Social News 28/9
Tilting house to be demolished
Local authorities and a house owner are joining hands
to pull down a tilting house in the capital’s Đống Đa District.
The four-storey house, located at No 117 in Ô Chợ Dừa
Ward’s Quan Thổ 1 Alley, has been uninhabited for years due to its dangerous
tilt.
After receiving Đống Đa’s District’s reports about the
case last month, Nguyễn Thế Hùng, vice chairman of the People’s Committee of
Hà Nội City, ordered a demolition plan for the house and an evacuation
plan for residents of the adjacent houses.
The owner, Phạm Đỗ Thanh Thùy, bought the house in 2002
and moved her family in. Some 10 years later, the house started developing
cracks and began to tilt. Thùy’s family moved out and sent letters to the
authorities asking for an inspection.
The condition of the house was brought to authorities’
attention after the house at No. 43 Cửa Bắc Street collapsed at the beginning
of last month, killing two people and injuring three.
“For now, I have signed a contract with a demolishing
company and they have proposed a solution to the concerned authorities,” the
owner told news website Cafef last week.
‘They will start demolishing the house right after I
complete all the necessary procedures,” she said.
Thùy said she was pleased with the authorities’
response and serious attitude in handling the issue.
Illegal building’s floor awaits demolition
The demolition of the illegally built 19th floor of the
building at No 8B on Lê Trực Street in Ba Đình District is expected to be
completed next month.
This was announced by Đỗ Viết Bình, chairman of Ba Đình
District’s People’s Committee, to an inspection team of the Prime Minister’s
office yesterday.
The 69m building, of which 53m are above ground, has
raised public concerns not only because of its excessive height, but also
because of the slow demolition process which started three months ago.
At the end of June, the People’s Committee of Điện Biên
Ward, Ba Đình District, ended a contract with the Hải Anh Phát demolition
company because it failed to meet deadlines.
The Phương Bắc demolition company took over the project
at the beginning of July. However, one and a-half months later, the company
had only demolished some 30 per cent of the illegally built floor because it
was using simple concrete drill machines instead of advanced ones.
“The first phase – to remove the illegally built floor
– will be completed in October. However, we need to work more with different
sectors and the city’s authorities to develop proper plans for the second
phase,” he said.
He also said the project was delayed partly because the
authority wanted to ensure the safety of workers, residents and the
environment and preserve the building’s structure for future use.
According to another representative from the People’s
Committee of Điện Biên Ward, the Phương Bắc demolition company has installed
a tower crane to remove construction materials from the 19th floor, reducing
noise and dust during the demolition process.
The city’s construction department had sent officials
to examine the crane in order to issue a license that would allow it to start
working today.
A representative from the Phương Bắc company said the
19th floor would be demolished before October 30.
Central city launches design contest on tunnel and
bridge
The central city of Đà Nẵng has launched a contest to
design a bridge and tunnel through the Hàn River.
Director of the city’s transport department, Lê Văn
Trung, who is head of the contest’s organising committee, said 13 designs
from 11 architecture firms including two from Japan and one from Spain,
proposed their initial designs in a meeting with city officials on Sunday.
Trung said the city plans to hold a public vote to pick
the best design to be constructed.
He said the contest winner will walk away with a
cash-prize of VNĐ100 million (US$4,400), while the runner-up will get VNĐ70
million ($3,100), and third place wins VNĐ50 million ($2,200).
Trung said the tunnel is needed due to the increasing
traffic in the city.
The partnership between the Vietnamese Bridge Design
company and Japanese Oriental Consultants Global company also proposed a
six-lane tunnel through the Hàn River
Last year, the city planned to build a tunnel, the
first traffic route under the Hản River, with investment of VNĐ3.3 trillion (US$157
million).
City authorities said the tunnel would help ease
traffic congestion at junctions in Sơn Trà and Hải Châu districts.
Currently, the city has six major bridges including
Thuận Phước, the Hàn Swing Bridge, Rồng (Dragon), Trần Thị Lý, Tuyên Sơn and
Nguyễn Tri Phương, and the 1960s-built Nguyễn Văn Trỗi Bridge.
In 2013, the city’s Rồng (Dragon) Bridge claimed the
American Council of Engineering Companies’ Diamond Award in the category for
structural systems.
Earlier this year, the city also launched a contest to
plan and design the Hàn River banks, aiming to create beautiful scenery for
locals and tourists.
Symbolic lighthouse to go up in HCM City Book Street
The city authorities have allowed the Hoa Binh Corp.
and First News to establish a “lighthouse” on Nguyen Van Binh street in
District 1 to symbolise Vietnam’s sovereignty over its seas and
islands.
