Social News 6/11
Doctors discuss hearts
More than 800 local and
international cardiologists are exchanging notes about the latest advances,
new trends and innovative therapies for cardiovascular diseases at a congress
on “New Trends in Management of Cardiovascular Diseases” that opened
yesterday in HCM City.
More than 20 leaders in
cardiovascular medicine from the US, the UK, Germany, Japan, South Korea,
Thailand, Malaysia and Việt Nam delivered updates on clinical practices in
cardiology, chronic coronary artery disease, heart failure, interventional
cardiology, aortic surgery, coronary artery bypass surgery, minimally
invasive cardiac surgery and management of acute coronary syndrome during the
two-day event.
The annual cardiovascular conference
provide opportunities for local cardiologists and cardiac surgeons to share
knowledge, and learn the latest techniques in the fields of cardiology and
cardiovascular diseases as well as expertise along with networking
opportunities between a large number of medical professionals, according to
Trương Quang Bình, deputy director of the University Medical Centre, the
congress’s organiser.
According to the World Health
Organisation, 17.7 million people die each year from cardiovascular
disease. More than 75 per cent of cardiovascular disease occur in low-income
and middle-income countries.
In Việt Nam, cardiovascular disease
takes the lives of around 200,000 people every year, an estimated 25 per cent
of all deaths nationwide.
Two poor-quality petrol sellers to
be investigated
Nghệ An Province Police Department
of Criminal Investigation in Economic Management and Positions (PC 46) on
Thursday began its investigation into a case related to making and selling
poor-quality A92 petrol.
Defendants Trần Văn Tuấn of Kiên Lục
Entreprise in Quỳnh Lưu District and Phan Thị Thanh of Thanh Ngũ Entreprise
in Diễn Châu District are accused of producing and selling counterfeit goods
and cheating customers.
On October 10, Nghệ An Province’s
functional forces found that the two enterprises were mixing cheap solvent
and colouring powder into A92 petrol to sell to customers.
With the help of the defendants’
testimonies, the functional forces discovered that since August 2017, more
than two million litres of poor-quality A92 had been consumed.
Analyses of 12 samples collected
from a gas station distributing Kiên Lục Entreprise’s petrol showed that 11 were
substandard according to the National Technical Regulations.
According to the value-added
invoices collected, solvent price is VNĐ10,600 (US$0.5) per litre while A92
petrol price is VNĐ18.000 ($0.7) per litre.
Officials seek to stop dumping of
62,000cu.m of mud waste
Quảng Ngãi Province People’s
Committee, on Friday, urged the provincial Department of Natural Resources
and Environment (DoNRE) to ask Việt Nam Maritime Safety – North (VMS – North)
to stop the dumping of 62,000cu.m of waste mud near Mỹ Khê Beach.
According to the People’s Committee,
because of environmental consequences, VMS – North has to halt the dumping
plan, as they await the official decision of the local authority.
Additionally, the DoNRE is directed
to collaborate with other agencies to review the proposal submitted by VMS –
North on October 27th and report to the People’s Committee by November 10th,
at the latest.
Earlier, Quảng Ngãi Province
Department of Culture, Sport and Tourism objected to the proposal. According
to officials, since Mỹ Khê Beach attracts thousands of tourists annually,
dumping mud waste near the area could destroy the tourism site, environment
and residents’ livelihood.
Plans called for dumping 62,000cu.m
of mud waste in an area of 4.97 ha in Tịnh Khê Ward from October 2017 to
March 2018.
Việt Nam-Russia Tropical Centre
offers hyperbaric oxygen therapy
Việt Nam-Russia Tropical Centre, set
up 30 years ago under a long-standing and close friendship between Việt Nam
and Russia, has made significant medical achievements, especially in
hyperbaric oxygen therapy.
The centre’s branch in the southern
region has offered hyperbaric oxygen therapy since 1994.
Dr Nguyễn Phương Nam, head of the
Hyperbaric Oxygen Treatment and Research Centre, which is managed by Việt
Nam-Russia Tropical Centre, told Vietnam News Agency that the therapy had
been used on nearly 200,000 patients with a variety of diseases, including
ulcers caused by diabetes.
With the therapy, patients breathe
pure oxygen at high pressure, Nam said, adding that it was especially suited
to children and the elderly.
The therapy is also used in
conjunction with other treatments for strokes, endarteritis obliterans,
sudden deafness, dengue fever, and autism.
