Social News 22/9
Vietnam promotes tourism in France
A
performance at the tourism promotion event in Paris.
A programme with the theme of “Hanoi – the cradle of
cultural heritage” has been held in Paris in an effort to introduce Hanoi’s
and Vietnam’s cultural essence as well as recent tourism policies.
The event began with a screening of a video on the
beauty of Vietnam and its people, followed by performances of Quan Ho folk
singing and traditional musical instruments.
Speaking at the ceremony on September 20, Vietnamese
Ambassador to France Nguyen Ngoc Son highlighted the position and importance
of the tourism sector in Vietnam’s economy. The sector attracted eight
million tourists in 2015 and targets to welcome 11 million by 2020, making up
seven percent of the country’s gross domestic product.
He said Vietnam’s efforts in recent years, including
the 15-day visa exemption policy and the use of A350 plane on the Hanoi/HCM
City-Paris route, made it more convenient for tourists to visit
Vietnam.
Do Dinh Hong, Director of the Hanoi Department of
Tourism, said culture tourism is typical products of the capital city’s
tourism sector thanks to Hanoi’s rich history, 5,820 global, national and
city-level relic sites.
Didier Cour, Director of France’s Terre d’aventure
travel company, highly appreciated Vietnam’s visa exemption policy and
praised the country as a wonderful culture and cuisine destination.
With advantages in natural landscapes, rich culture,
local people’s hospitality and a diversity of ethnic groups, Vietnam promises
to be a destination of the future in the global tourism picture.
During the event, Vietnamese and French travel
companies discussed cooperation to boost the number of tourists to each other
country.
India’s Hindi language promoted in
Vietnam
The Indian Consulate General in Ho Chi Minh City and
the University of Social Sciences and Humanities under the Vietnam National
University Ho Chi Minh City (HCMUSSH) on September 21 organised “Hindi
Language Day” with many cultural and art activities.
Associate Professor, Dr. Vo Van Sen, HCMUSSH Rector,
said the programme aims to help the public understand more about India ’s
Hindi language, and acknowledged efforts of the university’s students and
teachers in popularising the language as well as Indian culture among
Vietnamese.
Learning Hindi language can help Vietnamese have a
deeper look on India ’s culture, he noted.
Indian Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish said the teaching
of the Hindi language in Vietnam will contribute to enhancing cultural and
educational ties between the two countries.
On this occasion, the Indian Embassy in Vietnam and the
Vietnamese university agreed to extend the memorandum of understanding on
dispatching an Indian professor to teach at the university for 2017-2019.
Project launched to strengthen
women’s role in economic development
A project on enhancing opportunities for women’s
enterprises (EOWE) has been launched in the four central provinces of Binh
Thuan, Ninh Thuan, Quang Binh and Binh Dinh.
A ceremony to introduce the EOWE project, jointly
organised by the Binh Thuan province and the Netherlands Development
Organisation (SNV) in Binh Thuan on September 21, was attended by over 100
representatives from the four targeted provinces.
It is part of the Funding Leadership and Opportunities
for Women (FLOW) programme funded by the Netherlands Government, which will
be carried out in Vietnam and Kenya from 2016 to 2020 at a total investment
of 6.6 million EUR.
It aims to create a favourable climate for female
owners’ enterprises in agricultural fields, thus narrowing the gender gaps.
Under the project, around 100,000 people are expected
to have better awareness of gender equality; 20,000 women will have higher
incomes; and 18 others will receive assistance to run their lucrative businesses.
Other objectives of the project include building
capacity for governmental agencies to better implement policies integrated
gender issue and promote the women’s empowerment.
Support will be provided for female-run start-ups and
trade promotion, while strengthening role of women in agricultural
cooperatives.
SNV Vietnam Director Miguel Mendez said his
organisation has developed a programme to address gender barriers in
agricultural production, hoping that the situation will be improved in the
next five years, with female voices better heard in social plan making.
Participants also discussed strategies to promote
gender equality, smart agricultural production, climate change and value
chain.
Capital punishment inflicted on drug
baron, eight accomplices
Drug baron Trang A Tang and eight accomplices have been
given death sentence while three others have received life imprisonment for
their involvement in trafficking 1,791 heroin bricks and 553 drug pills.
Trang A Tang (alias Tang Keangnam), 34, from Moc Chau
district of northern Son La province trafficked 1,791 heroin bricks (about
350 grams each) and 553 synthetic drug pills for 13 times from 2009. He
earned US$608,500 from the trafficking.
Aside from the capital punishment, he has to return
US$608,000 and pay up to VND500 million (US$22,410) in fines. Other assets
linked to drug trafficking will also be confiscated.
The death penalty is also imposed on Trang A Nenh (25,
Tang’s foster brother), Giang A Cho (45, a policeman in Moc Chau district),
Giang A Nha (32, Tang’s brother-in-law), Sung A Lanh (42, from Mai Chau
district of Hoa Binh province), Song A Nenh (43, from Van Ho district of Son
La), Trang A Mua (45, from Van Ho district), Vu Van Lam (48, from Van Ho
district), and Trang A Ky (44, from Van Ho district).