The structure, whose construction began lastweek, is
7.4 metres high and made from a mixture of white glass fibre, black sand and
sand from Vietnam’s Hoang Sa (Paracel) and Truong Sa (Spratly) islands.
The symbolic lighthouse is designed with subterraneous
fibers that sparkle in the shape of the maps of the two archipelagos and
seven doves representing Vietnamese aspirations for peace.
The top of the structure has a revolving light at night
like a real lighthouse.
The construction is expected take 30 days.
Thanh Hoa needs proper development measures
The central province of Thanh Hoa needs proper
socio-economic development policies and measures in the light of
international integration, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said at a working
session with local authorities in Hanoi on September 26.
The PM recognised the local achievements in building
effective socio-economic management models and developing rural areas, saying
the province has favourable natural conditions, infrastructure and abundant
labour resources.
However, development gaps still exist with small
economic scale, he said, noting that the low rate of businesses has
discouraged the occupational generation and budget collection. Furthermore,
environmental pollution has affected the development of agriculture and
tourism, he added.
He asked the locality to focus on developing
high-quality human resources and realising Resolution adopted at the 12th
National Party Congress along with the National Assembly and Government’s
Resolutions on measures to develop socio-economic affairs.
Thanh Hoa needs to seek appropriate and effective
economic models to improve investment and labour productivity as well as
protect the environment, improve administrative procedures, and better serve
businesses and people, he said.
He told the province to make the best use of its
advantage as a “miniature” of Vietnam as well as drastically carry out the
Government’s Resolutions to boost business production and facilitate
operations of small-and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
The PM also directed Thanh Hoa to pay more attention to
agricultural restructuring in line with new-style rural building to develop a
multifunctional agriculture.
He reminded the province to prioritise development of
its western part – where the living conditions of local are difficult, while
tightening management of public investment.
The province is also expected to improve urban
development planning, ensure social welfare and reduce the proportion of poor
households under the country’s average level, while concentrating to
corruption prevention and protection of marine environment.
The gross regional domestic product (GRDP) expanded by
8.06 percent in the first nine months of 2016. The per capita GRDP is
expected to stand at 1,648 USD at the year’s end.
The province collected over 8.48 trillion VND (381.6
million USD) to the State budget in the period. It also allowed businesses to
invest in 158 projects with a total registered capital of over 18.36 trillion
VND (826.2 million USD) in January – September, 2.5 times against the same
period last year.
The local economic growth is estimated to reach 9.07
percent at the end of 2016, surpassing the set target of 9 percent.
Fishery catching reaches 2.3 million tonnes in nine
months
Fishery catching in the first nine months of this year
was more than 2.3 million tonnes, up 2.7 percent over the same period last
year, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD).
Thanks to favourable weather at sea during the period,
especially in southern central and Mekong Delta regions, seafood catching
reached nearly 2.2 million tonnes, a rise of 2.8 percent compared to the same
time last year.
Reports from localities showed that tuna outputs of
three southern central provinces of Khanh Hoa, Binh Dinh and Phu Yen in
January-September period were nearly 7.3 million tonnes, drop 0.03 percent
year on year.
Meanwhile, aquatic farming output in September was
319,000 tonnes, a rise of 7.4 percent over the same period last year, raising
total figure in nine months to 2.6 million tonnes, an increase of 1.8 percent
year on year.
So far this year, the low demand of export markets has
posed difficulties to seafood shipment. At the same time, the price of tra
fish as material also dropped, causing difficulties for farmers.
Total tra fish raising area in the first nine months of
2016 in the Mekong Delta was 5,146 hectares, a decline of 2.3 percent year on
year. But the production still rose 2.5 percent to reach nearly 861,000
tonnes as some localities enjoyed bumper crops.
In Dong Thap, the tra fish output was nearly 286,000
tonnes, up 6.8 percent while that of Can Tho was over 118,000 tonnes, a rise
of 27.2 percent.
As of September 20, black prawn raising area across the
country was estimated at 582,700 hectares, an increase of 0.6 percent over
the same time last year, with an output of 174,400 tonnes, a fall of 2.5
percent.
Fuyo scholarships awarded to 80 outstanding students
Fuyo scholarships, each worth 300 USD, were awarded to
80 university students across Vietnam who made outstanding performance in the
2015-2016 school year at a ceremony in Hanoi on September 26.
The annual scholarship is a joint effort by the
Ministry of Planning and Investment, the Ministry of Education and Training
and Japan’s Fuyo Group to encourage Vietnamese students to study and do
scientific research at universities, thus contributing to the country’s human
resources development.