Because of the effectiveness of
treatment, the Hyperbaric Oxygen Treatment and Research Centre has trained
doctors at other hospitals in the southern region, including traditional
medicine and rehabilitation hospitals in the provinces of Phú Yên, Khánh Hòa,
and Bình Thuận, and Đồng Nai General Hospital.
The Việt Nam-Russia Tropical Centre
is also involved in vegetable cultivation on the Trường Sa Islands.
Nguyễn Văn Thành Nam, deputy head of
the centre’s environmental analysis division, who is leading the research
work, said that when he was on a business trip to the islands in 2005, he saw
a shortage of vegetables.
He and his colleagues began to
conduct research on cultivation techniques in greenhouses, and later
installed an automatic drip irrigation system and multi-layer trays in
greenhouses. The effort was a success, Nam said.
The Việt Nam-Russia Tropical Centre
has also conducted many international research projects in defence security.
Colonel and Dr Nguyễn Văn Khuê,
director of the Việt Nam-Russia Tropical Centre’s branch in the southern
region, said the centre has had many achievements thanks to supports and help
of Russian experts.
Around 100 to 130 Russian experts
every year come to the centre to co-operate in research and projects.
The Russian government has helped
train Vietnamese scientists and staff for many years, according to Khuê.
Spam phone numbers blocked in Hà Nội
Hà Nội’s Department of Information
and Communications has asked telecom companies to stop providing service for
348 phone numbers that keep illegally sending spam messages.
The spam messages sent to clients
invite them to buy real estate, hire rented rooms and advertise services of
lending money at high rates of interest, tutors, concrete cutting and
drilling, as well as cesspit cleaning, Internet and delivery.
Phone number owners who have any
queries about the service are asked to contact cultural division of their
district for further information.
This is the 79th time Hà Nội’s
Department of Information and Communications has ordered the service of spam
phone numbers to be stopped
In 2016, more than 3,000 spam phone
numbers were blocked in the city.
Two charged over false seals
Police in Hà Nội’s Thanh Trì
District have charged two men for counterfeiting seals and documents of
organisations and agencies.
Nguyễn Văn Thắng, 27, from Nam Từ
Liêm District, and Lê Trần Tiến, 26, from Thanh Xuân District, were alleged
to be members of a ring of counterfeiters preparing health examination papers
in Hà Nội.
Initial information showed that in
late September, police in the Department of High-Tech Crime Prevention (known
as C50), and police in Thanh Trì District caught Hoàng Mạnh Hùng red-handed
in Tân Triều Commune transporting about 50 fake health examination papers
with seals from the Transport Hospital JSC.
Police made a raid on Hùng’s house
and found more than 700 fake health examination papers with Transport
Hospital seals.
The papers had results of medical
examinations, but had no name of patients.
After quick investigation, police
caught Thắng and Tiến.
At the police office, Tiến admitted
that he and Thắng counterfeited health examination papers and sold them for
between VNĐ50,000-200,000 (US$2.2-8.8) since mid August.
The two suspects allegedly hired
Hùng to find customers and paid him commission.
They are said to have admitted using
five seals from five doctors and one seal from the Transport Hospital.
Đắk Lắk starts to go solar
Đắk Lắk Province’s People’s
Committee has approved the construction of a solar power plant with a
capacity of 50MW in Ea Súp District’s Ia Lap Commune.
Long Thành Ia Lốp Co.Ltd has been
selected to carry out the project.
The plant will be built over 65
hetares situated on 500ha set aside for a solar power complex by Long Thành
Đắk Lắk Investment Joint Stock Company.
In addition, the provincial
committee has approved a proposal to increase capacity of the complex from
50MW to 400MW.
The committee asked the Ea Súp
District People’s Committee and related departments to create conditions for
investors to implement the project.It said investors should contact the
provincial Department of Foreign Affairs for guidance if foreign experts were
hired..
According to the province’s clean
energy development plan, between four and seven solar plants with the total
capacity of 800 to 1,000 MW will be built by 2020.
By 2030, the province plans to
increase the capacity of existing solar power plants and build other plants
with the total capacity of 3,500 to 4,000 MW.
Đắk Lắk has approved the
construction project of solar plants in Ea Súp and Buôn Đôn districts, including
Xuân Thiện Solar plant with a capacity of 2,000 MW and total estimated
investment capital of US$2.2 billion, the Green Power plant with a capacity
of 1,117 MW and investment capital of $1.2 billion, and Long Thành plant with
a capacity of 250 MW and total investment of $320 million.