Meanwhile, Luong Thi Thao (37, from Bac Giang city),
Giang Thi Sua (32, Tang’s wife), and Trang A Chu (58, Tang’s father) will
spend life behind bars.
At about 1pm of July 26, 2013, police tried to stop two
cars driven by Trang A Tang and Giang Thi Sua for check in Vo Cuong ward of
Bac Ninh city, but they didn’t obey. Police chased and stopped the cars in
Song Khe commune of Bac Giang city.
Up to 265 heroin bricks (weighing 91.76kg) and 553
methamphetamine pills (weighing 51.5 grams) were found in the cars.
Investigation results show that Trang A Tang
masterminded the ring which trafficked drugs from Laos to Bac Giang province
via Son La.
Tang bought drugs from some Mong ethnic people in Laos
and Thailand and gathered the narcotics at the house of his father, Trang A
Chu. The drugs were then sold to Luong Thi Thao in Bac Giang and others,
according to the indictment.
Training workshop on gender equality
for reporters
Reporters and editors have attended a two-day training
workshop this week on gender equality and education for girls and women to
improve the quality of their reporting.
The workshop, which concluded on September 21, is part
of a project called “Initiative on Gender Equality and Girl Education in
Vietnam: empowering girls and women for a more equal society”, jointly
sponsored by UNESCO’s Vietnam Office, Radio the Voice of Vietnam (VOV), and
the Ministry of Education and Training.
Hoang Minh Nguyet, UNESCO Communication and Information
Program Coordinator, said over the years, Vietnam’s media has contributed
greatly to enhancing gender equality and education for girls and women.
"The achievements have been shown through
Vietnam’s promulgation of the Law on Gender Equality and the Law on Domestic
Violence Prevention and Control. But there remain gender preconceptions in
the press and vestiges of male chauvinism in society. We hope that this
course will improve reporters’ knowledge about gender equality and the need
to educate girls and women," she added.
Deputy PM urges fast delivery of
compensation for marine pollution
Deputy Prime Minister Truong Hoa Binh has emphasised
the prompt delivery of compensation to residents in four central provinces
affected by the serious marine pollution incident earlier this year as well
as support for them to resume normal life and production.
The four central provinces of Ha Tinh, Quang Binh,
Quang Tri and Thua Thien-Hue saw abnormal dead fish in large amounts in April
this year.
In late June, Formosa Ha Tinh accepted responsibility
for the mass fish deaths. The pollution damaged about 400 hectares of coral
and affected over 260,000 people who earn their living by working at sea.
The company pledged to compensate over 11.5 trillion
VND (500 million USD), which will be used to support local fishermen in
changing their jobs and recover the polluted maritime environment. It also
vowed to deal with shortcomings and limitations in waste and wastewater
treatment.
In a document freshly issued by the Government Office
following a meeting of the steering committee for solutions to overcome the
pollution incident, the Deputy PM also instructed relevant ministries and
agencies to act quickly to address the consequences of the incident and restore
the marine environment while ensuring that the Formosa Ha Tinh abide by
environmental regulations and not repeat its violations of law on discharging
waste.
The Finance Ministry is to work with the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development to develop the guidance on levels of
compensation, while the administrations of the four affected provinces must
urgently complete the assessment of damages and calculate the amount of
compensation to be paid to different groups of victims.
The Party committees and People’s Committees as well as
social organisations of the four provinces are required to keep close
supervision of the assessment process to ensure fairness, transparency and
democracy.
Ministries must propose other forms of support in
fields in their management to affected communities with a focus on restoring
production and normal lives.
Deputy PM Truong Hoa Binh also urged accelerating the
pace of building marine environmental observatories in the four provinces and
later expanding to other coastal localities.
The Health Ministry will continue to test samples of
seafood from the affected sea areas to ensure only safe products are sold on
the market.
Revisions to Labour Code under
discussion
The Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs
(MoLISA) held a conference in Hanoi on September 21 to review the three-year
enforcement of the Labour Code 2012 and acquire feedback of businesses from
Hanoi and the northern provinces of Vinh Phuc, Ha Nam and Bac Ninh.
The amendments and supplements to the Labour Code are
expected to be submitted to the 14 th National Assembly for discussion at the
third session and for adoption at the fourth session slated for October
2017.
Speaking at the event, MoLISA Deputy Minister Pham Minh
Huan said the ministry has so far received reports from 47 departments, 20
management boards, 13 corporations and associations, and 10 ministries and
agencies.
Huan underscored the need to amend the Labour Code to
meet international labour standards, develop harmonious labour relations and
create a business environment conducive to businesses and workers, given that
Vietnam has joined a free trade agreement with the European Union and the
Trans-Pacific Partnership.
