Saturday, October 16, 2010

PM approves new poverty standards

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has approved new poverty standards that will apply in the making of economic and social policies for the next five years.

Rural household with average monthly per capita income equal or less than VND400,000 (US$20.5) will be deemed poor.

The figure for urban households is VND500,000.

Rural households with an average monthly per capita income of between VND401,000 and VND520,000 will be deemed almost poor.

The figure for urban household is VND501,000 - VND650,000.

In 2009, the figure for rural households was VND300,000 and VND390,000  for urban households.

In 2007, the figures were VND200,000 and VND260,000.

The Ministry of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs says Vietnam has about 3.3 million poor households, about 14.5- 15.5 percent of the total population, calculated from the new standards.

The new figures will be used for a planned national-poverty survey and the ministry says they reflect the improved living standards of Vietnamese.

Rural household with average monthly per capita income equal or less than VND400,000 (US$20.5) will be deemed poor.

The figure for urban households is VND500,000.

Rural households with an average monthly per capita income of between VND401,000 and VND520,000 will be deemed almost poor.

The figure for urban household is VND501,000 - VND650,000.

In 2009, the figure for rural households was VND300,000 and VND390,000 for urban households.

In 2007, the figures were VND200,000 and VND260,000.

The Ministry of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs says Vietnam has about 3.3 million poor households, about 14.5- 15.5 percent of the total population, calculated from the new standards.

The new figures will be used for a planned national-poverty survey and the ministry says they reflect the improved living standards of Vietnamese.
 

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Ten businesses honoured for fighting HIV/AIDS

Ten businesses has been honoured for preventing the spread of HIV and generating jobs for HIV positive people and high-risk individuals.

They were selected from more than 130 businesses involved in the USAID-funded project on workplace-based prevention and employment and supportive services for high-risk individuals in Vietnam (USAID HIV Workplace).

These businesses have applied a non-discrimination policy for people living with HIV/AIDS, employed HIV carriers and contributed finance to assist HIV sufferers in the community.

Around 90 percent of workers at these businesses have got access to information on HIV prevention and control and 125 HIV carriers and former drug users have worked without discrimination.

The businesses have contributed more than 156.6 million VND to grant scholarships and increase income for 27 people living with HIV.

The 3 million USD project, sponsored by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), started in Sept. 2008 and will last for five years.

The project is intended to prevent HIV infection among high-risk individuals and to provide employment opportunities and economic rehabilitation services for people living with HIV/AIDS and other high risk individuals, to help reduce discrimination and stigma.

The project has provided technical assistance to more than 130 businesses who are members of the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) in implementing the workplace-based HIV prevention policy for 128,000 workers and providing jobs for 456 HIV carriers and high-risk individuals.

Also at the ceremony held in Hanoi on Sept. 23, it was announced that 17 new HIV carriers and high-risk individuals will receive assistance from businesses./.

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VN, Cambodian provinces share experiences in women’s issues

A delegation from the Cambodian Women for Peace and Development Association in Kampong Speu province, headed by its chairwoman Tim Savath, is working with the Women’s Association of the southern province of Vinh Long from September 22-24.

The visit aims to help the two associations increase the exchange of experiences in a wide range of activities and learn about each others programmes and policies in order to support women living in difficult circumstances and provide them better health care, while preventing social evils such as human trafficking.

The Cambodian side spoke highly of achievements made by the Vinh Long provincial Women’s Association (VLWA) to assist women in running a household business while caring for their families. The province was also praised for vocational training and other effective club models.

Le Thanh Xuan, Vice Chairwoman of the Vinh Long provincial People’s Committee, said both Vietnam and Cambodia recognise the significance of families, in which women play an important role.

The proportion of women in Vietnam and in Vinh Long province assuming leadership roles is increasing, she said.

During its stay in Vietnam, the Cambodian delegation also made fact-finding tours of several craft manufacturing centres and resorts in the province where a large number of women work./.

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Vietnamese-English woman builds orphanage

The cries of orphans during a trip back to Vietnam haunted an English woman of Vietnamese origin and set her life on a new course.

Businesswoman Suzanne Hook, 41, sold her house and belongings in Buckinghamshire and left her comfortable life to return to Vietnam to take care of disadvantaged children.

With the Vietnamese name of Thi Hien, Hook was the abandoned daughter of a Vietnamese woman and a black US soldier who fought in the Vietnam war. Luckily she was found by an English nurse and then raised at the Germany-UK Society’s orphanage in Saigon.

In 1972, Hook was taken to the UK under a child adoption programme after being adopted by a catholic family in Hayes, Middlesex and led her life with very few memories of Vietnam .

Thirty-five years later in 2007, Hook, who at the time was running a beauty salon named the Couture Nail Service in Beaconsfield, returned to Vietnam and visited the orphanage where she had spent her early years in Ho Chi Minh City.

Her life then changed as the unfortunate orphans broke her heart and she knew she could not return to her previous life.

After the visit, she nurtured the idea of going back to Vietnam and building an orphanage in Ho Chi Minh City .

“My life now, is to go back to Vietnam to the children. I want to give them a future and the opportunity of going to school so that they can stand on their own two feet,” said Hook.

Hook took back her Vietnamese name, Thi Hien and says she is proud to tell everyone that she is Vietnamese.

According to the Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper, Hook’s Allambie Orphanage will begin to operate in November this year.

Suzanne Thi Hien said she hopes that the money she received from selling her property will be enough to build the orphanage, until she can raise more from other charitable foundations and philanthropists./.

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4th Environmental Film Festival launched

4th Environmental Film Festival launched

The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, Vietnam Television and the Vietnam Cinematography Association on September 23 launched the 4 th National Environmental Film festival in Hanoi.

According to the organising board, the entries focus on environmental problems, feasible solutions for rectifying them and proven examples of environmental protection work.

Organisations and individuals from across the country who have made films on Vietnam’s environment, including, videos, documentaries, feature films and cartoons, are being encouraged to take part.

The deadline for the entries is November 20 and the awards ceremony is scheduled for December.

