Soc Trang, Bac Lieu and Ca Mau provinces
for a period of four years from March 2016 to February 2020.
It will facilitate a win-win collaboration among value
chain stakeholders and empower the small scale farmers to engage effectively
in the value chain for added benefit. The participatory process facilitated
by the project allows surrounding communities to dialogue with shrimp value
chain actors and hold them accountable for negative impact management.
Speaking about the project, Alejandro Montalban,
Minister Counselor of the Delegation of the EU to Vietnam said the project
would contribute to efficient resources utilisation, responsible production
supply chains and practices, improved social and environmental conditions and
reduced waste.
Besides the technical support, the project will work
with project stakeholders to find solution to helping small scale shrimp
producers and SME shrimp processors to be able to access adequate finances,
including advocating favourable government credit policies, and empowering
them to have a stronger voice in negotiations with other actors in the value
chain, the EU official added.
Sustainable production practices and the successful
collaborative models of shrimp value chain actors are expected to be
documented for national level institutionalisation and be disseminated for
nation-wide replication in Vietnam at the completion of the project, said
Oxfam deputy country director in Vietnam Nguyen Thi Le Hoa.
The SWITCH Asia Programme started in 2007 is one of the
European Commission actions to promote the green economy in Asia. The
programme aims to identify and scale up successful Sustainable Consumption
and Production (SCP) practices in Asia in order to induce a systematic change
in consumption and production patterns and behaviour.
Government guarantees loan for 500kV
transmission line
Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has approved a
guarantee for an insured untied NEXI loan to fund the 500kV transmission line
between the Vinh Tan Power Centre and Song May-Tan Uyen.
To obtain the guarantee, the National Power
Transmission Corporation (NPT) must secure enough of its own capital for the
project in line with its progress, and register mortgaged assets as security
for government guarantee in line with the law.
Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) is responsible for
overseeing NPT’s implementation of the project and fulfilling the debt
obligation as the parent of NPT in case it is unable to pay back.
The guarantee fee is 0.25% per year.
The Ministry of Industry and Trade was tasked with
supervising the finances of EVN and NPT and reporting to the prime minister
if the two are in financial trouble.
The prime minister approved the letter of guarantee and
asked the Ministry of Finance to sign the letter on behalf of the government
with foreign creditors.
Construction of the Vinh Tan-Song May-Tan Uyen
transmission line started in November last year. Total investment for the
project is estimated at VND5.333 trillion (US$240 million).
Photos highlighting Vietnam’s world
heritages on display in RoK
A total of 100 photos capturing Vietnam’s world
heritages are on display at an exhibition in Yoondang Arts Hall in Seoul, the
Republic of Korea.
The opening ceremony on May 20 was attended by
Vietnamese Ambassador to the Rok Pham Huu Chi, Director of the Heritage
Promotion Bureau under the Korean Cultural Heritage Administration, Kim
Dae-hyun; and Director of the Korean Cultural Centre in Vietnam (KCCV) Park
Nark Jong, together with around 200 visitors.
The pictures on display, taken by Vietnamese
photographers, were selected from the best entries sent to world heritage
photo contests launched in recent years by Vietnam’s Department of Fine Arts,
Photography and Exhibitions.
The ten-day exhibition introduces to RoK people 16 of
Vietnam’s UNESCO-recognised heritages, including the complex of Hue
monuments, Ha Long Bay, My Son sanctuary, Phong Nha-Khe Bang national park,
Hue royal court music, and Xoan (Spring) singing.
The event was the first joint project between the KCCV
and Vietnam’s Department of Fine Arts, Photography and Exhibition.
According to KCCV Director Park Nark Jong, this is the
first time his centre has brought photos of Vietnam to the RoK, saying that
more of the same type of event would be held in the near future to boost
cultural exchanges between the two countries.
American photographer launches tips
website
Justin Mott, an American photographer and TV
personality who has been living and working in Vietnam and Southeast Asia,
has launched a photography tips website and social media campaign to improve
the skills of amateur photographers worldwide.
The site at justinmott.com is where Mott shares his 10
years’ experience in working as a photographer for well-known news
organizations such as the New York Times, Forbes, TIME and Conde Nast
Traveler.