Since it was set up in 1997, the Fuyo scholarship fund
has granted scholarships to 1,342 students from universities nationwide with
a total amount of 260,000 USD.
Bilateral relations between Vietnam and Japan have
prospered over the past years. The Japanese Government has actively supported
Vietnam in developing education through a number of projects.
Exhibition on Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos opens in
Vientiane
A photo exhibition featuring the legendary Ho Chi Minh
Trail in Laos during the 1961-1975 period, a symbol of Vietnam-Laos special
solidarity, was opened in Vientiane, Laos on September 26, marking the 55 th
anniversary of the Tay Truong Son (West Truong Son) road (1961-2016).
Chairwoman of the Vietnam National Assembly Nguyen Thi
Kim Ngan, who is paying an official visit to Laos , and Vice President of
Laos Phankham Viphavan attended the event which was also participated by
senior officials and war veterans of Vietnam and Laos .
The 10-day event aims to highlight the priceless
supports and contributions given by the Party, army and people of Laos to the
successful national liberation and reunification carried out by Vietnam , as
well as to the construction and preservation of the Tay Truong Son road which
served that period, in particular.
It helps educate Vietnamese and Lao officials, soldiers
and people on the combat alliance in the past as well as the traditional
friendship, special solidarity and comprehensive cooperation between the two
countries.
Nearly 100 pictures taken by war reporters illuminate a
glorious period in history of the people and armies of Vietnam and Laos when
they fought together in the war against the US under the leadership of the
Labour Party of Vietnam, now the Communist Party of Vietnam, and the Lao
People’s Revolutionary Party.
A map of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, which was drawn up
based on the historical documentaries as well as memories of Truong Son
soldiers, is also displayed for the first time.
Speaking at the event, Lao Minister of Defence
Chansamone Chanylath stressed that many Vietnamese and Lao soldiers and
people sacrificed their lives on the road for their countries’ independence
and freedom.
He expressed his hope that the exhibition will
contribute to fostering the friendship and special solidarity between the two
countries.
Meanwhile, Vietnamese Ambassador to Lao Nguyen Manh
Hung said that the Ho Chi Minh-Tay Truong Son Road constitutes a shining
symbol of Laos ’s sacrifice and wholehearted support, and an everlasting
monument of the special solidarity of the two nations.
In May 1959, the Vietnam People’s Army formed Mission
559 and tasked it to build the Ho Chi Minh Trail as a supply route for
southern battlefields to aim for ultimate national independence and
reunification.
Due to off-road terrains, the road was constructed
entirely by hands and rudimentary equipment.
In late 1960, at the permission of the Lao side, the Ho
Chi Minh Trail was expanded beyond the Vietnam-Laos border to the west of
Truong Son Range , which lies on the Lao territory.
From 1961 to 1975, with an iron will and strong
determination, the armies and people of Vietnam and Laos together built
thousands of kilometers of roads to connect the north of Vietnam, the central
and northern regions of Laos, the Zone 5 and southeastern region of Vietnam, and
northeastern Cambodia .
Vietnam and Laos also aligned closely to ensure the
operation of the strategic road that played a decision role in the victory
against the US and significantly contributed to the 1975 victory of Vietnam
and Laos .
After the event, all the photos will be presented to
the Lao Military History Museum in Vientiane for exhibition.
Ha Giang to build Mong ethnic culture and tourism
village
The People’s Committee of the northern mountainous
province of Ha Giang has approved the “Culture-Tourism Village of the Mong
Ethnic Group” project in Pa Vi Ha hamlet, Pa Vi commune, Meo Vac district in
an effort to preserve and promote the traditional cultural values of the
ethnic group and attract more tourists.
Covering a 4.6ha area at the foot of Ma Pi Leng Pass on
a highway connecting Dong Van and Meo Vac districts, the village will be
operated under a community-based tourism service cooperative model with the
engagement of 30 local households.
It will be built in the shape of three peach blossoms,
each is made up of 10 clay houses in the Mong ethnic group’s style.
The project has received warm response from local
authorities and residents. Artisan Ly Mi Na, 63, said he is happy when the
Mong people have such a village and even happier if he can live and engage in
tourism services there.
He expressed his hope that the village, once
operational, will promote the cultural features of the Mong ethnic people and
create a venue for them to perform traditional songs and dances, and play
folk games.
Locals will have a chance to develop traditional crafts
such as weaving, thus improving their living conditions, he added.