Nguyen Thai Lai, Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environment said that in recent years, the ministry has held many competitions to raise public awareness of the importance of protecting and improving Vietnam’s environment. All the winning entries will be used to help protect the country’s environment.

Lai also called on people from all walks of life to contribute to protecting the environment./.

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Cao Dai followers celebrate Hoi Yen Dieu Tri Cung

More than 100,000 Cao Dai followers gathered for the sect’s grand ritual, Hoi Yen Dieu Tri Cung, in the Cao Dai Tay Ninh Church in the southern province of Tay Ninh on Sept. 22.

Hoi Yen Dieu Tri Cung is a great religious banquet for the Great Mother and the nine female Immortals of the Dieu Tri Palace ( Jasper Pond Palace ) held annually on the 15 th day of the eighth lunar month. Cao Dai followers believe the banquet implies a practice that enables them to achieve their goal of liberating themselves from the cycle of birth and death.

This year’s event was also attended by Plok Phan, Minister of State and officials from the Ministry of Cults of Cambodia , representatives from the Dhaka Academy of Bangladesh and officials from the Government’s committee for religious affairs and provincial administration.

Speaking at the banquet, Monsignor Thuong Tam Thanh, Chief of the Cao Dai Tay Ninh Church ’s Executive Council, called on Cao Dai followers to enthusiastically participate in poverty reduction programmes, charitable and social activities, as well as environmental protection campaigns.

He urged the followers to practise faith in line with both the religion’s rules and the country’s laws under the motto “serving both religion and society well”.

On the occasion, the Monsignor thanked the Party and State as well as local authorities for providing favourable conditions for Cao Dai followers to practise their faith./.

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Leaf art to raise funds for poor

Artists commissioned by the Vietnam Fine Arts Association and the Vietnam Buddhist Church have created the first 10 of 52 artworks on holy leaves brought from India to raise money for eye surgery for poor children.

The “bo de hoa tam” (pictures made of bodhi leaves) will be displayed at three major pagodas around Vietnam for the Anh Sang Tri Tue (The Light of Mind) charity programme.

In 2008 the artists made a pilgrimage to Mahabodhi Pagoda in India's northern Bihar State, the site where the Buddha attained enlightenment under a bodhi tree and a direct descendant of that tree is still worshipped at the pagoda.

It is from this tree that they brought the leaves and have created Buddhist motifs like peace and images of Buddha.

"The 52 pictures represent the weeks in a year," Nguyen Doan Anh Khoa, the project spokesman, said.

"The Bodhi tree is associated with the goodness that is innate in people's hearts," he said, adding that the exhibition aims to remind viewers that everyone has a heart like the Buddha.

The works will go on display to the public on September 22-24 at Bat Nha Pagoda in Da Nang, from September 30 to October 2 at Tao Sach, Tay Ho District, Hanoi, and from October 8 to 10 at Xa Loi Pagoda, District 3, HCM City.

Later they will be awarded to 10 outstanding entrepreneurs on Entrepreneur's Day (October 13).
The entrepreneurs, in turn, will each fund 100 eye operations for poor blind children through charity organisations./.

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Power cuts loom as water levels at reservoirs decrease sharply

Water levels in many reservoirs have declined sharply compared to previous years, leading to possible electricity shortages.

Hoa Binh Reservoir, the biggest in the north, was at its lowest level for two decades.

The current water level stands at 99m, much lower than the reservoir's 117m capacity.

About 24.5 billion cubic meters of water flowed into the reservoir this year, 18.3 cubic meters less than the same period in previous years.

The National Hydro-meteorological Forecast Center warned that the total amount of water flowing into the reservoir during the remaining quarter of this year would reach 9.4 billion cubic meters.

The reservoir's water level is estimated to decrease by 22.5 billion cubic meters by the year's end.

This year's severe drought was to blame for the problem, said Hoa Binh hydroelectric plant director Nguyen Van Thanh.

There has been one small downpour this year. In the past, there were between five and eight, he said.

"Over the past 23 years of operation, this is the first time the plant hasn't had to open the sluice gate," Thanh said.

Other reservoirs also face the same problem, with many of their water levels reaching ‘death level' where turbines cease to safely function.

Son La Reservoir water level stands at 162m, 13m lower than the death level.

The water levels of Dai Ninh Reservoir in central Quang Nam Province, Ham Thuan Reservoir in central Binh Thuan Province and Tri An Reservoir in southern Dong Nai Province stand at just 0.2 m, 0.1m and 0.13m higher than death level, respectively.

Meanwhile, the monsoon season was set to end, worsening the water shortage situation, said deputy director of the center Nguyen Lan Chau.

"Rains are forecast in the next few months, however the expected 20-30mm of rainfall will not be enough to make up for the water shortages," she said.

Low water levels may lead to electricity shortages.

CEO of the Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) Dao Van Hung said the company's electricity supply would be 5-10 per cent lower than demand as a result of the droughts.

The Hoa Binh hydropower plant annually generated more than 10 billion kWh and this year intended to generate 8.5 billion kWh but the target might be decreased due to water shortages, he said.

The plant generated 42 million kWh per day in 2009, but the figure had dropped to 32 million kWh a day this year.

The plant's director Thanh said electricity generation was limited due to water shortages while the Hoa Binh Reservoir had to start to reserve water for electricity generation during the approaching dry season.

The low water level at the Hoa Binh Reservoir would affect the construction of Turbine No 2 at the Son La hydropower plant, meaning that the power's electricity generation would slow, according to EVN deputy director general Vu Duc Thin.

The water level needed to measure 113m to be able to transport the equipment, but the present level was 99m, he said.

All 17 key EVN reservoirs faced water shortages while hydroelectricity accounted for 6,500MW of the company's total electricity generation capacity of 16,000-17,000MW, causing difficulties for electricity generation which would continue well into next year, CEO Hung said.

The company planned to propose the Ministry of Industry and Trade to map out plans to avoid rolling power cuts, he said.

"Cement and steel production plants, which consume large amounts of electricity, will be required to change their production plans to save electricity," he said.

Other power sources such as thermo-electricity would be maximized to help make up for the electricity shortages, he added.

