COVID-19:
The truth is always the strongest argument
02:00
International experts and media have been trying to
explain Vietnam’s extraordinary success in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.
Vietnam has gone more than 70 days
with no new community transmissions, almost all of its COVID-19 patients have
recovered, and there has not been a single COVID-19 death in Vietnam. The
truth refutes those who try to deny Vietnam’s achievements.
Most
international media use phrases like “amazing Vietnam” and “role model” to
describe Vietnam's successful battle against COVID-19, but there
are a few who want to deny Vietnam’s undeniable achievements.
A tweet
posted by Professor Steve Hanke of John Hopkins University on June 10 named
Vietnam among a list of countries that "do not report COVID-19 data”,
rejecting the statistics reported by worldometers.info.
Former BBC
reporter Bill Hayton criticized Vietnam’s epidemic measures as a restriction
of human rights.
The facts
The opinions
of the American professor and the BBC reporter are at odds with those of international
organizations who have direct access to information in Vietnam.
Making
public up-to-date information about the COVID-19 pandemic was one of the
factors in Vietnam’s success. The World Health Organization and the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) say Vietnam has been transparent in
its handling of the pandemic. CDC Director in Southeast Asia John MacArthur
affirms there is no evidence that the numbers reported by Vietnam are not
accurate. He said transparency and political determination are what made
Vietnam a role model in fighting the disease.
The website
Eastasiaforum.org said Vietnam has kept the public informed through TV news
and text messages sent to mobile phones.
Germany’s
Der Spiegel said the Vietnamese Health Ministry has sent daily messages to
all mobile phone subscribers and used public loudspeakers to keep people
informed about preventive measures to protect themselves.
David Hutt,
a Southeast Asia columnist with The Diplomat, said the Vietnamese Party
and State have been open in sharing up-to-date COVID-19 information, have
acted responsibly, and have made public health their top priority.
The
government’s quick, firm actions to control the epidemic and threat infected
individuals have made people feel that they are protected and no one will be
left behind. A global survey in May by Singapore’s Blackbox Research found
that 94% of respondents said transparent information about the pandemic
increased their trust in the government.
Undeniable success
Mark
Ashwill, an educator who has lived in Vietnam for 15 years,
called BillHayton’s criticism of Vietnam’s preventive measures a
distortion by someone who knows nothing about Vietnam in 2020. Ashwill said
that before discussing Vietnam’s epidemic prevention policy, Bill Hayton
should have read an article in The Diplomat, which attributed Vietnam’s
successful control of COVID-19 to its social cohesiveness and ability to
mobilize resources quickly.
The Nation
said Vietnam achieved the most effective response to COVID-19 through rapid
mobilization of its health care system, public employees, and security
forces, combined with an effective and creative public education
campaign.
Eastasiaforum.org
said the military and the police inspired public cooperation by empathizing
with them in the fight against the pandemic.
These
assessments were borne out by statistics from daliaresearch.com in Berlin
which showed that Vietnam has the highest percentage of people who say they
believe in their government’s epidemic prevention policy.
A survey by
YouGov, a British market research and data analytics firm,
showed that Vietnam has had the best public response to the epidemic and that
95% of its citizens are happy with the government’s public health policies.
Facts and
figures posted by widely-respected media outlets refute the few skeptical or
unfriendly denials of Vietnam’s successful fight against the COVID-19
epidemic.
VOV5
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Thứ Hai, 29 tháng 6, 2020
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