Health experts share experiences on
cancer control
More than 300 local and
international health experts shared scientific research and experience on
cancer diagnosis and treatment at an international conference on cancer
control that began in Hà Nội today.
“Cancer is a burden all over the
world, especially in low and middle income countries. In Việt Nam, there is
an increasing burden of cancer across the country, drawing attention from the
whole society,” Deputy Minister of Health Lê Quang Cường said at the event.
“However, with the strong leadership
of national leaders and international support, Việt Nam has made several
achievements in cancer control.” Cường added.
“For example, we have seen an
increase of 5-10 per cent in cancer patients diagnosed in early stages, along
with decreased cancer mortality rate of several cancers such as breast
cancer, cervical cancer, oral cancer and colorectal cancer. Community
awareness on cancer prevention and early detection and quality of cancer
treatmet have also improved.”
At the conference, participants
focused their discussions on proposing the direction and strategy of cancer
control, as well as conducting comprehensive training and sharing
opportunities in cancer control.
They said the forum was an
opportunity for local and international experts to discuss the current
situation and consolidate the objectives of cancer control, targeting the
direction and strategy in Việt Nam.
A cooperation agreement on cancer
research and treatment was signed between the Việt Nam National Cancer
Institute, the Korean National Cancer Center Graduate School of Cancer
Science and Policy, the Institute of Preventive Medicine and Public Health,
and the Hà Nội Medical University at the conference.
According to GLOBOCAN - a project of
the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) provides estimates of
cancer, at national level, for 184 countries of the world every year, Việt
Nam reports more than 126,000 new cancer cases and some 94,000 cancer deaths.
Most patients visit hospital for cancer examination and treatment when they
are already in an advanced stage, which is very late and costly in terms of
treatment.
At the national level, the Prime
Minister has approved the national strategy on cancer, cardiovascular
disease, diabetes and COPD, as well as asthma and other non communicable
diseases, during the 2015-25 period, with strong investment in local
community and primary healthcare.
Việt Nam has set targets of
improving adult awareness on cancer consequences and prevention to 70 per
cent, reducing adult smoking by 30 per cent and heavy drinking by 10 per
cent, improving early cancer detection to 40 per cent and decreasing cancer
deaths below the age of 70 by 20 per cent, compared with 2015.
Cường, Linh complete semi-finals at
Beer Lao badminton tourney
Only Phạm Cao Cường and Nguyễn Thuỳ
Linh of Việt Nam remained to compete at the Beer Lao International Series
badminton tournament in Vientian.
Cường is the No 2 seed in the men’s
singles. He defeated Faiz Rozain of Malaysia 21-10, 10-21, 21-19 in the
quarter-finals after 51 minutes.
He will next play No Kantawat
Leelavechabutr of Thailand. Leelavechabutr overcame Vietnam’s Nguyễn Hải Đăng
21-14, 18-21, 21-15 yesterday.
His teammate, No 3 seed Lê Đức Phát,
was surprisingly defeated by No 8 seeded Mek Narongrit of Thailand.
On the women’s side, Linh, No 1
seeded, defeated Nuntakam Aimsaard from Thailand in the quarter-finals.
Linh will face Manassanan
Lerthattasin, another Thai, in the final four rounds.
Hue Central Hospital celebrates
anniversary of 1,000 IVF babies
A gathering was held in the Hue
Central Hospital this morning with the participation of parents, children to
celebrate 10 year anniversary of implementation of in- vitro fertilisation (IVF)
and congratulated 1,000 babies conceived by the technique
From July, 2008 till now, the
hospital has applied the technique to assisst infertile couples to have
babies of their own.
The hospital manager said that
before 2002, the infertility treatment was conducted at the Maternity
Department by examining and simple treatment. At the end of 2007, experts in
infertility field in Ho Chi Minh City transfered the IVF technique to the
hospital.
In July, 2008, the hospital welcomed
first six babies conceived by IVF and till now, over 1,000 babies have been
born thanks to the technique.
Additionally, the hospital has
carried out seven surrogate pregnancy and three babies were born healthily.
Vietnam fights violence against
women and girls
The Ministry of Labour, Invalids and
Social Affairs held a ceremony in Ho Chi Minh City on November 4 to launch a
national action month for gender equality and to tackle abuse against women
and girls.