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Science key to development

Le Thi Thuy became one of just a few female researchers to have been awarded the Kovaleskaia Prize following her work in agriculture. The Ministry of Science and Technology has launched a five-year programme in which up to 10,000 businesses will participate in the application of modern science and technology. — VNA/VNS Photo Thai Binh

Le Thi Thuy became one of just a few female researchers to have been awarded the Kovaleskaia Prize following her work in agriculture. The Ministry of Science and Technology has launched a five-year programme in which up to 10,000 businesses will participate in the application of modern science and technology. — VNA/VNS Photo Thai Binh

HCM CITY — Viet Nam will have up to 10,000 businesses that participate in application of modern science and technology achievements by 2015 if an action programme by the Government succeeds.

The programme, initiated by the Ministry of Science and Technology, seeks to create an impetus for the development of science and technology in upcoming years.

It also seeks to help provinces and cities draft their own science and technology application development plans and provide financial support to 50 science and technology transfer centres to help them realise their business well.

To achieve the objectives, the ministry plans to set up a national fund to help small and medium-sized enterprises obtain and upgrade technologies and train their scientific and technical workforce.

The fund, to use money from the state budget and voluntary contributions by organisations and individuals, will also help speed up technology transfers in poor rural and mountainous areas.

It will offer loans at low or no interest to eligible enterprises and provide them guarantees if they borrow from other sources for renewing technologies.

Minister of Science and Technology Hoang Van Phong says to foster science and technology development, it is necessary to improve scientists' research capabilities and that of enterprises to obtain and apply technologies.

Science and technology will only develop when there is widespread use by enterprises, Phong says.

Innovation

According to the ministry, there are nearly 1,500 scientific research institutes and centres in the country which employ 2.6 million people, including 60,000 those who directly doing research.

They have made a significant contribution to the country's socio-economic development, defence, political security, and social order.

They have managed to make cutting-edge innovations, including diagnostic equipment for diseases caused by viruses.

They have also provided domestic shipyards the technologies required to build ships of up to 100,000 tonnes.

The country has managed to send the Vinasat 1 satellite into space and has become the world's second biggest exporter of coffee and rice.

Despite such successes, there are barriers to the transfer and application of scientific and technical advancements, Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Le Dinh Tien says.

They are mainly the result of the low investment in science and technology by the Government while the corporate sector seems to ignore research and application, he says.

The quality of science and research personnel is modest, with the country having few top experts, he says.

Most science and technology research institutes lag behind international and regional standards, he adds. — VNS

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Friday, October 15, 2010

Hi-tech park donates English study materials

HCM CITY — The management board of Sai Gon Hi-tech Park (SHTP) on Monday donated English study materials valued at VND64 million (US$3,368) for Long Thanh My Elementary School in District 9.

The donation is a part of programme titled "For the development and happiness of the community" with a focus on educational improvement.

Panasonic awards three scholarships

Ha Noi — Panasonic Viet Nam yesterday granted three scholarships worth a total of US$240,000 to Vietnamese students.

The three recipients will each be enrolled in three-year masters programmes at universities in Tokyo and Osaka.

Nineteen Vietnamese students have been awarded the scholarships since 2003.

Ministry announces tuition-fee exemptions

HA NOI — The Education and Training Ministry has issued the official list of groups entitled to consessional tuition fees for the 2010-11 academic year to rectors of universities, colleges and vocational training schools.

They are descendants of people who devoted their lives to Viet Nam's revolution; students whose parents live in remote areas or the highlands as well as orphans, homeless, disabled, minority and markedly poor students. – VNS

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Reducing child mortality rates a top priority

Each locality should prioritize its investment in ethnic inhabited and poorer regions to protect the lives of children, an official of the Ministry of Public Health has said.

At a workshop on implementing an action plan for improving children’s lives in Ho Chi Minh City on Wednesday, Head of the ministry’s Child and Mother Health Protection Department Nguyen Duy Khe said the mortality rate of children in mountainous and remote provinces and poor families is three to four times higher than that of wealthy families.

He emphasized the need for each locality to conduct surveys and have its own action plan to protect children’s lives, with a national program target of reducing the mortality rate of children under five to below 18 percent and that of newborn babies to less than 10 percent.

A special focus should be put on reducing the mortality rate of newborn babies, which represents around 70 percent of that of all children, said Dinh Thi Phuong Hoa from the Public Health University.

The mortality rate of newborn babies can be reduced from 6-42 percent with timely emergency treatment and 55-87 percent for early breastfed cases, she said.

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said Vietnam had around 28,000 children die under the age of five, including 16,000 newborns each year.

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ASEAN looks to people-centred community

The sixth ASEAN People’s Forum is due to take place in Hanoi from Sept. 23-26 under the theme, “Solidarity and Action for People-Centred ASEAN”.

As many as 700 delegates have registered for the event, including over 370 from key people’s organisations of member countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

The Permanent Deputy President of the Vietnam Union of Friendship Organisations, Tran Dac Loi, said at a press briefing on Sept. 22 that the forum aims at exchanging information and experiences while strengthening solidarity and cooperation between social movements and people’s organisations in ASEAN member countries.

Also high on the event are innovations and constructive measures that coordinate action among ASEAN People’s organisations to cope with common challenges emerging from the building of an ASEAN community.

The workshop also aims to increase public involvement in the policy-making process of ASEAN. To this end, people are encouraged to take part in the campaigning process and supervision, as well as to put forwards recommendations to the grouping’s leaders to build a people-centred ASEAN.

The ASEAN People’s Forum is an opportunity for regional people to better understand host Vietnam and promote cooperation between the Vietnamese people’s organisations and their ASEAN partners./.

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Reducing child mortality rates a top priority

Each locality should prioritise its investment in ethnic inhabited and poorer regions to protect the lives of children, said an official of the Ministry of Public Health.

At a workshop on implementing an action plan for improving children’s lives in HCM City on Sept. 22, Head of the ministry’s Child and Mother Health Protection Department Nguyen Duy Khe said the mortality rate of children in mountainous and remote provinces and poor families is three to four times higher than that of wealthy families.