According to Ma Quoc Truong, Vice Chairman of the
People’s Committee of Meo Vac district, Pha Vi Ha hamlet is the most suitable
location for the village as all of its residents are Mong ethnic minorities.
The village not only serves tourists but also helps
Mong people themselves to understand more about their culture, he said.
Meo Vac district strives to finish three to five houses
in the village by the end of this year, and 25-27 houses and supporting
facilities by 2017.
The village is expected to be open in the first quarter
of 2018 as a highlight of Meo Vac’s tourism, attracting about 1,500 domestic
and foreign tourists every year.
German television features Vietnam and its people
A team from the German television ARD has been working
on a programme to discover Vietnam and its people.
Philipp Abresch, head of the ARD Office Southeast Asia
in Singapore and a member of the team, said this is the second time the team
has produced a programme on Vietnam. The team travelled throughout Vietnam to
record the beautiful landscapes and cultural traditions of the country,
especially of ethnic minority groups.
Besides Hanoi, Ha Long and Hoi An, the German producers
came to the northern mountainous province of Ha Giang to capture landscapes
and locals’ farming methods in Hoang Su Phi.
All the team members were impressed at colourful
terraced fields as well as the warm welcome of local ethnic people in
traditional costumes, he said.
The 45-minute programme is scheduled to air in 2017.
Lào Cai police nab heroin smuggler
Police in the northern border province of Lào Cai’s Văn
Bàn District arrested a drug smuggler and seized nearly 3kg of heroin
yesterday.
The suspect, Phạm Sơn Hải, 48, from Lào Cai’s Phố Lu
Township, was caught carrying 10 nylon-wrapped packs of heroin – some 300g
each – at toll station IC16 on the Nội Bài-Lào Cai Expressway.
The police also seized VNĐ21 million (US$940), a Toyota
Hilux car and three mobile phones.
The investigation at the suspect’s house in Lào Cai’s
Khánh Yên Township also led to the seizure of another VNĐ143 million
($6,400), two electronic scales and equipment used in drug use.
The case is being investigated further.
Man sentenced to death for murder
The Hà Nội People’s Court today sentenced a 28-year-old
man to death for murder and robbing homes.
Lê Ôn Tùng, who lives in Hòa Lâm Commune, Ứng Hòa
District, on August 17 last year robbed people in Hòa Chanh Village.
He first entered Lê Thị Nham’s house but was unable to
steal anything.
He then discovered that the door of Nham’s neighbour Tạ
Văn Cát’s house was open.
He entered Cát’s house, Cát, however, saw him and Tùng
ended up strangling the 91-year-old to death. He then put a face-cloth on
Cát’s mouth and tied his hands with a soft water pipe.
Tùng searched Cát’s house and took VNĐ20 million
(US$880) and 26 tenths of a tael of gold. One tenth of a tael of gold cost
some VNĐ3.6 million ($160). He then ran away to HCM City.
Tùng used the money for personal purposes. He
eventually gave himself up to the police on December 29 last year once he
realised the police had discovered his wrongdoing.
VN to focus on youth’s sexual reproductive health
Investing in the education and health, including sexual
and reproductive health, of young people is of utmost importance to Việt
Nam’s productivity and development in the future, Nguyễn Anh Tuấn, secretary
of the HCM Communist Youth Union Central Committee, has said.
Speaking at a workshop on the implementation of “Youth
led initiatives on promoting access to sexual and reproductive health
information and services for Vietnamese youth and adolescents” held this
morning, Tuấn said the youth played a significant role in the country’s
growth and they represented an increasingly large proportion of the labour
force.
“However, young people still lacked vital knowledge and
life-skills on safe sex and consensual relationships, facing considerable
barriers to accessing sexual and reproductive health services,” Tuấn said.
Sexual education for young people remained limited,
particularly for ethnic minorities, migrants or those living in rural areas,
he said.
Young people were, therefore, at risk of early and
unintended pregnancies, unsafe abortion and sexually transmitted infections,
including HIV, Tuấn said.
Six youth-led initiatives were implemented in one year
in Hà Nội, central Quảng Bình Province, central Đà Nẵng City and northern Hải
Dương City.
The beneficiaries are high school students, female
workers aged18-30, disabled youth and deaf people.
The total funds for the six initiatives are VNĐ314.9
million (US$14,100).
Ritsu Nacken, UNFPA deputy representative in Việt Nam,
said, “The participation of young people in designing and analysing the
policies that affect them is one way to ensure that the policies and services
respond to their actual needs.”
Evidence showed that working in partnership with young
people was an essential component of any successful youth programme, she
said.