Speaking at the event, Deputy
Minister of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs Dao Hong Lan said gender
inequality and gender-based violence is an issue across regions and social
classes.
She noted the action month calls for
concerted efforts from public agencies, organisations and the community,
particularly male citizens, to implement the national goals on gender
equality and protection of girls and women from violence.
Responding to the launch, Vice
Chairman of the Ho Chi Minh People’s Committee Le Thanh Liem stated the
southern city will enhance its gender policies, particularly on the
improvement of living standards for female residents.
Elisa Fernandez, head of office at
the UN Women Vietnam, said violence against women and girls is a prolonged
human rights problem despite economic and social progress.
She pointed to a survey that showed
87 percent women encountering sexual abuse in public spaces do not speak out
or seek help due to a lack of support services.
The UN representative also urged the
removal of gender stereotypes.
Earlier, a photo exhibition on women
took place at the local Nguyen Hue pedestrian street in District 1, featuring
a flashmob, a household chore contest for men, and a painting competition on
a safe city for women and girls.
Book on Vietnam-US relation, AO
issue launched
The book: “From Enemies to Partners:
Vietnam, the US and Agent Orange” was launched during a roundtable discussion
with the two authors – Le Ke Son and Charles R. Bailey in Washington DC, the
US last week.
The event was held by the US Centre
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) on November 1 with Vietnamese
Ambassador to the US Pham Quang Vinh, and Senior Adviser and Deputy Director
of CSIS’s Southeast Asia Programme in attendance.
Le Ke Son used to serve as vice
director general of the Vietnam Environmental Administration at the Ministry
of Environment and Natural Resources while Charles R. Bailey is the former US
Ford Foundation representative in Vietnam who headed the foundation’s Hanoi
office from 1997 to 2007.
During the discussion, the two authors
said the book is a result of their long-term study on a time when the two
countries were going from enemies to partners and overcoming differences to
resolve the impacts of Agent Orange/ Dioxin on human health and the
environment.
The US’s efforts in helping Vietnam
cope with the war’s aftermaths contributed to fostering bilateral ties and
demonstrated a sense of humanity and morality, according to the authors.
In this book, two leading experts on
Agent Orange and its aftermath also considered solutions to addressing the
consequences of its use. They urged more comprehensive long-term efforts
between the two countries, including an Agent Orange cleanup at Bien Hoa
Airport and additional support to affected people in Vietnam.
Speaking at the event, Ambassador
Vinh lauded the book and the US assistance over the past 19 years in
supporting victims and a dioxin cleanup project at Da Nang Airport.
The dioxin cleanup project at Da
Nang Airport is a symbol for the two nations’ cooperation in humanitarian issues
and addressing war aftermaths, Vinh said. He also asked the US Government to
soon launch the cleanup project at Bien Hoa Airport.
Thousands of Hanoians hit the
streets for PhotoMarathon
From septuagenarians to teenagers,
more than 4,000 photography enthusiasts flocked to the final leg of the
three-part 2017 Canon PhotoMarathon held in the capital on Sunday.
“At 70, I still attend this
competition as a good way to keep fit, health and of course, to fulfil my
passion,” said Trinh Than Phi.
Meanwhile, 18-year-old Dao Thi Van,
whose is passionate about candid photography, said he was making his debut
and doing it for the experience. “Win or lose doesn’t matter,” he said.
They contestants hit the streets of
the capital city on Sunday morning. They will record images under three
themes and submit them by 5pm in the evening.
This year has shattered all records
for the 12-year-old contest with over 1,200 and 7,000 ‘racers’ in Đà Nẵng and
HCM City, respectively, representing a 50 per cent increase over last year.
Leading Vietnamese and Viet
Nam-based photographers Hải Đông, Hải Thanh and Justin Mott, who have spent
this year’s PhotoMarathons in the judging booth, will join the contestants on
the streets of Hà Nội.
Later, they will evaluate the
submissions based on four criteria: creativity, composition, colour and
adherence to the theme. Winners will be announced within the day.
Hiroshi Yokota, CEO of Canon
Marketing Vietnam said: “The PhotoMarathon strikes just the right chord
between photography, flexibility and creativity. The contest has gone
on to flourish not just in Viet Nam but all around the region.