The revisions include increasing limit for extra work
time and retirement ages, reconsidering procedures for strike, and priorities
to firms that employ many female workers.
Several opinions suggested strengthening free legal
consultation services, holding more dialogues and food safety training at the
workplaces, and revising terms regarding salary and working time.
After the Labour Code was put into force on May 1,
2013, the government and MoLISA has issued 29 decrees and 37 circulars
guiding the enforcement of the Code.
Measures against AIDS, drugs and
prostitution to be strengthened
Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam has urged ministries
and agencies to enhance measures to prevent and control HIV/AIDS, drugs and
prostitution from now to the end of the year.
At a recent conference of the Standing Board of the
National Committee for AIDS, Drugs and Prostitution Prevention to review the
work in the first eight months of this year and set tasks for the remaining
months, the Deputy PM asked the Ministry of Public Security to submit the
2016-2020 programme on drug prevention to the Government for approval and
work with other agencies to amend the Law on Drug Prevention and Control.
The ministry was also urged to collaborate with the
Ministry of Defence totackle drug crimes in border areas.
As Chairman of the committee, Dam requested the
Ministry of Health to promulgate documents guiding the use of methadone for
drug addiction treatment and establish antiretroviral treatment management
systems.
The Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs was
asked to propose measures to handle violations on prostitution prevention
while the Ministry of Justice will consider an administrative punishment on
drug users.
He stressed that localities should develop policies to
mobilise resources from the community for the fight against AIDS, drugs and
prostitution.
Children in Ba Ria–Vung Tau, Thai
Nguyen receive support
About 20,000 students at primary and secondary schools
in the southern province of Ba Ria–Vung Tau are expected to benefit from an
eye care project, which was launched by the province’s Health Department on
September 20.
The project has total investment of 876 million VND
(over 39,200 USD), of which 796 million VND (over 35,600 USD) was sponsored
by Australia’s Brien Holden Vision Institute (BHVI), with the remaining 80
million VND (over 3,500 USD) contributed by the province.
It will be carried out from September 27 to November
30, aiming to promote eye care and eye treatment in schools.
The project will provide eye check-ups and present glasses
to children, give eye tests training to school medical staff and organise
communications activities.
Ba Ria–Vung Tau’s Ophthalmology Hospital will receive
help from the BHVI to establish three public vision units in Long Dien
commune, Con Dao commune and Vung Tau city.
From 2011–2015, the BHVI and Opthalmology Hospital set
up 5 public units in the province. Eye tests and glasses were offered to
students, including 543 children with disabilities.
On the same day, construction of 20 houses for disadvantaged
children began in Linh Son Commune, Dong Hy District under a programme from
the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union and the Ho Chi Minh Young Pioneer
Organisation of the northern province of Thai Nguyen.
At the ceremony, Thai Nguyen’s Agriculture and Rural
Development Bank gave each household 50 million VND (over 2,200 USD), and the
provincial Youth Union and Red Cross gave presents to 10 disadvantaged
children who performed well in school.
Int’l exhibition on fire safety
equipment opens in Hanoi
The International Fire Safety & Rescue and Security
Technology and Equipment Exhibition 2016 kicked off in Hanoi on September
21.
Politburo member and Deputy Prime Minister Truong Hoa
Binh attended the event which shapes part of activities to mark the 55th anniversary
of Fire Police Forces’ traditional day (October 1961) and 15th anniversary of
Fire Prevention Day (October, 2001).
The expo features 450 booths showcasing fire rescue and
prevention equipment and security products of leading manufacturers and suppliers
from 18 countries and territories.
It also introduces advanced technologies on fire
fighting and prevention and solutions on environmental hygiene and industrial
safety.
The event offers an excellent opportunity for domestic
and foreign businesses to share experience and study investment in fire
safety industry in Vietnam .
Jointly held by the Vietnam Fire & Rescue Police
Department, Vietnam Advertisement & Fair Exhibition JSC – VIETFAIR and
Messe Frankurt New Era Business Media Ltd, the exhibition will run until
September 24.
Khanh Hoa calls for investment in
upgrading reservoirs
The central coastal province of Khanh Hoa is calling
for foreign and domestic investments into building and upgrading reservoirs
to address serious water shortages.
According to local authority, the locality needs an
investment of 9.4 trillion VND (423 million USD) to upgrade eight existing
reservoirs, and build five new ones in an effort to deal with an anticipated
water shortage of 300 million cubic metres of water by 2020.
The provincial People’s Committee requested the
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development accelerate the building of the
Song Cho and Dong Dien reservoirs which have the capacity of 99 million and
95 million cubic metres of water, respectively, at a combined cost of 7.2
trillion VND (324 million USD).
The locality will mobilise different resources to build
the Son Trung, Song Can, Suoi Sau reservoirs, at a total cost of 730 billion
VND (32.8 million USD) and a dam to prevent saltwater intrusion in the Cai
River, worth 700 billion VND (31.5 million USD).
From 2017 to 2022, numerous projects will be
implemented to repair eight degrading reservoirs, namely Suoi Trau, Lang
Nhot, Dong Bo, Da Mai, Cay Sung, Suoi Luong, Suoi Lon, and Ben Ghe, at a
total cost exceeding 9.4 million USD funded by the World Bank.
Other dredging projects will also be carried out to
ensure safety and prevent sedimentation in Am Chua, Da Mai, Suoi Trau
reservoirs.
Khanh Hoa is now home to 28 reservoirs, with a combined
capacity of 250 million cubic metres of water, meeting 60 percent of the
locality’s current water demand, which is estimated to reach 670 million
cubic metres by 2020 and 754 million cubic metres by 2030.
Gastronomy gives Vietnamese a taste
of Peru’s culture
A Peruvian gastronomy week will provide visitors with
useful information and the best experience about the culture of the South
American country when it takes place in Hanoi from September 21-27.
Luis Tsuboyama, Chargé d’affaires at the Peruvian
Embassy in Vietnam, said the week is held on the occasion of the 22nd
anniversary of the countries’ diplomatic ties (November 14, 1994) and Peru’s
organisation of the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit in
November.
The Peruvian cuisine promotion week, the second of its
kind in Vietnam, aims to popularise the country’s culinary culture and
beauties among local people through various activities such as a cuisine
festival, a painting exhibition, a workshop on Peru’s tourism and farm
produce, and a music and fashion show.
Notably, a seminar will give attendants an insight into
the special potato variety of Peru and offer them dishes made from this
potato. Products typical for the country will also be displayed at a painting
exhibition.
The week is held by the Peruvian Embassy, Vietnam’s
military-run telecommunication group Viettel, and Vietnamese companies with
activities related to Peruvian goods.
Luis Tsuboyama said trade between Peru and Vietnam has
grown strongly in recent years, from 40 million USD in 2005 to over 395
million USD in 2015.
Viettel and the Vietnam National Oil and Gas Group
(PetroVietnam) are running profitable projects in Peru, whose AJE Group and
Aqua Expeditions are operating in beverage and tourism industries in the
Southeast Asian nation, he added.
A Sao Temple Festival kicks off
A ceremony was held in the northern province of Thai
Binh on September 20 to kick off the A Sao Temple Festival and receive a
certificate recognising the festival as a national intangible cultural
heritage.
The festival began with drumming and dragon dances as
well as an art performance highlighting the historical and spiritual
significance of the temple.
It will run until September 22, featuring traditional
cultural rituals and folk games.
Located in An Thai commune, Quynh Phu district, A Sao
Temple was built to worship General Tran Hung Dao (Tran Quoc Tuan), the
Supreme Commander of Vietnam during the Tran dynasty (1225-1400), who led the
Dai Viet army to repel Mongolian invasions in 1258, 1285 and 1288.
The temple is considered a holy land owing a strategic
position that contributed to victories over the Mongolian invaders.
In 2014, the temple relic complex received the national
cultural and historical relic certificate from the Ministry of Culture, Sports
and Tourism.
The provincial People’s Committee approved a plan to
build a historical relic site of the Tran Dynasty covering nearly 32 hectares
in A Sao hamlet, An Thai commune.
Ninh Thuan: Cham ethnic group
celebrates traditional festival
Cham ethnic people in south central coast Ninh Thuan
province will celebrate the Kate festival 2016 from September 29–October
1.
According to Director of Ninh Thuan’s Department of
Culture, Sport and Tourism Chau Thanh Hai, the province will also hold a
grapes and wine festival during the Kate festival.
There are many traditional activities held during the
Kate festival such as brocade weaving and pottery making. Cham cuisine will
also be served.
Local authorities will also hold a diplomatic seminar,
combined with sight-seeing activities, to call for UNESCO recognition of Cham
people’s towers and the Kate festival as world heritage.
For Cham people, the Kate festival is the most
significant festival of the year. Visitors can take part in Brahmanism
rituals and enjoy traditional music.
Company caught smuggling tiles
The Anti-smuggling Department under Việt Nam Customs
will prosecute a Hà Nội-based company for allegedly smuggling and trading
over 100 containers of ceramic tiles worth some VNĐ3.2 billion (US$143,300)
From September to December 2015, the Tuấn Phát Commerce
and Trade Ltd Company bought 65 containers with over 76,000sq.m. of ceramic
tiles from China. The tiles were scheduled to transit via the Hải Phòng Port
and then reach Inland Container Depot (ICD) Gia Lâm-Hà Nội.
Once the 30 containers arrived at ICD Gia Lâm-Hà Nội,
the company took them out of the depot without following the required customs
procedure for imported goods. Another 35 ceramic tile containers were sent
directly to the company’s warehouse instead of to ICD Gia Lâm.