The workshop in Hà Nội was organised by the HCM Youth
Union via the Central Centre for Youth and Adolescent with technical support
from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
Six youth-led initiatives were selected from a
competition launched in May 2015 calling for the development of innovative
and practical initiatives promoting access to sexual and reproductive health
information and services for Vietnamese youth.
Over 40 guests down with food poisoning after wedding
Over 40 guests have been struck with suspected food
poisoning after attending a wedding reception at Đại Thắng Commune in
northern Nam Định Province’s Vụ Bản District yesterday.
The guests complained of stomach ache, vomiting,
diarrhea, dizziness and high fever.
The province’s Health Department has asked local
hospitals to conduct treatment for all victims and told health officials to
take food samples for testing.
After receiving initial examination at the local
hospital, 15 guests were sent to Nam Định Province’s General Hospital for
further treatment.
Phan Đình Phổ, head of the hospital’s Infectious
Diseases Faculty, confirmed that 15 guests were hospitalised after attending
the wedding, with some serious cases, including a pregnant woman.
All the patients are in stable condition after
receiving intensive treatment, he said.
Hundreds of people were reported to have attended the
wedding reception.
The incident is being investigated.
Contest to make public facilities accessible to
disabled people
The Disability Research and Capacity Development Centre
in HCM City last Saturday launched a contest for students to design and
upgrade public facilities to make them more usable for people with
disabilities.
The three-month Breaking Down Barriers contest is open
to all students of architecture, interior design, planning, industrial arts
and construction in the city.
Contestants have to choose one public work for
research, analyse its shortcomings in terms of access to disabled people and
suggest solutions.
Phạm Nhật Bổn, a senior interior design student at the
HCM City University of Architecture, said the contest sounded interesting and
would help him and other students in these streams apply what they had learnt
in designing works for people with disabilities.
The contest is organised by the centre and the
university’s interior design faculty .
Đồng Tháp to restore its forests
The Đồng Tháp Province Department of Agriculture and
Rural Development is afforesting 155ha under a province plan to grow forests
through 2020.
It is also planting another three million trees around
the province.
Most of the trees being planted are local or Australian
cajuput.
Hồ Anh Dũng, deputy director of the department, said
the two species are suitable for growing in low-lying, flood-prone areas and
alum affected soil.
Every year during the flood season, cajuput trees live
in inundated areas for three to five months, he said.
Đồng Tháp is one of the most flooded provinces in the
Cửu Long (Mekong) Delta when the Mekong River and its tributaries rise
between August and November.
In the past cajuput trees were planted on flat lands
which caused them to grow slowly – taking 10-12 years for harvest -- and
yield less timber.
But now they are grown on ridges, which helps rid the
soil of alum, increases yield and reduces harvest period to six to nine
years.
Đồng Tháp is buying cajuput seedlings from Long An and
Đồng Nai provinces since its own output is not enough.
This year cajuput farmers in Đồng Tháp have made big
profits since tree prices have increased.
In July traders bought four-five-year-old cajuput trees
in Đồng Tháp’s Tháp Mười District at VNĐ100-110 million (US$4,500 – 5,000)
per hectare, giving farmers profits of VNĐ70 -80 million.
The province has more than 5,600ha of forests,
including more than 2,580ha of special use forests, 1,000ha of protective
forests and 1,980ha of commercial forests, according to the People’s
Committee.
Smart toilets challenge users in Nha Trang
Many people have been complaining about the
inconvenience of smart public toilets in the southern central coastal city of
Nha Trang.
Although those smart public toilets were built several
years ago to serve the large number of visitors to the popular beaches here,
many of them have been rarely used as they appear too intimidating.
According to local people and visitors, the problem is
that these automatic toilets ask for coins while coins are no longer in
circulation.
"We are told to exchange coins at tourist offices
or parking staff at Thuan Viet Coffee to use the toilets," said a
tourist, Nguyen Van Linh. "It’s very inconvenient."
Pham Huy Thang, a local man, said that besides the coin
problems, they are also made difficult with the long instructions and
regulations some of which were hard to follow.
"People are not allowed to use the toilets for
more than 6 minutes," Thang cited one of the instructions. "If
you’re sick maybe this isn’t possible."
Nha Trang built the first two free toilets on Nha Trang
Beach last year. It is hoped that more toilets of this kind will be built.
HCMC patient to propose breakthrough mechanism: City
Party Chief
Ho Chi Minh City Party Committee must focus on drastic
implementation of its regulations and action programs of resolutions of the
Central Party Committee, the National Assembly and the Government; and be
patient to propose breakthrough mechanisms for the city to develop quickly
and sustainably according to the Resolution 16 of the Politburo.