"As we celebrate our 15th
anniversary in the country and our 80 years of development, the PhotoMarathon
is one of the most powerful ways that we share our message of cultural
development, positive living, and passion for photography with photo-lovers
here and abroad.”
Canon PhotoMarathon 2017 features
several new categories including the admittance of images from drones, and a
separate section for online entries for those unable to attend the event in
person.
Winners will be announced on the
Canon Vietnam fanpage on November 15. More information can be found at:
www.canon.com.vn/PhotoMarathon.
Along with their fellow-winners from
Đà Nẵng and HCM City, pictures taken by contetants in Hà Nội victor will
present Việt Nam at Canon PhotoMarathon Asia Championship in Japan along with
16 regional champions. Winners can win awards of up to US$5,000 and have
their work throughout Asia.
All registration fees will be transferred
to a charity programme called “For Future Generations” that aims to build
schools for poor students and make photography a ‘bridge’, and a meaningful
‘instrument’ to support the community.
Green works – new trend in
sustainable development in Vietnam
Green works are construction
projects that offer energy and materials efficiency, minimal environmental
impact, and maximal user friendliness. They have become a global trend in
sustainable development to which climate change is a looming challenge.
The first green works in Vietnam
were built in 2007 and were enthusiastically welcomed by the government, and
the general public. In the following decade, 60 construction projects in
Vietnam have been certified internationally as green works.
Architect Hoang Thuc Hao, a lecturer
at the National University of Civil Engineering, says green works have been
considered the right development direction because they conserve energy,
preserve natural landscapes, and promote a healthy environment.
“Vietnam has traditional
architecture works that save energy. For example, the 5-chamber houses in the
rural area of the Red River Delta are constructed with organic materials in a
north-south orientation, link gardens, ponds, and pigsties, and have front
eaves made of timber, rocks, or soil.
These are environmentally friendly
materials. These houses are warm in winter and cool in summer. Our ancestors’
experience in architecture should be respected in modern architecture by
combining advanced technology with native Vietnamese culture,” said Hao.
In the past decade, Vietnam’s annual
construction and urbanization rate grew 12% and 3.4% respectively.
Energy consumption has increased 14%
per year, growing faster than GDP.
Vietnam uses 36% of all its consumed
energy for construction works, 33% of which is electricity consumption. This
produces 25% of all greenhouse emissions and one third of all carbon dioxide
output, the main contributor to global climate change. It is predicted that
Vietnam will suffer severe ecological damage if it doesn’t take appropriate
steps now to boost green works and conserve its natural resources.
Phan Thi My Linh, Deputy Minister of
Civil Engineering, said the development of green works is part of the
implementation of the National Green Growth Strategy.
She said: “We have defined green
works as green architecture adapted to climate change. This means choosing
the right scale and increasing the use of wind energy, solar energy, and
environment-friendly materials.”
Green works development has been
combined with sustainable development of urban and rural environments.
Architect Nguyen Thanh Le, Director
of the 5.i.v.E Architecture and Construction Consultancy Company, said “Green
buildings must be environmentally friendly, so architects must pay attention
to environmental issues from the original concept through the construction
process. Because Vietnam has hot, humid weather, houses must be designed with
modern technology, non-baked bricks, and double glazing. Ventilation must use
convection to make the house cool and dehumidified. The house should be
designed to take advantage of its own shadow to avoid direct sunlight,
especially in summer.”
Vietnam can have more green
buildings if the State, the public, architects, and builders all participate.
The National Strategy on Climate Change and the National Strategy on Green
Growth are the keys to promoting green works.
Professor Hao says the development
of green buildings will bring great benefits to the national economy,
society, and the environment. But Vietnam needs more qualified architects, he
added.
“Architects, especially young
architects, should lead the development of green buildings and convince
investors to put money into these programs. When the idea spreads throughout
the community, people will see the benefits of green buildings. If only one
or two architects are involved, it will be hard for them to have an impact.
But if 100 to 200 architects join the movement, there will be a major
breakthrough,” Hao noted.
Although the development of green
works in Vietnam is relatively new, it has achieved positive results. The
Vietnam Real Estate Association has set up a Green Building Program
Coordination Committee comprised of architects, builders, and experts to
provide a foundation for the development of green buildings in Vietnam.
Woman killed by car crash while
sitting inside restaurant in Vietnam
A car caused multiple crashes before
plunging itself into a restaurant in Hue in central Vietnam near midnight on
November 3, killing a woman inside.