He emphasised the need for each locality to conduct surveys and have its own action plan to protect children’s lives, with a national programme target of reducing the mortality rate of children under five to below 18 percent and that of newborn babies to less than 10 percent.

A special focus should be put on reducing the mortality rate of newborn babies, which represents around 70 percent of that of all children, said Dinh Thi Phuong Hoa from the Public Health University.

The mortality rate of newborn babies can be reduced from 6-42 percent with timely emergency treatment and 55-87 percent for early breastfed cases, she said.

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said Vietnam had around 28,000 children die under the age of five, including 16,000 newborns each year./.

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German scientists discover rare ape species in Asia

German scientists said on Tuesday they had discovered a new rare and endangered ape species in the tropical rainforests between Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia by its distinctive song.

The new type of crested gibbon, one of the most endangered primate species in the world, is called the northern buffed-cheeked gibbon or Nomascus annamensis, a statement from the German Primate Centre (DPZ) said.

"The discovery of a new species of ape is a minor sensation," said Christian Roos from the DPZ.

"An analysis of the frequency and tempo of their calls, along with genetic research, show that this is, in fact, a new species."

The distinctive song "serves to defend territory or might even be a precursor of the music humans make," the statement added.

The male of the new species is covered with black fur that appears silver in sunlight. His chest is brownish and his cheeks deep orange-golden in color. The females are orange-beige in color.

Crested gibbons are found only in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and southern China. Scientists had assumed there were six different species but the recent discovery takes the number to seven.

Gibbons have become endangered due to illegal hunting. "Gibbons are kept as cute pets, or they are eaten, or they are processed into traditional medicines," said the DPZ.

Many species number only around 100 individuals, said Roos. Scientists currently have "absolutely no idea" how many of the new species might be alive, but are conducting further study to determine this, he told AFP.

Like orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees and bonobos, gibbons belong to the apes, man's closest relative.

"Only if we know where which species is found and how many individuals there are can we start with serious conservation actions," added the scientist.

News of the discovery was published in the Vietnamese Journal of Primatology.

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Vietnam ranks second in 2010 Robocon competition

The Vietnamese Robocon team LH-LED from Lac Hong University came in the second place in the 2010 Asia-Pacific Robocon contest, held in the Egyptian capital city of Cairo Tuesday.

In the Group D, the Vietnamese team surpassed Japanese and Malaysian teams to take the first place. It continued to beat the Egyptian host team in the quarterfinal and the Hong Kong team in the semifinal.

China defeated the Vietnamese team in the final round to win the championship this year.

“We have set the target to bring home the third prize, thus, the result is seen as a success to the whole team”, said Dang Huy So, the Vietnamese team’s head.

The Vietnamese team has also been honored with an award from the contest’s sponsor Panasonic.

With the theme “Robo-Pharaohs Build Pyramids”, 17 teams from 16 countries and territories in the region competed to build three pyramids within three minutes. The winner is the team who finishes the task in the shortest time.

Originally launched in Japan in 2002, Robocon is an annual contest held by the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union, to encourage robotic inventions by young people in the region.

The next Robocon contest is scheduled to be held in Thailand.

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Vehicles to be banned for anniversary celebrations

Vehicles will be banned from central city to assure traffic order and safety during the ten-day 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long - Hanoi celebrations.

The Hanoi Transport Department says all vehicles will be banned in the Ly Thai To Park precinct and limited around Hoan Kiem Lake before the opening ceremony at 7am Friday, October 1.

Vehicles will also be prohibited from Ba Dinh Square; Hung Vuong Road; Doc Lap-Hoang Van Thu; the Nguyen Canh Chan-Ba Huyen Thanh Quan-Mot Cot Pagoda route; the Phan Dinh Phung-Hoang Dieu-Quan Thanh route; Thanh Nien Road; the Van Xuan Garden and surrounds during parade rehearsals on October 6-7 and October 9-10.

Nguyen Thai Hoc-Cua Nam-Trang Thi-Hang Khay-Trang Tien Streets will be closed to traffic for the parade.

Both vehicles and pedestrians will be banned from Ba Dinh Square on Sunday morning, October 10.

Public screens will be installed at public places.

All roads to My Dinh National Stadium, including Cau Dien-Ho Tung Mau-Pham Hung-Tran Duy Hung-Khuat Duy Tien-Lang Hoa Lac streets will be closed during the final ceremony of Sunday evening, October 10.

All coaches of 24 seats or more will be banned from the ring road to downtown Hanoi and will have to park at Long Bien, Hai Ba Trung, Tu Liem, Hoang Mai, Ba Dinh and Cau Giay districts between October 7-10.

Buses will be used to ferry people from these points to the central city and return free of charge.

Hanoi Police deputy director Bach Thanh Dinh said security and safety were the priorities for guests and participants at the celebration and his officers would oversee five key areas during the parade.

People who lived or worked in restricted areas should carry their identification cards or employee cards to enter and leave restricted areas, he warned.

Transport Department director Nguyen Quoc Hung said the dense population would make traffic congestion inevitable.

People should follow the guidance of police and be aware of the need for traffic sense during the ceremonies, he advised./.

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Man kills woman, injures two over wife job grievance

A Ho Chi Minh City man, who was furious that his wife was about to be dismissed, killed a woman Monday and injured his wife’s boss.

Nguyen Trong Nhan, 30, and Luong Hoai Sang, 20, were arrested for killing 47-year-old Dang Thu Hong and stabbing Bui Ngo Thi My, the boss, and her daughter at My’s house in Phu Nhuan District.

According to the police, Nhan went to the house to ask My, chief of the local natural resources and environment agency, to condone his 20-year-old wife’s wrongdoings.

His wife faced the sack for breaking several rules.

He and Sang also carried a knife and an electric baton to threaten My.

After their discussion became heated and My rejected his entreaties, the two attacked her with the baton and also her 24-year-old daughter who came downstairs upon hearing her mother’s screams.

Hong, My’s friend, suddenly turned up at the house and Nhan hit her on the head with a tennis racket until she passed out.

He also repeatedly stabbed the three women with the knife, and Hong died on the way to hospital.

Since My lived opposite the local military headquarters, soldiers heard the victims’ screams and rushed to their rescue.

Nhan also threatened them, saying he would kill anyone who approached him.

He only surrendered when armed police showed up.

My and her daughter have recovered after treatment.

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Firms avoid environmental protection fees in HCM City

Many enterprises in HCM City have become debtors of the Municipal Environmental Protection Sub-department, not paying charges fixed by the city, a report says.

According to the sub-department, as of this month, more than 30 enterprises had not paid environment protection charges of about 3 billion VND (154,000 USD) for wastewater treatment alone.

Tran Ngoc Dinh, an official of the sub-department, said environmental protection charges had been collected since 2004 under Prime Minister's Decree 67.

However many enterprises in the city were still trying to avoid their obligations, he said.

Some of the enterprises had evaded payments for several years, Dinh said.

The Phan Muoi Company in Hoc Mon district, for instance, owes environmental protection fees of 51 million VND (2,600 USD), but to date, it has paid nothing, he said.

The Hau Sanh Company in Tan Binh District owed the department 55 million VND (2,800 USD), and while the Binh Trung Dong Company in district 2 owed 57 million VND (2,900 USD).

"We have many times sent warning letters to the enterprises. We have also discussed this issue several times with them. However, the situation has not changed," Dinh said.

While some of the establishments had closed, many were still in operation.

Nguyen Minh Hoang, deputy director of the municipal Environmental Protection Sub-department, attributed the evasion to a lack of serious punitive measures.

The sub-department was tasked to collect environmental protection charges from local enterprises but it did not have the authority to penalise violations, Hoang said.

Current environmental protection charges are very low, accounting for a small part of the total costs the city has to pay for processing wastewater and improving the environment, he said.

Enterprises in the city have to pay just 250 VND for one kilo of contaminated water that exceeds chemical-oxygen-demand (COD) and Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) specifications, he said.

The report shows that many enterprises that have not paid their environmental protection dues continue to discharge polluted water into the environment, but have not been penalised.

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Thursday, October 14, 2010

HIV increases in remote north

by Hang Nguyen

Lo A Man (first right), who is living with HIV, speaks to visitors in his house in the northern province of Dien Bien. — VNS Photo Hang Nguyen

Lo A Man (first right), who is living with HIV, speaks to visitors in his house in the northern province of Dien Bien. — VNS Photo Hang Nguyen

DIEN BIEN — Lo A Man, a 23-year-old ethnic Thai man who lives in Huoi Ron Village, in Dien Bien District's Nua Ngam Commune didn't realise he was infected with the HIV virus until his wife gave birth to twins.

The couple, whose names have been changed in this report, had a routine health check ahead of the birth, only to find that they were both infected.

"When I was a child, my parents could not afford the money to send me to school so I was not able to read, I also did not know what HIV/AIDS was," says Man.

At the age of 15, Man left his home to work as a builder in nearby provinces. Talking on how he may have contracted AIDS, he says he once joined a party with his friends, got drunk and slept with a sex worker.

"If I knew I was infected with HIV, I would not have married," he says. "Now I just hope that my babies will not be infected as well."

His wife, Luong Thi Dam, 25, says that despite having AIDS, she and her husband have been lucky to avoid much of the discrimination that most AIDS victims struggle with.

"Although our neighbours know my husband and I are infected, they do not treat us any differently," she says.

"We felt consoled by this."

Man's story is a common one in the north-western mountainous province of Dien Bien, situated about 500 kilometres from Ha Noi.

The province has recently become a ‘hot spot' for drug trafficking and sex workers, and AIDS is spreading throughout local communities.

Vu Hai Hung, deputy director of the provincial HIV/AIDS Prevention Centre says the main reasons for the rapid spread of the disease are men having sex with prostitutes without using condoms as well as the sharing of needles among drug users.

Hung said a lack of awareness among local residents about the danger of AIDS was also a factor.

Statistics from the provincial Health Department show that the number of local residents infected with HIV/AIDS has been steadily rising since 2005.

Dien Bien Province is now one of the country's most troubling AIDS hot spots.

In a province with a population of 500,000, about 599 people out of every 100,000 are infected with AIDS, which is double the national rate.

The latest statistics from the provincial HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Centre show that on average one person dies from AIDS every two days, as many as 120 are infected with HIV each month, and more than 85 per cent of those infected with HIV are between 20 to 39 years of age.

For the past several months, Man's family has received support from doctors at the Centre's HIV/AIDS Adult Outpatient Clinic.

He has to visit the clinic in Dien Bien Phu City, about 20 kilometres from his house, every week to get anti-retroviral drugs for him and his wife and milk for his baby twins.

"Sometimes during rainy days, I did not go to the clinic because it's so far away from my house," Man says. "If only it wasn't so far."

Doctor Lo Thi To Khuyen, head of the clinic says mothers infected with AIDS should not breast feed their babies.

"Since last August, we have treated 20 pregnant women infected with HIV/AIDS in an attempt to prevent mother-to-child transmission," he says.

However, Khuyen says the clinic only treats a small percentage of the total number of people living with AIDS in the province.

"The clinic just meets a small fraction of the 900 cases, the cumulative total of pregnant women infected with HIV in the province," she says.

Nguyen Thi Thuy, a communications officer from the provincial HIV/AIDS Prevention Centre, says people living far from the clinic cannot afford regular visits.

"An inconvenient transport system and the great distances between villages and clinics or health centres are the main factors preventing local residents from getting health services," says Thuy. — VNS

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New waterworks begin supplying City districts

HCM CITY — The Thu Duc waterworks began operation on Monday, five years after its construction began, supplying 300,000 cubic metres of water daily to several districts in HCM City.

Thu Duc Water B.O.O (Build-Own-Operate) Corporation, the investor, has also built the 315,000 - cubic metre Hoa An water pumping station in southern Dong Nai Province and laid pipes between Thu Duc and Nha Be Districts.

The waterworks cost more than VND1.7 trillion (US$87.6 million) which was brought in by the company and loans from the Viet Nam Development Bank.

Its output is being bought by the Sai Gon Water Supply Corporation (SAWACO) for supply to Districts 2, 4, 7, 8, 9, and Nha Be.

SAWACO will also supply Thu Duc, Binh Thanh, and Go Vap Districts when it links the pipelines in both places.

Nguyen Thanh Tai, deputy head of the city People's Committee, said the plant will enable the city to supply clean water to places that are now lacking, helping improve the quality of life for residents there.

Thu Duc Water B.O.O Corporation is a joint venture between Water&Environment Joint Stock Company, HCM City Infrastructure Investment Joint Stock Company, Construction Corporation No.1, HCM City Investment Fund for Urban Development, Refrigeration Electrical Engineering Corp and Thu Duc Housing Development Joint Stock Company. — VNS

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Remains of 26 soldiers found in mass grave

QUANG NGAI — The remains of 26 war soldiers were found yesterday in a mass grave excavated in central Quang Ngai Province's Nghia Hanh district.

Quang Ngai Province's Military Steering Committee said the soldiers' belongings helped identify the Commando C506 soldiers that died during the General Offensive in 1968.

City to fine homes with mosquito larva

HCM CITY — People in HCM City will be fined up to VND500,000 (US$26) if mosquito larva are found in their home by health inspectors, the HCM City's Health Department announced.

The department has asked the city's 24 districts to expedite their clean up efforts to combat the spread of dengue fever.

Coach cleaner returns VND40 million

NGHE AN — A coach cleaner from Van Xuan Coach Company returned more than VND40 million ($2,000) to a passenger who accidentally dropped the money while travelling from Ha Noi to Vinh on Monday.

Tran Quoc Tuan, 23, was honoured by his company for his honesty.

Miwon VN supports Red Cross fund

HA NOI — Miwon Viet Nam Ltd yesterday committed to provide at least US$25,000 annually over the next five years to help the Viet Nam Red Cross Society carry out humanitarian programmes. The aid, beginning this year, will be used to assist the poor and victims of natural disasters and Agent Orange. — VNS

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Vietnamese woman sells it all to open orphanage

A Vietnamese-born woman who was adopted by a British family 40 years ago has sold all of her possessions, including a £500,000 home and sports car, to fund an orphanage in her home country, The Daily Mail reported Tuesday.

Suzanne Hook, 42, was one of the first 'air babies' rescued during the Vietnam War after her desperate mother dumped her under a bush when she was born in 1969.

She was adopted by a British family aged three and used her golden opportunity for a better life to become an extremely successful business woman.

Suzanne, whose birth name was Thi Hien, has now sold her £500,000 home in Buckinghamshire, her Mercedes sports car and an enviable shoe collection.

She has also sold off all of her clothes and furniture to achieve her dream of setting up an orphanage for abandoned children in Vietnam.

Suzanne, who is abandoning her English life to run the Allambie Orphanage in Ho Chi Minh City, says: “I'm practically selling everything. My whole life is up for sale."

'I've had a comfortable adult life and now I'm giving it all up to live in Vietnam which will be the opposite.

“I'm leaving my friends and whole way of life to take on between eight and 10 children for the rest of my life. It is important to get a chance to better themselves.

“My life here has gone - it will be out in Vietnam with the children.

“I want to give them a future and educate them at a level to get them to university or a job and a home so they can stand on their own two feet.

“But also make them feel wanted, needed and loved. This is something I never felt when I was a child and it is important they have that.”

Suzanne, who is the daughter of a Vietnamese woman and black American soldier, was born at the height of the brutal conflict which ravaged her homeland.

She was taken to an orphanage in 1969 suffering from malnutrition and was too weak to move when she was spotted by British nurses.

The nurses paved the way for Suzanne to be one of first 'air babies' rescued from the war in 1972 with the promise of a better life.

Her arrival at Gatwick Airport at the age of three made national news and she was adopted by a Christian Evangelical family in Hayes, Middlesex.

Suzanne left home when she was 18 and went to catering school before working as a head chef in restaurants and cruise liners for 13 years.

Since 2002 she has built up a successful beauty firm called Couture Nail Service, in Beaconsfield, Bucks, which has allowed her to plough money into the orphanage.

When she visited Vietnam during a career break in 2007 she went on a teaching course and tracked she tracked down her old orphanage.

Inspired by what she found Suzanne returned home and secured funding to open her own orphanage for five girls and four boys all aged between six and 16 years old.

Allambie Orphanage is due to open in November and is named after the home which cared for Suzanne after she was abandoned by her mum.

Suzanne hopes that selling her Western possessions will pay the orphange's £950 a month running costs until she attracts suitable families to sponsor the children.

To make a donation to the orphanage log on to www.allambie.co.uk

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Firms evade environmental protection fees in HCMC

A number of enterprises based in Ho Chi Minh City have become debtors of the Municipal Environmental Protection Sub-department, not paying charges fixed by the city, a report says.

According to the sub-department, as of this month, more than 30 enterprises had not paid environment protection charges of about VND3 billion (US$154,000) for wastewater treatment alone.

Tran Ngoc Dinh, an official of the sub-department, said environmental protection charges had been collected since 2004 under Prime Minister's Decree 67.

However many enterprises in the city were still trying to avoid their obligations, he said.

Some of the enterprises had evaded payments for several years, Dinh said.

The Phan Muoi Company in Hoc Mon district, for instance, owes environmental protection fees of VND51 million ($2,600), but to date, it has paid nothing, he said.

The Hau Sanh Company in Tan Binh District owed the department VND55 million ($2,800), and while the Binh Trung Dong Company in district 2 owed VND57 million ($2,900).

"We have many times sent warning letters to the enterprises. We have also discussed this issue several times with them. However, the situation has not changed," Dinh said.

While some of the establishments had closed, many were still in operation.

Nguyen Minh Hoang, deputy director of the municipal Environmental Protection Sub-department, attributed the evasion to a lack of serious punitive measures.

The sub-department was tasked to collect environmental protection charges from local enterprises but it did not have the authority to penalize violations, Hoang said.

Current environmental protection charges are very low, accounting for a small part of the total costs the city has to pay for processing wastewater and improving the environment, he said.

Enterprises in the city have to pay just VND250 for one kilo of contaminated water that exceeds chemical-oxygen-demand (COD) and Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) specifications, he said.

The report shows that many enterprises that have not paid their environmental protection dues continue to discharge polluted water into the environment, but have not been penalized.

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Vehicles to be banned for anniversary celebrations

Vehicles will be banned from central city to assure traffic order and safety during the 10-day 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long - Hanoi celebrations.

The Hanoi Transport Department says all vehicles will be banned in the Ly Thai To Park precinct and limited around Hoan Kiem Lake before the opening ceremony at 7am Friday, October 1.

Vehicles will also be prohibited from Ba Dinh Square; Hung Vuong Road; Doc Lap-Hoang Van Thu; the Nguyen Canh Chan-Ba Huyen Thanh Quan-Mot Cot Pagoda route; the Phan Dinh Phung-Hoang Dieu-Quan Thanh route; Thanh Nien Road; the Van Xuan Garden and surrounds during parade rehearsals on October 6-7 and October 9-10.

Nguyen Thai Hoc-Cua Nam-Trang Thi-Hang Khay-Trang Tien Streets will be closed to traffic for the parade.

Both vehicles and pedestrians will be banned from Ba Dinh Square on Sunday morning, October 10.

Public screens will be installed at public places.

All roads to My Dinh National Stadium, including Cau Dien-Ho Tung Mau-Pham Hung-Tran Duy Hung-Khuat Duy Tien-Lang Hoa Lac streets will be closed during the final ceremony of Sunday evening, October 10.

All coaches of 24 seats or more will be banned from the ring road to downtown Hanoi and will have to park at Long Bien, Hai Ba Trung, Tu Liem, Hoang Mai, Ba Dinh and Cau Giay districts between October 7-10.

Buses will be used to ferry people from these points to the central city and return free of charge.

Hanoi Police deputy director Bach Thanh Dinh said security and safety were the priorities for guests and participants at the celebration and his officers would oversee five key areas during the parade.

People who lived or worked in restricted areas should carry their identification cards or employee cards to enter and leave restricted areas, he warned.

Transport Department director Nguyen Quoc Hung said the dense population would make traffic congestion inevitable.

People should follow the guidance of police and be aware of the need for traffic sense during the ceremonies, he advised.

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Historians recognise contributions of Mac dynasty

Historians have called for softer stance on the Mac dynasty, which gained power through a coup d’etat in 1527 and ruled northern Vietnam until 1592.

The question was raised at a symposium in Hanoi on September 21 where nearly 50 historians recognised the Mac dynasty -- considered illegal by historians until the 1970s -- for its contributions to cultural, ideological and economic development.

The Director of the Centre for Conservation of the Co Loa-Hanoi Ancient Citadel, Dr Nguyen Van Son, said the Mac Dynasty had left numerous documented relics and objects that had proved its role in the long history of Thang Long-Hanoi.

The Mac Dynasty ruled northern Vietnam from 1527-92, when they lost control over Thang Long, now Hanoi. They were forced to move to Cao Bang and ruled the northern mountainous province until 1677.

The founder of the Mac Dynasty was Mac Dang Dung, who was related to a famous Tran Dynasty Confucian scholar named Mac Dinh Chi.

Unlike his ancestor, Mac Dang Dung chose to enter the military and ascended the ranks to become a senior general.

He seized power in a coup d’etat in 1527 and ruled Vietnam until his death in 1541.

In 1535 Mac Dang Dung managed to send Chinese Ming troops away from Vietnam by means of diplomacy./.

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Children with disabilities enjoy rare night out

If anyone thinks that a barrier exists between children with disabilities and those who have none, they are mistaken.

In fact, most children see those with disabilities as potential friends with whom they can have fun.

On September 19, a gathering of around 100 kids testified to this feeling.

The evening gathering was held as part of Tet Trung Thu (Mid-Autumn Festival), which is a children's festival and falls on the full-moon day of the eighth lunar month.

The gathering took place in the yard of a mansion in District 10 where the Disability Resource and Development is based. The DRD (also stands for Doi Rat Dep) in Vietnamese, meaning Life is Beautiful is a local non-governmental organisation providing support to disadvantaged people.

Visually and hearing-impaired, mentally impaired and autistic children mingled with others from nearby neighbourhoods. They ranged in age from five to 13.

The enclosed yard was fully packed with children. Their boisterous laughter enlivened the space, while their hands were gesticulating wildly.

The kids also spilled onto the passage in the front, which was roofed to provide more space for kids during a lantern-making competition.

They were divided into 20 groups of five and provided with bamboo frames, cellophane of various colours, rayon, scissors and glue to build their own lanterns.

Twenty colourful lanterns of different shapes, most of them lovely animals like rabbit, peacock, swan, bird along with stars and flowers, were hung up in the air after they were completed.

"I wish that all of my friends were as gorgeous as swans in the Mid-Autumn Eve," explained one member of a group, describing the significance of their works to the jury.

All of the kids in the groups held conferences to discuss the significance of their lanterns, according to Nguyen Thi Loi, a fourth-year student specialising in social work at the University of Social Sciences and Humanities.

"We just gave them some hints, like what a flower or heart means," she said.

Loi and dozens of other volunteer students were assigned to supervise and support groups of kids.

A flower lantern represented the children's dream to have a beautiful flower to celebrate the festival, while a house-shaped lantern conveyed wishes to live in happiness.

"Every wing of this five-wing star represents each of us, as they have our fingerprints on them," explained one child about his group's work. "It means that when we join hands together, we can make a brilliant star."

Tran Thi Ngoc Anh, who is 10 years old and lives nearby, observed that the children with disabilities had "fun to the max".

"I approached a cute-looking girl and asked her name," she added. "But she just turned back and gesticulated with her hands."

"Even though she knows that I do not understand her language, she did try to reply," she said.

Nguyen Ngoc Ha, 15, who listens and speaks with difficulty and lives at Binh Thanh District's Hy Vong (Hope) School for hearing-impaired kids, said she tried to win the highest prize with her group's lantern, which was in the shape of a fish in the paddy field.

"We love to sing and dance," said Ha, who performed dances and songs to celebrate the moon and legendary figures who live on it.

The party, performances of lovely songs and dances, a fashion show and parade with lighted lanterns were activities that spiced up a fabulous evening for the kids.

Nguyen Thi Ngoc Anh, a teacher of Hy Vong School who accompanied some kids, said hearing-impaired children were hungry to mix and have fun with other children.

"They rarely set foot out of school, so they never want to miss a chance like this."/.

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Vietnam to grow genetically-modified corn

Vietnam intends to plant genetically-modified corn in 2011 after successfully completing an experimental project.

A recent seminar in the southern province of Ba Ria-Vung Tau discussed initial outcomes of the project, which was carried out in both the northern and southern regions.

The Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Bui Ba Bong, said the project showed that genetically-modified corn can adapt to the weather and land in these areas.

It also showed that this corn is resistant to pests, diseases and could help Vietnam reduce it imports of maize for making animal fodder.

Vietnam produces between 1.1-1.2 million tons of maize a year while it needs 1.5 million tons.

The genetically-modified corn will be planted on a large scale from 2011, if it passes a final test, said Bong.

According to Le Huy Ham, Director of the Agricultural Genetics Institute, various species of genetically-modified plants have been grown worldwide for 16 years, with a current acreage approaching 126 million ha.

Vietnam also plans to grow genetically-modified cotton and soya beans by 2013-2014.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Hospitals brace for flu season

Children receive medical care at the National Paediatricts Hospital. Chidren are at greater risk of picking up viruses when the weather changes in autumm, doctors warn. — VNS Photo Viet Thanh

Children receive medical care at the National Paediatricts Hospital. Chidren are at greater risk of picking up viruses when the weather changes in autumm, doctors warn. — VNS Photo Viet Thanh

HA NOI — Paediatricians are warning that children are at greater risk of picking up viruses when the weather changes in autumn.

About 2,000 children daily have been undergoing check-ups or receiving treatment daily at the Ha Noi-based National Paediatrics Hospital over the last few weeks – about 20 per cent higher than normal, according to doctor Nguyen Van Loc.

Most of the children admitted to the hospital have been suffering respiratory problems, allergies, fevers or diseases such as mumps or chicken pox, Loc said.

He said parents should send their children to hospital on the first sign of illness. He said worrying symptoms included a high temperature and a runny nose.

"A lot of parents treat their children on their own. They use either out-of-date medicines or borrow prescriptions from friends or neighbours," he said.

"When their children fail to recover they simply increase the dose, which can be dangerous," Loc said.

Recently, Nguyen Minh Hue, who lives in Dong Da District, brought her five-year-old daughter to hospital after giving her child an old drug.

"I used the prescription the doctor gave my daughter five months ago when she developed a cough. She had the same symptoms this time around as well," Hue said.

When her daughter failed to get better, she said she increased the dose. Since last being ill, she has gained a kilo, so I thought she would need more medicine, she said.

Hue gave her daughter 4ml of an antibiotic twice a day, instead of 2ml as recommended.

After two days of taking the medicine, Hue's daughter developed an allergy and suffered from serious diarrhoea.

"Luckily, the doctor knew what to do," she said.

Loc warned that children are particularly prone to respiratory diseases when temperatures are high during the day and cool at night. "Children usually recover from a simple viral infection in three to five days if they get treatment," he said.

Nguyen Van Lam, deputy director of the National Paediatrics Hospital's Infection Ward, said children should be vaccinated regularly against viral infections.

"Teachers should isolate sick children or let them stay away from school until they are better to prevent them infecting other children," he said.

Teachers should also encourage children to wash their hands frequently with soap and ensure toys and teaching aids are clean. — VNS

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Employment agencies fall short of goals

Jobseekers at an employment fair in HCM City's Tan Binh District last week. — VNA/VNS Photo Phuong Vy

Jobseekers at an employment fair in HCM City's Tan Binh District last week. — VNA/VNS Photo Phuong Vy

HCM CITY — Employment exchanges established nationwide have failed to effectively perform their basic function of connecting job seekers with employers, a senior official says.

Nguyen Thi Hai Van, deputy head of the Labour and Employment Agency under the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs (MoLISA), said at a conference held in Ha Noi last week that the exchanges met just 10-15 per cent of existing employment demand in the country.

"This has led to the situation that Industrial Zones and Export Processing Zones are suffering constant shortage of workers while unemployment in large cities, which account for more than five per cent of the labour force, is still high," Van said.

Job transaction floors were established as an upgrade of jobs fairs in 2006, with each one receiving average funding of VND5-7 billion (US$260,000-364,000) from the State budget, according to statistics released by the Labour Ministry.

The exchanges are present in almost all provinces and cities across the country, with 44 of them holding one to three sessions per month. Each session receives funding of VND200 million (US$10,400).

However, thus far, just 14 per cent of job seekers and 16.4 per cent of employers have joined the exchange, the ministry estimates.

Huynh Ngoc Long, director of the Employment Service Centre in Dong Nai Province, said most enterprises in the province operating in the wood processing, garment and textiles, electronics and footwear industries had a large demand for unskilled labour.

Twenty one industrial parks operating in the province needed to recruit 50,000 labourers a year, but they could only hire 4,500-5,000 through the employment exchanges, he said.

Enterprises participating in a job fair held in the province on September 5 offered 5,000 vacancies, but managed to recruit only a few hundred workers, Long said.

Only 1,000 job seekers attended the 19th employment fair held in April in Binh Duong Province, where more than 300 enterprises registered to recruit more than 20,500 workers, provincial reports said.

The Employment Service Centre in Ha Noi held 56 job fairs between 2007 and mid 2010, attracting the participation of more than 4,800 enterprises and nearly 150,800 visitors, said Vu Trung Chinh, the centre's director.

However, these events only met 20 per cent of enterprises' labour demand, with each one receiving an average of 1,874 applications, he added.

Low salaries and tough working conditions without other benefits were main reasons for workers not opting to accept employment with the factories in big cities and industrial zones, experts have said.

Weaknesses in the analysis of labour market data, poor forecasting skills and a lack of qualified staff were severely limiting the effectiveness of employment exchanges, Van said. — VNS

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