It provides aspiring photographers with secrets and
skills for taking photos for specific purposes and how to do a photography
business.
His social media campaign #AskMOTT is offered to
encourage photography lovers to access a professional photography mentor
online.
Anyone can post their images or questions online
publicly with the AskMott hashtag on social media like Twitter, Facebook and
Instagram and Mott will find them and offer his professional advice and tips
to make them better photographers.
The hashtag is also used for the #ShowMeYourBestShot
weekly photo competition, where Mott rewards the week’s best amateur
photographs with prizes.
Justin Mott is currently the star photographer in
History Channel’s Photo Face-Off, a reality TV show airing throughout Asia.
The next season of the program is expected to air in Vietnam.
Since 2007, he has been working as a contributing
photographer for the New York Times for which he shot more than 100
assignments. He won many awards from TPOTY (Travel Photographer of the Year),
NPPA (National Press Photographers Association), PDN (Photo District News),
CPOY (College Photographer of the Year) and Missouri School of Journalism.
Day of Bulgarian education, culture,
Slavic script marked in Vietnam
The Bulgaria Embassy in Vietnam together with the
Vietnam-Bulgaria Friendship Association celebrated the European country’s day
of education, culture and Slavic script in Hanoi on May 24.
Chairman of the association Nguyen Van Tuan said the
celebration is also a reunion of Vietnamese who have studied or worked in
Bulgaria.
It helps cement good-working ties between the two
countries, he noted.
On the occasion, Tuan and Simeon Dimchev, Chairman of
the Bulgaria-Vietnam Friendship Association, signed a cooperation pact
between the two agencies for 2016-2021.
Requiem held in Hungary for
Vietnamese sea, island martyrs
The Vietnamese Buddhists’ Association in Hungary
recently held a requiem for martyrs who laid down to Vietnam’s sovereignty
over its sea and islands.
Through the requiem, the association wanted to show
that the Vietnamese community in Hungary love peace and object to China’s
militarisation of the East Sea.
The requiem also explained to young people that the
Hoang Sa (Paracel) and Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelagos are integral parts of
Vietnam and inviolable national sovereignty.
The Vietnamese community in Hungary currently numbers
nearly 5,000 people, mainly living in Budapest.
China’s recent militarisation in the East Sea include
its deployment of warplanes to Phu Lam (Woody) Island in the Hoang Sa
archipelago and its construction of a high frequency radar facility in the
Truong Sa archipelago.
HCM City: pilot projects benefit
street traders
Some public areas in Ho Chi Minh City have been
assigned for street vendors, giving them a chance to do stable trade along
sidewalks in the city.
This is part of efforts of the municipal authorities
towards building a legal framework for street vendors.
The selected areas for this pilot project are located
in District 1, including the sidewalk of the streets Nguyen Van Chiem, Pham
Ngoc Thach and Hai Ba Trung.
The project requires all street traders from the
district to do their business in certain fixed streets.
It is expected to create a stable trading environment
for about 500 street vendors operating in the district. They have also
benefited from support policies by the State, including taking part in
courses on food hygiene and environmental protection and to improve their
communication skills.
Along with these models, the municipal authorities have
also built regulations on food safety and the urban environment to apply to
street vendor activities in the city.
Piloted projects to ensure hygiene and safety for food
sold in streets, which have been arranged in a number of districts from 2014,
have also proved effective, contributing to calling on street traders to
strictly implement relevant regulations.
Lam Thi Ngoc Nga, a Pho “noodle soup” vendor in
district 3 said she joined training courses on food safety and practices to
ensure proper hygiene while selling her goods.
Such projects aim to support the municipal authorities
in managing street traders and to control hygiene standards in street food,
thus maintaining the beauty of the city.
According to the General Statistics Office, HCM City is
home to about 400,000 vendors. Many of them have stable incomes from street
trading.
Le Dieu Anh, coordinator of the National Programme of
the Association of Cities of Vietnam said street trading creates jobs for a
significant number of people, especially the unskilled workforce.
This trading form should be facilitated in urban areas,
she stressed.
Films based on German fairytales to
be screened in Hanoi
The Goethe Institute will screen popular fairytales
Sleeping Beauty and The Bremen Town Musicians which are based on the Grimm
brothers’ stories.
In The Bremen Town Musicians, a chicken, a cat, a dog
and a donkey escape from their farm to become musicians in the German town of
Bremen. Along the way they encounter some robbers who they manage to outwit
with their singing.
In Sleeping Beauty, a princess falls asleep for 100
years after she pricks her finger on a spindle. Over time, the castle gets
surrounded by an impenetrable hedge of thorns. Only a brave prince who
conquers the thorns and clambers up the tower is able to awaken the princess
with a kiss, ending the wicked spell.
The screenings of The Bremen Town Musicians and
Sleeping Beauty will take place at 10am and 2pm, respectively, on May 29 at
the Kim Đồng Cinema on 19 Hàng Bài Street. Free tickets can be collected from
today onwards at the Goethe Institute on 56-58 Nguyễn Thái Học Street in Hà
Nội.
After the films, fans can take home a collection of the
10 most popular fairytales by the Grimm brothers in Vietnamese and German,
edited by the Goethe Institute, available at a special discount from the
institute. The institute will also present small gifts to the audience to
celebrate International Children’s Day.
Northern provinces cope with
torrential rain
The office of the Steering Committee for Natural
Disasters Prevention and Control said torrential rain raged through many
northern provinces on May 24 and caused remarkable human and material losses
in some localities.
The rainfall rose to 247mm in mountainous Yen Bai
province. The heavy rain resulted in inundation and caused the death of a
woman in Yen Bai city. It also submerged 206 houses and over 83 hectare of
crops. The economic loss is estimated at around 200 million VND (9,000 USD).
Local authorities have mobilised forces to help people
move to safer places while directing relevant units to enact measures to
address flooding on some routes.
In Hanoi, the pouring rain flooded almost all streets
in the capital. More than 1,600 hectares of crops in the city were submerged.
Workers from the municipal water drainage and green
trees companies have taken measures to deal with the situation and ease
traffic jams. The flooding subsided in most places by around 8 am on May 25.
The irrigation sector has also directed relevant
companies to operate 37 pumping stations to deal with flooding.
The National Centre for Hydro-Meteorological
Forecasting said heavy rain is likely to continue hitting northern
mountainous provinces as well as the Central Highlands and southern region.
Landslides could occur in the northern mountainous
region, especially Lai Chau, Dien Bien, Son La, Hoa Binh, Lao Cai, Yen Bai,
Ha Giang, Tuyen Quang, Cao Bang, and Bac Kan provinces.
Needy people in southwest region to
receive more support
The Sponsoring Association for Poor Patients in the
southwest region decided to extend its target to poor people in general, at a
session in the Mekong Delta city of Can Tho on May 25.
It has also amended its official name following the
decision.
Chairman of the association (now renamed the sponsoring
association of the poor in the southwest region) Nguyen Phong Quang said ten
months after being established in July 2015, the organisation realised the
need for a larger scale of operations so that aid could reach more people.
The association has so far raised 273 billion VND (12.3
million USD) in funds. It has organised free medical check-ups for more than
5,000 patients and will soon put into operation a clinic to serve poor
patients across the region.
The southwest region has a population of approximately
18 million, of which over 244,000 people have been classified as
impoverished.
Vietnam promotes child protection
against accidents, injuries
The Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs
announced on May 25 that June has been earmarked for a string of programmes
to protect children from accidents and injuries.
Dang Hoa Nam, Director of the ministry’s Department of
Child Protection and Care, said all 63 provinces and cities nationwide have
readied to join the action month.
Their activities will feature mass communication
campaigns on wearing helmets and life jackets, along with summer camps and
swimming classes, he added.
On the occasion, the National Fund for Vietnamese
Children will deliver gifts worth more than 2.5 billion VND (112, 500 USD) to
nearly 5,000 children.
The 4th ASEAN Children’s Forum is scheduled to take
place in Hanoi in June.
According to the Health Ministry, between 2010 and
2014, everyday there were approximately 580 children facing a host of
incidents from electric shocks and burns to traffic accidents and drowning.
These have become the top causes of disabilities for the group.
The rate of accidents occurring among children in
Vietnam is about eight times higher than that in developed countries, with
fatalities most commonly caused by traffic accidents and drowning.
Protestant practices facilitated in
line with law
Authorities of the central and Central Highlands
localities, along with Binh Phuoc province in the south – which are home to a
large number of Protestants in Vietnam, will continue facilitating religious
practices in line with the law.
This was agreed as part of the provinces’ religious
work with a focus on Protestantism between 2016 and 2020, heard a meeting
held by the Steering Committee for the Central Highlands and the Government’s
Committee for Religious Affairs on May 25.
The provinces will also enhance State management over
Protestantism and ensure people’s rights to the freedom of religion and
belief. At the same time, efforts will be made to bring into play the
religion’s positive values and encourage followers to contribute to national
development and protection.
Local authorities will work harder to prevent and fight
hostile forces’ plots to take advantage of Protestantism, while guaranteeing
political security and social order and safety. They will also enhance the
solidarity of local Protestant dignitaries and followers in the great
national unity bloc.
The provinces are also instructed to do their best in
licensing the operation of Protestant groups, particularly those in rural and
border areas, along with strengthening relations with Protestant
organisations.
Since 2005, the Central Highlands provinces (Dak Lak,
Gia Lai, Kon Tum, Dak Nong and Lam Dong) have recognised 223 branches and
licensed 544 groups of Protestants. A total of 121 places of worship have
been built or repaired.
The provincial administrations have also recognised the
appointment and reinstatement of 378 dignitaries and opened Protestant
doctrine teaching courses for nearly 77,000 followers.
Quang Nam helps poor households cope
with extreme weather
The central province of Quang Nam decided to put aside
over 5.6 billion VND (246,000 USD) for helping poor households build
flood-resistant houses.
The money will be used to finance 1,936 poor
households, 427 of which are in extremely disadvantaged areas.
Nong Son, Dai Loc, Duy Xuyen, Nui Thanh and Thang Binh
districts record a large number of beneficiaries.
Dinh Van Thu, Chairman of the provincial People’s
Committee, said the action is one of efforts to implement the government’s
policy on assisting poor households in building flood-resistant houses.
In order to ensure the transparency of the programme,
the provincial People’s Committee asked the People’s Committees of districts,
towns and cities to be accountable for the management and use of the
allocated capital.
Seminar seeks to prevent fake goods
Measures to combat fake goods and intellectual rights
violations was the focus of a workshop in Hanoi on May 25.
Co-organised by the Cong Thuong (Industry and Trade)
newspaper and the Market Management Department under the Ministry of Industry
and Trade (MoIT), the event aims to promote coordination between legal
enforcement organs and enterprises in this fight.
Le The Bao, Chairman of the Vietnam Association for
Anti-Counterfeiting and Trademark Protection highlighted the important role
played by his agency and enterprises in raising awareness of protecting trade
names.
Exhibitions should be organised, helping consumers know
the symbols for distinguishing between genuine and counterfeit products ,
while market management forces should be provided with knowledge and
experience in discovering counterfeit goods on the market, he suggested.
Meanwhile, Nguyen Anh Ngoc from the Investip Industrial
Property JSC said that businesses should be supported in investigating and
handling violations of intellectual property rights.
Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Do Thang Hai
mentioned the complicated situation of counterfeit products and violations of
intellectual property rights, saying that m any enterprises, when they discover
that their designs and trademarks have been copied, do not denounce these
actions to authorised agencies.
This causes negative impacts for consumers and licensed
companies’ production and business, and the investment climate as well, he
added.
According to Nguyen Trong Tin, deputy director of the
Market Management Department, market management forces settle about 10,000
cases of fake and low-quality goods, and trade fraud every year.
Legal enforcement organs and enterprises should further
enhance links, towards improving efficiency of the fight against counterfeit
products and violations of intellectual property rights, Tin noted.
VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/TT/TN/Dantri
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Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 5, 2016
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