HCMC Party Chief Dinh La Thang (L) talks to delegates
at the 7th session of the 10th HCMC Party Committee on September 25 (Photo:
SGGP)
That was stated yesterday by secretary of the city
Party Committee Dinh La Thang while concluding the two-day 7th session of the
10th committee on September 24 and 25.
General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam
Nguyen Phu Trong has many times affirmed that Vietnam has enough resolutions
and mechanisms but their implementation has not been good and effective,
according to Mr. Thang.
Hence, HCMC must take the lead in practicing and
specifying the 12th Party Congress’ resolution and the city’s 10th Party
resolution, he said.
If the city really makes efforts and there is a
mechanism for it to mobilize human, material and financial resources
especially those from citizens, it will be able to successfully carry out its
targets including seven breakthrough programs, Mr. Thang said.
If mechanisms are outplaned and well implemented, they
will contribute in promoting democracy in party activities, uphold party
disciplines and rules, ensure the principle of democratic centralism and
increase the responsibility of individuals especially leaders, he stressed.
They will also improve the quality and effectiveness of
party leadership; promote the role, activeness and creativeness of
organizations in the political system; intensify collective strength and the
party’s solidarity and unity and renew party leadership method to the
operation of the political system, he believed.
He proposed every member of the city Party Committee
especially key leaders of agencies on their working positions and
responsibilities to be exemplary and serious to implement the above
requirements.
After two working days, the conference passed
statements and seven draft action programs to implement the resolution of the
10th Party Committee.
Mr. Thang required agencies and districts to focus on
administrative reform and intensify IT application towards e-government
implementation in the city.
They should concentrate on mobilizing social resources
to carry out projects under the seven breakthrough programs and give priority
to key projects on technical and traffic infrastructure for the connectivity
of the southern key economic zone.
The conference discussed and agreed with working
regulations of the city’s Party Committee’s executive and standing boards and
the inspection committee of 10th party tenure.
These are very important documents specifying functions
and missions of the party committee and the standing board according to the
12th party regulation to continue reforming the party’s leadership method and
administrative reform.
During the first nine months this year, the Gross
Regional Domestic Product (GRDP) of HCMC increased 7.6 percent. It is
expected to reach 8 percent this year meantime the country has been striving
to reach the Gross Domestic Product growth of 6.3-6.5 percent.
The city’s budget revenue hit VND220 trillion (US$9.87
billion) accounting for 73.5 percent of plan. The number of newly established
businesses neared 26,000 with the total registered capital of VND212.1
trillion ($9.51 billion).
The number of new businesses was reported to total
73,400 in Vietnam during the nine months, which HCMC accounted for one third.
This shows the city’s great efforts and creates a basis to believe that the
target of over 500,000 enterprises by 2020 to be is feasible.
Mercedes hands over V 220 d to Imperial Vung Tau Hotel
Mercedes-Benz Vietnam (MBV) and its authorized dealer
Haxaco have handed over two V 220 d’s to the 5-star Imperial Vung Tau Hotel -
a familiar travel destination of domestic and international visitors.
With the combination of the seven-seat roomy interior and
the comfort of sedan, the V-Class is a good choice for many luxury hotels and
resorts across the country.
“The V-Class is an ideal solution to our VIP chauffeur
service as it has Mercedes-Benz brand name as well as offers a seven-seat
setup that brings sufficient space to family, group of colleagues and lots of
luggage,” said Thomas Meyer, service director of Imperial Group.
The V 220 d is also an economical choice for business
purpose. The 2.1 liter diesel engine helps the V 220 d reach the average fuel
consumption of just 5.7 liters/100 km and therefore, the V220 d can travel a
distance of 1,200 km with a single fill-up.
The car has become one of the most favorite luxury
multi-purpose vehicles (MPVs) thanks to its versatile compartment.
Its two individual seats of the second row are able to
turn by 180 degrees for easier communication with other companions. The
automatic powered tailgate with separate opening rear window can save a lot
of time for owners in loading and unloading luggage.
Rooted the core value of Mercedes-Benz, the V 220 d is
equipped with up to 10 airbags including two front airbags, two front
side-bags and six window-bags. The V 220 d should be the best choice on windy
coast journey in Vung Tau as Crosswind Assist function will keep the vehicle
strong and balanced against gusting cross-winds.
Choi Duk Jun, managing director of Mercedes-Benz
Vietnam Passenger Cars, shared: “Besides our core sedan models such as the
E-Class or the S-Class, we expect that this premium MPV V-Class will be warmly
welcomed by top hotels and resorts.”
“Three-pointed star” brand is now the leading partner
of more than 80% of 5-star hotels and resorts around the country.
Imperial Hotel Vung Tau is the 84th 5-star partner of
MBV in Vietnam.
Located at Bai Sau – one of the beautiful beaches, the
hotel adorns its classical Victoria architecture style with the patterns
inspired from Renaissance and interiors collected from around the world. In
the peak season, 350 luxury rooms of Imperial Vung Tau Hotel will be the ideal
destination for families, groups of friends or corporates.
VND8.5 billion in Lawrence S. Ting scholarships awarded
to students
Lawrence S. Ting Memorial Fund and Phu My Hung
Corporation jointly donated nearly VND8.5 billion in scholarships to students
nationwide at a ceremony in HCMC last Saturday.
The two benefactors presented 389 scholarships worth
VND3.4 billion to college and university students with outstanding academic
records in the country and more VND5.06 billion in scholarships to
foundations, charities and study encouragement associations in the country’s
63 cities and provinces.
So far, Lawrence S. Ting Memorial Fund has donated over
82,000 scholarships worth VND87.1 billion. Together with the
scholarships, the fund has carried out another program to award IT devices
for schools in Vietnam since July 2006 with a total value of VND137.6
billion.
The fund has also carried out practical activities for
the healthcare sector with VND35.9 billion donated to buy healthcare
equipment and drugs, and build clinics. After 11 years of operation, Lawrence
S. Ting Memorial Fund has spent over VND243 billion on its education and
healthcare programs in Vietnam.
Hospital overload still persists in HCMC
Many public hospitals in HCMC are grappling with
overload as many of their inpatients share beds and even lie on the floor
though hospital leaders have pledged to quickly solve the problem.
At Children’s Hospital No.1, its respiratory department
has only 100 beds but the number of patients climbed up to over 464 on some
days in early August, forcing four to six children to share a bed.
Children’s Hospital No.1 is one of the hospitals which
promised in March last year that it would not allow more than two patients to
use one bed within 24-48 hours. The hospital has partnered with
district-level hospitals in Binh Tan and Tan Phu and send doctors there to
take care of patients in an effort to deal with overload but things have
remained unchanged.
Oncology Hospital is in the same boat. The hospital has
only 600 beds but the number of its inpatients is usually three or four times
higher than capacity, said director Le Hoang Minh.
The hospital has launched satellite hospitals in
districts 2 and Binh Thanh, trained staff and transferred technologies to
satellite hospitals, including those in Can Tho City, Khanh Hoa, Binh Dinh,
Dong Nai, Kien Giang and Ca Mau provinces. However, overload has remained as
severe as ever and the overload rate increases by 7-10% a year, Minh said.
As a second traumatology and orthopaedics hospital has
not been in place as planned, the current Traumatology and Orthopaedics
Hospital has to send its doctors to district-level hospitals as a temporary
measure.
The measure has brought positive results but the
problem is that district-level hospitals lack operating rooms.
Doctors in HCMC said shortages of experienced doctors
and modern equipment have kept many patients from district-level and
provincial hospitals. This is why overload persists at hospitals in HCMC.
Vietnam-China relationship makes big strides: workshop
Delegates at a workshop in Hanoi on September 26
emphasised the need for Vietnam and China to enhance their cooperation in all
aspects, and join hands in removing difficulties for the sake of the two
countries’ people.
The workshop was jointly held by the Vietnam Academy of
Social Sciences (VASS) and the National Institute of Chinese Studies (VNISC)
to review the Vietnam-China relations after 25 years of normalisation and
seek ways to step up the bilateral ties.
Prof. Dr. Nguyen Quang Thuan, VASS President, said
since the two countries normalised their relations in 1991, their affiliation
in politics, economics and culture has made big strides.
Assoc. Pr. Nguyen Huy Quy from the VNISC said in the
field of politics and diplomacy, Vietnam and China have upgraded their
“abnormal relations” during the 1975-1990 period to a comprehensive strategic
cooperative partnership based on the principle of the “16-word” motto
(friendly neighbourliness, comprehensive cooperation, long-lasting stability
and looking forward to the future) and the “four-good” spirit (good
neighbours, good friends, good comrades and good partners).
However, the present relationship has yet to fully
follow the motto and spirit, he said, calling on the two countries’ leaders,
researchers and diplomats to seek ways to develop the relations in a healthy
and stable manner.
China is Vietnam’s largest partner in trade, investment
and tourism. Vietnam has set forth various policies, guidelines and solutions
to boost friendship, solidarity and cooperation with the neighbouring
country.
A Vietnam-China business forum was held in Hanoi the
same day.
MoH preparing law to tackle alcohol harm
The Ministry of Health (MoH) is finalising a draft law
on alcohol harm prevention and plans to submit it to the National Assembly
for consideration in May 2018.
The draft law will feature policies based on studies on
alcohol consumption in Việt Nam, Nguyễn Huy Quang, Director of the MoH’s
Legal Affairs Department, said at a workshop organised by the ministry and
the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Hà Nội yesterday.
Deputy Minister of Health Nguyễn Thanh Long said Việt
Nam ranked second in Southeast Asia, 10th in Asia and 29th in the world in
alcohol consumption.
More than 77 per cent of adult males and 11 per cent of
women said they had drunk alcohol in the past 30 days. Nearly half of men had
engaged in binge drinking.
Meanwhile, the older people were, the more alcohol they
consumed, according to Trần Quốc Bảo – an official from the Department of
Preventive Medicine.
About 45 per cent of surveyed people said they drove a
vehicle within two hours of drinking. A national survey on Việt Nam’s male
adolescents also showed that 20.8 per cent of respondents drove after
drinking and sustained injuries that led to a leave of at least one week from
school or work.
Bảo said alcohol directly resulted in at least 30
diseases and is the indirect cause of 200 other diseases. It is also one of
the top 10 causes of deaths in Việt Nam, according to the WHO.
Deputy Minister Long said many new regulations being
considered have already been enforced in other countries and proved
effective, such as a ban on alcohol sales after 10pm or for underage youth,
and a ban on alcohol advertising in public places.
If such regulations were not enforced, alcohol
consumption in Việt Nam would grow at an even faster pace, he stressed.
HCM City spends over $944mn on flood, sewage management
Ho Chi Minh City is set to begin implementing two
projects worth over VND21 trillion (US$944.7 million) for flood control and
sewage management in the near future.
The projects for tidal flood control, with investment
being nearly VND10 trillion (US$449.8 million), and a drainage system,
costing over VND11.1 trillion (US$500 million), are intended to improve the
environment and boost tourism as well as economic growth in the southern hub
upon completion.
According to the Investment Management Authority for
the Ho Chi Minh City Environmental Sanitation Project, a new pipeline system
is scheduled to be built in October.
A sewage pipe, 3.2 meters in diameter and eight
kilometers in length, will connect the southern section of the Saigon River
with the Nhieu Loc-Thi Nghe Wastewater Treatment Plant in District 2.
Vuong Hai Long, director of the management authority,
stated that the new drainage system will carry sewage released from
households along the Nhieu Loc-Thi Nghe Canal section in District 5 and from
residential areas in District 2 to the factory, instead of pumping it into
the Saigon River.
The treatment plant will be constructed in Thanh My Loi
Ward on an estimated area of 38.4 hectares, with a capacity of 480,000 cubic
meters per day, which is the highest nationwide, Long said.
After its completion in 2020, wastewater will be purified
before being released into the city’s rivers.
The project received a total capital of US$524 million,
of which US$450 million was provided by the World Bank while the rest came
from the state coffers, the director added.
A similar plan has already been executed, with VND8.6
trillion (US$386.9 million) in investment capital.
The two projects are expected to improve the local
environment and the livelihoods of over two million residents in District 1,
District 2, District 3, District 10, Phu Nhuan District, Tan Binh District,
Binh Thanh District, and Go Vap District.
Construction of many components of the tidal flood
control project has been initiated, intended to eliminate inundation in 19
out of 24 districts in the city.
Dams will be built along a 7.8 kilometer section of the
Saigon River bank and more conduits will be constructed to better regulate
floodwater.
Two pumping stations, whose capacities are 12 and 24
cubic meters per second, are also set to be constructed in areas vulnerable
to rising tide.
According to Nguyen Tan Tien, director of Trung Nam
Corporation, developer of the project, recent downpours and high tide have
posed challenges to the city’s drainage system and seriously impacted local
residents.
“This flood control project will deal with inundation
caused by rising tide,” Tien asserted.
The scheme, upon completion, will prevent flooding
within an area of 570 square kilometers, home to 6.5 million citizens, said
an official of the municipal People’s Committee.
It will also help boost the city’s economy and
competitiveness and thus attract more investment from domestic and foreign
businesses, the official continued.
VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/TT/TN/Dantri/VNE
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Thứ Tư, 28 tháng 9, 2016
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