Further investigation showed that from July to October
2015, the company submitted eight customs declaration to import 44 containers
of ceramic tiles worth VNĐ1.8 billion ($80,600).
The ceramic tiles were not legally imported as the
company did not submit the required documents, including quality test results
and samples for testing.
However, all the smuggled tiles in 44 containers were
sold in the domestic market.
The Anti-smuggling Department said it would transfer
all documents relating to the company to the Hà Nội Police for further
investigation.
Soil from road construction turns
Huế River red
The high volume of soil from road construction works in
the upper part of the Hương River in this central province has turned the
colour of the water to red.
This has left locals worried about the health of their
beloved river.
Tests by the local department of environment protection
showed content of suspended solid substance in the river water had increased
10 times, while its turbidity was 200 times higher compared with normal
conditions.
“This is caused by the soil from the construction of
roads in the province’s mountainous Nam Đông District,” department director
Nguyễn Việt Hùng said. Many upper streams supply water to the river and water
from the heavy rains had flowed into the river carrying the soil with it
The construction of a highway connecting the province
and neighbouring Đà Nẵng City is ongoing and the district bears part of the highway.
Another project to build a road linking the district’s municipal town to the
highway is also underway.
Digging into the local mountains and hills has
unearthed a huge quantity of broken soil, which is easily swept by the strong
current of the rainwater.
Although Huế City’s water supply company said they are
not affected thanks to a hi-tech filtering system, locals expressed their
concern over the turbid condition of the famed clear river. Turbidity is so
strong that water in its tributaries and in the vast Tam Giang Lagoon and the
ocean has turned red as well.
The river runs across the city and gives the city a
unique beauty thanks to its clear water and charm.
Projects to focus on pregnant women,
lactating mothers
Pregnant women, lactating mothers and clinical patients
will benefit from two nutrition improvement projects worth VNĐ15 billion
(US$670,000) signed between the Ministry of Health and Abbott Company at a
ceremony today in Hà Nội.
“The two projects will contribute to the improvement of
the nutrition status of the people, especially to the faster decline of
stunting malnutrition in Việt Nam and the enhancement of inpatients’ health
and clinical treatment efficiency in hospitals,” Deputy Minister of Health
Nguyễn Việt Tiến said at the signing ceremony.
The project on improvement of the nutrition status for
pregnant women and lactating mothers will focus its activities on developing
a National Nutrition Guideline. It will also help to increase knowledge about
nutrition in healthcare staff and members of the Việt Nam Women’s Union
through implementation of the National Nutrition Guideline for pregnant women
and lactating mothers.
The project on improvement of clinical nutrition
quality in hospitals in Việt Nam will focus on developing a quality improvement
programme (QIP) for clinical nutrition to be implemented in hospitals.
The National Strategy on Nutrition for the period
2011-2020 and vision to 2030 approved by the Prime Minister has identified
that an important direction to improve people’s health is providing early
nutrition intervention for women of reproductive age, pregnant women and
children during the golden period of the first 1,000 days.
The two projects will help the health ministry
implement the National Strategy on Nutrition and enhance inpatients’ health
and clinical treatment efficiency in hospitals in Việt Nam.
A report of the National Institute of Nutrition showed
that the rate of childhood stunting in 2014 was 24.9 per cent, the rate of
zinc deficiency in pregnant women was 80.3 per cent and that of anemia was
32.8 per cent.
Doctors warn of seasonal outbreaks
Doctors have warned of possible outbreaks of seasonal
diseases such as pinkeye, viral fever and respiratory tract infections.
The Hà Nội-based Paediatrics Hospital has recorded more
than 30,000 patients this month. It sees an average of 3,000 children
patients a day, approximately 25 per cent higher than normal.
The young patients are often reported to suffer
respiratory diseases, as well as pneumonia, gastrointestinal disease, viral
fever and dengue fever.
Similarly, the Paediatrics Department of Bạch Mai
Hospital has lately received an increased number of patients for the
treatment of respiratory diseases. It has reported receiving about 400-500
patients per day, with more than half of them suffering diseases related to
respiratory problems and viral fever. Many children have been hospitalised
several times in a short time because of re-infection.
Doctors of the two hospitals explained that the reason
behind the increasing number of paediatric patients was because the weather
in the North was in a transition period with hot weather in the daytime and
chilly weather at night that reduced the resistance of children.
Besides, the concentration of bacteria and increasing
viruses in the air made children susceptible, they said.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Health’s Department of
Preventive Medicine has warned that erratic weather would enable bacteria
that cause pinkeye disease.
Doctor Lê Xuân Thủy from the department said that
pinkeye is a very contagious disease and spread easily in the community.
From mid-August until now, the number of patients
diagnosed and treated for pinkeye at hospitals in Hà Nội has reportedly
increased and exceeded normal days.
At the Central Eye Hospital, the number of patients
suffering pinkeye coming in for diagnosis and treatment accounted for about
11-12 per cent of the total number of all patients.
Thủy said the main causes of pinkeye disease are adenoviruses
or bacteria such as streptococcus, staphylococcus and pneumococcus.
“A dirty environment, poor sanitation, contaminated
water use, and shared living supplies such as towels and pillows are
favourable conditions for developing the disease and spreading outbreaks,”
Thủy said.
Thủy noted that pinkeye could spread through the
respiratory tract, tears, and saliva, as well as by shaking hands, holding,
touching items contaminated with pathogens such as door handles, stair knobs,
telephones; shared objects and the personal belongings of the patients, such
as towels and washbasins.
He said any suspected case of pinkeye disease should go
to medical facilities for examination, counseling and treatment and should
not be treated by traditional Vietnamese methods such as applying leaves like
betel leaf and mulberry leaf onto eyes.
Govt-civil society-business nexus
key to hitting UN development goals: experts
The partnership between Government, enterprises and
civil society is vital to achieving the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals
(SDG) in Việt Nam, experts have said
The SDGs were adopted by 193 countries a year ago with
qualitative objectives across the social, economic and environmental
dimensions to be achieved by 2030.
They are 17 goals with 169 targets and 231 indicators,
Jasmine Jaruphand, the Asia Pacific Regional Lead for the Sustainable
Development Goals Action Campaign, said.
“It is the time to build new partnerships and alliances
to make sure the SDGs are a reality for everyone, everywhere by 2030,” she
told a workshop held in HCM City yesterday (September 20).
“The UN will play a key role in co-ordinating new
partnerships for action with governments and the private and public sectors.”
The campaign’s methodology includes building public
awareness and partnerships, developing creative and innovative communication
tools and fostering citizens’ action and SDG solutions in the community.
Generating citizen-driven data for the SDG tracking
process and facilitating inclusive dialogues for policy change are also
included, she said.
Phil Maclaurin, business unit manager of Premier Oil
Vietnam, said, “UN Sustainable Development Goals make good sense for strong
businesses.
“As a business leader, I believe most of my team can
work within four to six goals,”
“The 17 sustainable development goals are well-chosen
and visionary. They are visions that Government and big agencies like the UN
seem best able to deliver.”
SDGs impact the economy, politics, society, education,
quality of life and environment.
Young talented people aged from 18 to 30 can
participate in the 2016 Sustainable Tourism Awareness and Ideas (STAI)
Incubator, part of efforts to implement the SDGs in Việt Nam.
The competition aims to increase community awareness to
protect marine life and eco-systems as well as develop ideas about
sustainable coastal tourism among young Vietnamese, Đào Mạnh Hùng, chairman
of the Vietnam Tourism Education Association, said.
"It is a forum for young people to contribute to
tourism development," he said.
With a coastline of more than 3,000 kilometres, a total
of 125 beaches and thousands of islands, Việt Nam has huge potential for
coastal tourism, which accounts for 70 per cent of the tourism sector’s
revenues, he said.
The contest is jointly organised by Sustainable Development
Goals Action Campaign, Asian Development Bank, Publication and Social
Development Engagement Centre, and Sea Media Co., Ltd.
In the first round titled “Creator” held from June 25
to September 25, contestants will present proposals on promising projects to
tackle problems related to sustainable tourism in Việt Nam.
Fifteen teams with the best ideas will be chosen to
enter the “Ideation” round in October from which six will be selected for
consultancy from experts from international organisations.
The “Integration” round in November will further
whittle down the number of projects to four for financial support from
investors to implement them.
The contest is part of a community project to implement
the UN’s SDGs in Việt Nam between 2016 and 2030.
It targets making 50 million people, or 50 per cent of
the population, aware of the Sustainable Development Goals by 2020, Hanni
Tran, head of the contest organising board, said.
Thirty million people would serve as advocates for
SDGs, articulating them and doing related tasks, she added.
First ví giặm singing club opens in
HCM City
A group of veteran artists sang the beautiful rhythms
of ví giặm, folk songs from the Nghệ An-Hà Tĩnh region, during the opening
ceremony of the first Ví Giặm Singing Club in HCM City last weekend.
The club promotes the values of ví giặm and encourages
local residents, especially youth, to learn about the art form.
Veteran artists who are members of the club, such as Tố
Nga, Thu Giang, Đinh Linh and Sông Thao, offer free training in singing.
Ví giặm was recognised as an intangible cultural
heritage of humanity by UNESCO last year. It is the ninth Vietnamese cultural
practice to receive UNESCO’s intangible heritage status.
The song is sung in a back-and-forth style while
working, unaccompanied by musical instruments. The singing reflects the work,
cultural life and feelings of the local people.
There are more than 50 singing clubs with a total of
800 members in Hà Tĩnh and Nghệ An provinces.
Children in Ba Ria–Vung Tau, Thai
Nguyen receive support
About 20,000 students at primary and secondary schools
in the southern province of Ba Ria–Vung Tau are expected to benefit from an
eye care project, which was launched by the province’s Health Department on
September 20.
The project has total investment of 876 million VND
(over 39,200 USD), of which 796 million VND (over 35,600 USD) was sponsored
by Australia’s Brien Holden Vision Institute (BHVI), with the remaining 80
million VND (over 3,500 USD) contributed by the province.
It will be carried out from September 27 to November
30, aiming to promote eye care and eye treatment in schools.
The project will provide eye check-ups and present
glasses to children, give eye tests training to school medical staff and
organise communications activities.
Ba Ria–Vung Tau’s Ophthalmology Hospital will receive
help from the BHVI to establish three public vision units in Long Dien
commune, Con Dao commune and Vung Tau city.
From 2011–2015, the BHVI and Opthalmology Hospital set
up 5 public units in the province. Eye tests and glasses were offered to
students, including 543 children with disabilities.
On the same day, construction of 20 houses for
disadvantaged children began in Linh Son Commune, Dong Hy District under a
programme from the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union and the Ho Chi Minh
Young Pioneer Organisation of the northern province of Thai Nguyen.
At the ceremony, Thai Nguyen’s Agriculture and Rural
Development Bank gave each household 50 million VND (over 2,200 USD), and the
provincial Youth Union and Red Cross gave presents to 10 disadvantaged
children who performed well in school.
Health Ministry, Abbott shake hands
for nutrition improvement
The Ministry of Health and the US-based Abbott Company
on September 21 signed a memorandum of understanding on cooperation in two
projects to improve the quality of clinical nutrition at hospitals and among
pregnant and nursing women.
At the signing ceremony, both Prof. Dr. Nguyen Viet
Tien, Deputy Minister of Health, and Brett Blackshaw from the US Embassy in
Vietnam held that the projects will help reduce the malnutrition ratio in
Vietnam as well as enhance the health of patients and raise the efficacy of
treatment in hospitals.
According to head of the Department of Medical
Examination and Treatment Luong Ngoc Khue, the National Strategy on Nutrition
for the 2011-2020 period with a vision to 2030 has targeted the restoration
and development of a clinical nutrition system and hospital regulations in
the field to give better nutrition care for specific groups.
The project to improve the clinical nutrition quality
will focus on building a Quality Improvement Programme in Vietnam (VN QIP),
which comprises tools for nutrition screening and a nutrition assessment
process for patients at hospitals, together with training courses and guiding
documents for health staff.
Meanwhile, the project to better nutrition conditions
among pregnant and nursing women aims to design a national manual on
nutrition for the targeted groups, while enhancing capacity and knowledge of
nutrition for caregivers as well as officials of the Vietnam Women’s Union
through the popularisation of the document.
Statistics showed that the ratio of underweight among
under-five-year-old children in Vietnam has reduced rapidly and stably. However,
the percentage of stunted children remained high, mostly due to
malnutrition-caused vitamin deficiency suffered by their mothers during
pregnancy and nursing.
According to the National Institute of Nutrition, in
2014, 24.9 percent of children in Vietnam were stunted, while the ratio of
pregnant woman with insufficient zinc provision was 80.3 percent, and those
with anaemia were 32.8 percent.
Photography workshop with Peter Le
The Factory Contemporary Arts Centre will host a
three-session workshop “Introduction to Photography” with Peter Le, a
photographer and visual artist living and working in Việt Nam and China.
The workshop, to be held on September 27 and 29, and
October 2, will discuss the history of photography, modern themes, and
photography in the past and today in Việt Nam.
Born in Việt Nam and raised in Vancouver, Le studied
painting and art history at Emily Carr University of Art and Design, and film
at the Vancouver Film School. He holds a BFA in photography from Parsons
School of Design in New York.
He has worked as a fashion and portrait photographer
for publications in Beijing such as GQ CN, Elle China and Architectural
Digest CN. He has also worked with world-renowned artist Ai Weiwei as
in-house photographer and photography expert.
The workshop fee is VNĐ750,000. The venue is at 15
Nguyễn Ư Dĩ Street in District 2.
Photographic images of women
displayed in City
An exhibition of 23 photos by French artist Thiery
Beyne is on display at the Eastin Grand Hotel Saigon in HCM City.
The Back Photography exhibition features the backs of
Vietnamese women he photographed during his travels in the country.
To satisfy his passion for travel and photography, he began
travelling in the 80s, traversing several Asian countries, including India,
Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Thailand and Việt Nam.
During his 15 years in Việt Nam, he has had a chance to
travel from the north to the south, meet many different people, and show different
perspectives about life in Việt Nam through his work.
”From behind the shadow, we let ourselves dream about
the face on the other side: that of a refined Vietnamese woman,” he said.
“Imagination stimulates the senses by unveiling beauty through their backs. I
invite you to see the ‘stolen’ backs that are rarely photographed.”
His Back Photography works were exhibited in
Paris in March.
3D art lessons for little ones
The Workshop series Creative 3D invites children to
hone their artistic skills starting October 2 in Blossom Art House at 5pm.
In the workshop, students from 5 to 11 years old will
learn the art of 3D visual creation using a most familiar theme: portrait of
themselves or the people around them. After developing their designs on
paper, students will learn about the basic facial structure and then will
develop their drawnings into one-relief portraits made of paperboard and
decorated with color paints.
Portrait & Reliefs is the first of 10 Creative 3D
workshops.Each workshop lasts 90 minutes.
A workshop costs VNĐ200,000 (US$8.9) per child.
Children taking part in all 10 workshops will get a discount of 10%. To
register, call Ms. Linh at 0126.620.3694. The Blossom Art House is located at
94B Trần Hưng Đạo Street, Hà Nội.
PM launches Óc Eo-Ba Thê
preservation for 2016-2020
The Prime Minister has approved a project to preserve
the Óc Eo- Ba Thê archeological site in the Cửu Long (Mekong) Delta province
of An Giang.
Funded by the provincial budget, the project will cost
VNĐ6.74 billion (US$300,000) and will be carried out between 2016 and 2020.
The work will include upgrading infrastructure and
completing a dossier to submit to UNESCO for recognition as a world heritage
site.
In 2012, the site—with its millenia-old pottery, tools,
and other remains—was recognised as a national cultural relic.
The Óc Eo Cultural Relic Management Board, in
coordination with the Việt Nam Institute of Culture and Arts Studies, held a
press meeting Monday to launch the book Di sản văn hóa Óc Eo- Ba Thê tỉnh An
Giang (Óc Eo- Ba Thê Cultural Relic in An Giang Province).
The 780-page book is a collection of documents and
research on the relic from foreign and domestic experts.
Thanh Hóa upgrade line-up for new
season
FLC Thanh Hóa have strengthened their defences with two
new contracts for the next season just a few days after the V. League 2016
ended.
Thanh Hóa shopped a lot prior to this year’s tournament
but failed to enter the top three as planned. They grabbed 42 points after 26
matches and were ranked sixth.
Following news of the club, Thanh Hóa lured striker
Uche Iheruome from Sanna Khánh Hòa to improve their front line.
The Nigerian player is one of the three best scorers of
the V. League with 14 goals.
National midfielder Đinh Tiến Thành has joined Thanh
Hóa from Cần Thơ. Under the three-year deal Thành is expected to strengthen
the defence, after they let through 42 goals last season.
The club is seeking a coach who can lift it to the top
position in 2017.
Long An promised big bonus for
playoff win
Long An will play Viettel in the V. League’s play-off
match tomorrow to avoid relegation.
The team is promised a big bonus of VNĐ1 billion
(US$44,500) if they go home with a win, according to Long An Football Club
managers.
Long An finished this year’s premier league at the 13th
position among 14 teams.
Their key midfielder Hoàng Lâm may not play because of
injury.
Former national team coach Henrique Calisto was invited
to be a consultant to Long An in this game.
Viettel, meanwhile, rank second in the First Division
and have a chance to jump to the top of the national league.
Their young members are rated not as good as Long An,
but they are all at their peak for the upcoming event.
The match will be organised in the neutral stadium of
Chi Lăng in Đà Nẵng City.
PM stresses application of military
science
Enhancing the application of military science is an
important task in the present context, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has
said.
At a working session with leaders of the Ministry of
National Defence in Hanoi on September 21, the PM stressed the need for the
sector to master cutting-edge weapons and equipment in training and fighting.
He urged the ministry to set forth policies boosting
the development of the defence industry in order to produce high-tech and
modern military products, while outstandingly perform defence external
relations in the context of international integration.
The ministry was also requested to keep discipline,
seriously fight corruptions and other bad deeds in the army, and hasten the
equitisation of military-run businesses to prevent losses of State assets.
The leader asked the ministry to better fulfil its role
as an advisor to the Party and the State on making strategic decisions and
policies on national defence, especially amidst the complicated regional and
international situations.
Hailing the army’s core role in protecting the
country’s territorial sovereignty, PM Nguyen Xuan Phuc said despite a range
of difficulties facing the country, the Government will create optimal
conditions for officers and soldiers to fulfil their tasks.
Mentioning the development of the defence industry, he
said Viettel has operated fruitfully, becoming a prestigious telecom group in
the region and the world at large.
Apart from building and maintaining border lines of
friendship and peace with neighbouring countries, the military has well
coordinated with local authorities and people in socio-economic development,
the leader said.
It has also shown good performance in mass
mobilisation, search and rescue operations, he added.
The PM displayed his belief that officers and soldiers
will overcome all difficulties to attain more glorious achievements and
complete all the assigned tasks, deserving of the trust of the Party, State
and people.
VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/TT/TN/Dantri/VNE
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Thứ Năm, 22 tháng 9, 2016
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