The 24-year-old driver, named Duong
Duc Huy, hit a motorbike at around 11:15 p.m., throwing the latter around 20
meters away. The collision somehow caused it to lose control and slam into
many motorbikes parked on the sidewalk before sliding into the restaurant.
A car is badly damaged after
crashing multiple motorbikes and eventually into a restaurant in Hue on
November 4. Photo by VnExpress/Nguyen Vuong
Many diners managed to run but a
22-year-old woman was hit and killed on the spot.
The car was badly damaged. The driver
reportedly fled the scene.
Police are investigating.
Road crashes are a leading cause of
deaths in Vietnam, killing an average of one person every hour. Some of them
happened in the most bizarre ways.
Vietnam decides to stop controlling
citizens with permanent residence book
The government has decided to scrap
the archaic residence books in favor of an online database whereby each
citizen will be registered with a personal identification code.
The resolution issued earlier this
week says that Vietnam will stop managing its citizen registration through
the residency book, which attaches a person to a permanent address.
The book, ho khau in Vietnamese, has
been in effect since the 1960s as an instrument of public security, economic
planning, and control of migration, similarly to China's hukou. In the
post-war period, the book was used as a means to ration food and allocate
jobs under the then planned economy.
But following economic reforms since
the late 1980s, Vietnam has adoped a socialist oriented market economy and ho
khau has been kept to limit migration to booming cities, to no avail.
A report issued last year by the
World Bank says 36% of the population in Ho Chi Minh City and 18% in Hanoi
lack ho khau.
“This study shows that the ho khau
system has created inequality of opportunity for Vietnamese citizens,” Achim
Fock, the World Bank’s Acting Country Director for Vietnam, said in 2016.
The book has come to signify
Vietnam's excessive red tape. It is required in most administrative
procedures including filing a birth certificate, going to school, getting
married, and it decides how easy it is for one to find a job, buy a house or
a vehicle.
A person who is registered outside
Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City will not be able to buy a motorbike or a house
under their own name in these cities, for example.
In most cities and provinces in
Vietnam, people can only become a public worker where they are registered as
permanent resident.
And once a person moves, he or she
will have to go through many doors to remove their name from one residency
book and add it to another.
It is not yet clear how the new
personal code would work and whether it will create any breakthroughs in
paperwork.
But from now on, people will at
least have one less document to worry about.
Female farmer’s innovative farming
method helps sustainable poverty reduction
Nguyen Thi Hue, head of a lemon
growing cooperative in Can Tho city, was among 10 individuals who received a
2017 Vietnam Women Award for their outstanding contribution to social
development.
The two-year-old cooperative led by
Hue has promoted fresh agricultural products, and helped farmers expand
markets, and escape poverty.
Nguyen Thi Hue was born in 1956 in
Hau Giang province. After she got married and moved to Can Tho City in 1978,
Hue grew oranges and jackfruits on a 3,000 square meter farm using chemical
fertilizer and preservatives, but it was not very profitable due to soil
degradation.
In 2010, Hue switched to growing
seedless lemons. In two years, her family has escaped poverty.
Ms. Dang Thi Thu of Truong Long
commune, said, “Hue was the first to grow seedless lemons and was very
successful. She shared the idea with other local women, and now the lemon
cooperative is booming”.
With the support of the Women’s
Union, Hue and other local women expanded their lemon trees to five hectares.
After finding an outlet at supermarkets, in 2015 the group became a
cooperative of 24 members, cultivating 12 hectares for both domestic
consumption and export: “We guarantee safe, high-quality and fresh produce.
Our lemons are exported at a stable price”.
Hue did a lot of research and
applied technology to produce organic lemons. Le Van Anh, Deputy Chief
administrator of Truong Long commune, said many local farmers have followed
Hue’s method, and are moving toward a collective economic model.
Mr Anh said “The successful lemon
cooperative has changed local farmers’ mindset and created momentum for the
establishment of a star apple cooperative in 2015. As a new-style rural
commune, we encourage new cooperative models”.
HCMC to build more pedestrian
bridges
The HCMC Department of Transport
will construct more footbridges near schools and hospitals to guarantee
safety for pedestrians.
The department’s Urban Traffic
Management Authority No.1 broke ground for a pedestrian bridge on Nguyen Van
Cu Street in front of Le Hong Phong High School for the Gifted in District 5
on November 2.
The bridge, 23 meters long and four
meters wide, costs around VND3.8 billion (over US$167,300) and is scheduled
for completion in late December.
The pedestrian overpass will help
students from Le Hong Phong High School and the nearby HCMC University of
Science cross the street safely.
The traffic management authority has
been also seeking a contractor to build a pedestrian bridge on Hoang Minh
Giam Street in front of Gia Dinh Park in Go Vap District. The VND11.6 billion
(US$510,600) footbridge will be 37 meters long and 4.4 meters wide.
In addition to these two bridges,
Urban Traffic Management Authority No.3 has invited tenders for construction
of a footbridge on Quang Trung Street Go Vap District.
The cost of the bridge, 23 meters
long and four meters wide, is VND3.3 billion (over US$145,200). When in
place, it will allow students of Thong Tay Hoi High School to cross the
street safely.
The city has six operational
footbridges including one on Cong Quynh Street in front of Tu Du Maternity
Hospital in District 1.
2,500 packs of smuggled cigarettes
seized
A car transporting 2,500 packs of
smuggled cigarettes was seized on Sunday by the traffic police in the central
province of Thanh Hóa.
On National Way 1A, the traffic
police stopped a car with number 74C-48.02 for violating traffic rules and
discovered that the car was transporting 2,500 555 Blend No Gold cigarette
packs, currently of unknown origin.
The car was driven by Nguyễn Ngọc
Hùng, born in 1970 and residing in Đông Hà Township of central Quảng Trị
Province.
Hùng told the police he was
transporting the cigarettes from Hà Nội to sell in Quảng Trị Province.
Deeming the incident required
investigation since it appeared to be a criminal offence, the traffic police
transferred all seized goods and the vehicle to the investigation police
agency of Thanh Hóa City.
Quảng Ninh mulls tunnel for Cửa Lập
Strait
The northeastern province of Quảng
Ninh is considering building a tunnel across Cửa Lập Strait to reduce traffic
pressure on Bãi Cháy Bridge.
The province’s Party Committee
Secretary and head of the province’s People’s Council Nguyễn Văn Đọc told Lao
động (Labour) newspaper that the tunnel was part of the province’s
newly-updated transport plan until 2030.
He said that the tunnel was expected
to help ensure smooth travel between Bãi Cháy and Hòn Gai wards – two parts
of Hạ Long City.
So far, the two parts are connected
by Bãi Cháy Bridge which is experiencing overcrowding and traffic congestion,
especially during rush hours, Đọc said.
If a traffic accident occurred on
the bridge, traffic would be blocked.
Moreover, during stormy season, the
bridge could not be used in strong winds of level six (40-50km per hour) or
more. The bridge was built in 2006 and stands about 60 metres above the water
level.
Vũ Văn Khánh, director of the
province’s Department of Transport, said that the tunnel would not be very
far from the Bãi Cháy Bridge.
“As the tunnel has been added to the
province’s transport plan, there is no more detailed information about it at
this time,” Khánh said.
Transport experts and local
residents expect that the tunnel would ensure smooth traffic and provide a
new tourist destination for visitors to Hạ Long.
The Bãi Cháy Bridge is a
cable-stayed bridge on Highway 18, connecting Hồng Gai with Bãi Cháy over the
Cửa Lục Straits, separating Cửa Lục Bay with Hạ Long Bay. Bãi Cháy Bridge was
the first central-line cable-stayed bridge in Việt Nam. At the time of its
inauguration, it set a record as the longest central-line span for a
cable-stayed bridge. — VNS
Festival commemorates ancestors in
Bình Thuận
More than 200,000 locals and
visitors are taking part in the Thầy Thím Temple Culture and Tourism Festival
in La Gi Town in coastal Bình Thuận Province, which closes on November 4.
The event, which began on November
2, featured rituals worshipping ancestors, including the couple Thầy (Master)
and Thím (Lady).
According to legend, Thầy and Thím
use their magic powers to help and cure poor people, and to build boats for
fishermen. The legend was illustrated by a miniature statue at the venue.
The festival also included a lion
dance, folk music performances, and traditional games.
The Thầy Thím Temple was built in
1879. Each year, local people organise a festival on September 14-16 of the
lunar calendar to show their respect to the couple.
This year’s festival celebrates the
20th anniversary of the temple, which is slated to be recognised as a
National Artistic and Architectural Relic.
VNN
|
Thứ Ba, 7 tháng 11, 2017
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét