Saturday, January 8, 2011

PM grants licence to new university

HCM CITY — Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung last Thursday approved the establishment of Tan Tao University (TTU) in Long An Province, which is expected to begin enroling students in the 2011-12 academic year.

Located on 103 ha in Tan Duc Educational City, some 12km from HCM City, the new private TTU is unique among Vietnamese universities because it is based on an American model and has a non-profit status.

TTU has been invested in and developed by Tan Tao Group, a leading diversified conglomerate encompassing industrial parks and infrastructure development that includes thermal power plants, renewable energy and water treatment plants, and media technology.

Teaching and studying at TTU will be conducted in English.

Students will study at the TTU campus for three years and the fourth year at a well-known university in the US, according to the Government's website.

Dung also appointed the Ministry of Education and Training to inspect TTU's necessary facilities before it is allowed to open any faculty and enroll students in various fields of study.

TTU's mission is to produce graduates who will be experts in their fields, committed to life-long learning and adept in the use of creative and critical thinking.

The chairwoman of Tan Tao Group and founder and chairwoman of the TTU Board of Advisors, Dang Thi Hoang Yen, said: "TTU is a Vietnamese university that will provide quality education to excellent students who need an opportunity (for an international-standard education)."

At its full operation, TTU will have nine schools, with schools of Business and Economics, Engineering, and Computer Science and Humanities and Languages to be established in the first year of operation. — VNS

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Daycare worker to face abuse charges

HA NOI — Tran Thi Phung, who was caught abusing a three-year-old girl in a video clip disseminated online, was prosecuted and held in custody at the order of the People's Procuracy in Binh Duong Province's Thuan An District.

Phung, 52, who runs a nursery in the district's Thuan Giao Commune, was charged with physical abuse and maltreatment of children according to criminal law, said prosecutors.

A hidden camera recorded Phung stomping on the body, pulling the hair and splashing water into the mouth of Ho Thuy Ngoc Ngan, one of thechildren entrusted to her care.

The clip was launched on the internet last Tuesday and immediately stirred anger across the country.

Local police tracked down the nursery just several hours later. Phung admitted to being the woman in the video, but said she had just been washing the girl as she normally did.

The footage was clear enough for criminal prosecution, and investigation was still underway, said provincial prosecutor Tran Tri Thuc.

The commune's Hoa Mai Kindergarten offered to care for Ngan even though it was already overloaded, said the kindergarten's principal Nguyen Thi Hau.

Ngan's mother, a worker at the locally based Hai My Footwear Company, was given several days off to take care of her daughter. — VNS

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Pharma executive arrested for alleged securities fraud

HCM CITY — Le Van Dung, chairman and general director of Duoc Vien Dong Pharmaceutical Company, has been detained by police for alleged securities price manipulation.

The company is listed on the HCM City Stock Exchange as DVD.

This is the first arrest in Viet Nam involving securities fraud since the country's stock market opened in 2000.

Dung made transactions with other people to allegedly manipulate the price of another pharmaceutical firm, the Duoc Ha Tay Company, listed on the Ha Noi Stock Exchange as DHT.

The transactions were alleged have been made via trading accounts opened by Dung's younger brother Le Van Manh and several other people.

The transactions created false demand, and lured many investors into buying DHT shares at high prices. They then suffered losses.

According to the State Securities Commission, on June 21 Dung held 18.74 per cent of DHT's VND41 billion (US$2.05 million) in chartered capital.

The Medi Investment Company, a shareholder of DVD, also owned several per cent, as well as DVD itself.

In all, they have a stake of 28.68 per cent. Their purchases, as a group, are supposed to be made public when they exceeded 25 per cent under current regulations. But they were not, according to authorities.

DVD and a group of shareholders continued their DHT buying, increasing their ownership to around 60 per cent, according to Tuoi Tre Newspaper.

They managed to inflate the DHT price, from VND30,000 to VND100,000. DVD sold out its stake in July.

Last Friday, DHT shares closed at VND49,300.

In early September, DHT officially blamed the price fall on manipulation by DVD and those people associated with it.

The SSC suspended DVD share issuance to the public for 60 days beginning November 19, basing its decision on the incorrect, insufficient information in the prospectus.

Dung holds around 4 million out of the total of 11.9 million DVD shares.

Last Thursday, DVD executive board relieved Dung of his position as the company chairman and general director.

HOSE announced last Friday that DVD shares would be put on alert as a way to protect investors, saying Dung's arrest might strongly affect the company's operation. — VNS

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Needy children receive free surgeries

HCM CITY — Surgeons at the French-invested FV Hospital in HCM City today begins operating on 26 children with tumours and congenital deformities of the hands.

The surgery will be conducted until Sunday at an estimated cost of VND700 million (US$35,000), and sponsored by the Children of Viet Nam Charitable Fund.

The children are from needy families in the southern provinces of Ba Ria-Vung Tau, Dong Nai, Tay Ninh, Long An and Binh Duong.

Australia to fund joint research on poverty

HCM CITY — Australian and Vietnamese experts plan to undertake research into economic integration and poverty reduction with funds from Australia.

The grants, which were announced last Wednesday, will be provided through the Australian International Science Linkages – Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences Academies programme.

The University of New South Wales' Australian School of Taxation will work with the Viet Nam Development and Policies Research Centre to conduct research on international economic integration and child poverty.

The second project on the global economic crisis, Australia-Viet Nam trade and regional integration will be implemented by Victoria University's Centre for Strategic Economic Studies and the Vietnamese Ministry of Industry and Trade's Institute for Trade. — VNS

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Gathering marks global day for disabled persons

HA NOI — More than 2,000 disabled people gathered at a meeting in Ha Noi to mark the International Day for Persons with Disabilities which fell on Saturday.

Addressing the meeting, Deputy Minister of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs Dam Huu Dac said Viet Nam had 6.7 million disabled people, accounting for 7.8 per cent of the total population.

The Law on People with Disabilities, which would take effect on January 1 next year, showed the Party and State cared for them and testified to the country's commitment to the Convention for the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Dac said.

The law and guiding sub-documents would also create a better environment for the disabled, helping them take part in social activities and integrate into the community equally and enjoy improved mental and material life, he said.

US Ambassador to Viet Nam Michael Michalak spoke highly of the Vietnamese Government's efforts in working with international partners, including the US, to boost supporting activities, improve the lives of the disabled and ensure they had the opportunity to fully take part in social life. — VNS

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Vietnam attends charitable fair in India

The Vietnamese Embassy in India attended an international fair for charity which opened in New Delhi on November 28.

The fair also attracted the participation of more than 40 foreign embassies, including those of Spain , Russia , China , Japan , Kazakhstan , Pakistan , Egypt and Thailand .

The Vietnamese Embassy’s pavilion showcased the country’s traditional products such as lacquer paintings, palm-leaf hats, Central Highlands coffee and Pho (noodle soup).

On the occasion, the Vietnamese embassy distributed many cultural documents and publications as well as special editions on the 1,000 th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi and the Vietnam-India relations in order to promote the image of the Vietnamese country and people as well as the fine traditional relationship between the two countries.

Initiated and organised by the association of women in diplomatic corps in New Delhi , the annual fair aims to raise funds for charitable activities in India . The day-long event also offers a chance to foreign embassies in India to promote their countries’ handicrafts, culture, cuisine and tourism./.

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ODA embezzlers prosecuted

The Supreme People’s Procuracy has prosecuted nine people for embezzling over 3.4 billion VND (roughly 173,400 USD) in a bridge project funded by Japanese ODA in Quang Ninh province.

They include Bui Tien Dung, ex-executive director of the Project Management Unit 18 (PMU-18), a bureau within the Transport Ministry for road construction and other infrastructure facilities. Its budget received funds from overseas donors, including Japanese Official Development Assistance.

Dung and other seven companions, who were high profile officials under the Transport Ministry, are accused of “embezzling public property” while his former deputy, Do Kim Quy, was prosecuted for selling property embezzled by others.

The Bai Chay bridge building project was funded by Japanese credits and Vietnamese State budget. The Ministry of Transport was entrusted by the Government as the investor, of which PMU 18 was the representative with Dung assigned as executive director.

The suspects are accused of making ghost payrolls of consultants to pocket 1.6 billion VND, or almost half of the embezzled amount, and misspending the remainder against rules./.

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HCMC thieves crack cash machine, steal money

Thieves broke open an ATM machine in Ho Chi Minh City’s Tan Phu District and stole more than VND1 billion (US$51,000) on Friday.

According to eyewitnesses, the ATM’s money box was cracked, and a lot of fingerprints were spotted on the glass of the ATM booth.

The machine belongs to Techcombank’s transaction office on Le Trong Tan Street.

District police said the thieves may have used a welding equipment to cut open the money box.

A Techcombank officer said the bank put money into the machine a day before; therefore, the thieves must have followed their moves and broke into the booth at midnight or early Friday morning.

It was the third time that thieves broke into ATM booths in HCMC to steal money in the last two months.

On October 21, they took away VND822 million ($42,000) from a cash machine on Cong Hoa Street in Tan Binh District with similar tricks.

The same day, three thieves attempted to cut open an ATM machine on Truong Chinh Street, but they fled the scene after being caught by security officers.

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Workers fight for survival as prices soar

Consumers buy food at the Dich Vong wholesale market in Ha Noi. People, especially low-income earners, are facing a price hike of goods as the Vietnamese dong continues to depreciate. — VNA/VNS Photo The Duyet

Consumers buy food at the Dich Vong wholesale market in Ha Noi. People, especially low-income earners, are facing a price hike of goods as the Vietnamese dong continues to depreciate. — VNA/VNS Photo The Duyet

HA NOI — As the lunar New Year festival approaches, the prices of goods have soared as usual. But the increase has come earlier this year. As the Vietnamese dong continues to depreciate, people have been faced with increased living costs.

Ta Van Sy, a labourer at HCM City's Tan Tao Industrial Park, said last month he had to send his wife and children back to their native province to cut costs as his family relies solely on his modest salary of VND2 million (US$102) a month.

"It is impossible to resist the price storm now," says Sy, "I work on Sunday to send extra money to my wife and children in the countryside."

To cope, workers have cut daily expenses dramatically.

Another worker, Pham Thi Vy, also earns about VND2 million a month and uses almost all of it to pay for food, electricity, water and her brother's school tuition.

Vy says she recently moved into a 10q.m room with a friend to save money.

As of mid-August, the monthly price for a room near the industrial parks and export processing zones in HCM City increased by between VND50,000 (US$2.5) and VND100,000 ($5.1).

Prices for foods like rice, cooking oil, meat, and vegetables have also increased to dizzying levels.

Nguyen Thi Nhung, an employee at a State enterprise in Ha Noi, jokes that shopping in supermarkets is harder than performing magic tricks.

"I have very little money and everything is expensive and all prices are increasing," Nhung says.

Economist Ngo Tri Long, former deputy head of the Market and Price Research Institute, attributes rising prices to multiple causes.

He says the exchange rate rise between Vietnamese dong and the US dollar is one factor.

Long says Viet Nam has been exposed to dollarisation (the holding by residents of foreign currency), meaning the impact of the rate adjustment may have been even stronger once imported goods are sold and people convert dollars to dong.

"The rate adjustment has devaluated the dong, causing increased input costs to produce goods," Long says.

The economist also attributes price rise to the loss of consumer confidence and to the trend among traders of hoarding rice to export to neighbouring countries, a situation Long says will immediately affect prices.

According to deputy director of the Ha Noi Industry and Trade Department Nguyen Van Dong, the total commodity circulation in February will be about VND19.2 trillion in value ($960 million) or an increase by between 20 and 22 per cent compared with the earlier months.

He says Ha Noi will have to import pork from other provinces because it has met only 70 per cent of the city's demand.

The inability to meet consumption demand will encourage hoarding or the spread of false information to raise prices and earn illegal profits, says deputy head of Ha Noi Market Watch Vuong Tri Dung.

To reduce pressure, Ha Noi authorities have decided to lend enterprises VND400 billion ($20.5 million) with preferential interest rates to help them stock goods for the lunar New Year period.

But Nguyen Minh Phong, an expert at the Ha Noi Socio-Economic Development Institute, says this will not be effective enough to stabilise market prices.

Phong suggests the State satisfy demand for foreign currencies among enterprises and apply drastic measures to stabilise the price of products like electricity, coal, water, and oil and gas. — VNS

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Friday, January 7, 2011

Doctors save infant with open diaphragm

HCM CITY — Doctors from HCM City's Children No1 Hospital have saved the life of a three-month-old boy diagnosed with a diaphragmatic hernia.

The birth defect involves an abnormal opening in the diaphragm, the curved membrane that helps people breathe. The opening allows some of the organs of the belly (stomach, spleen, liver, and intestines) to enter the chest cavity near the lungs.

The newborn, from central Binh Thuan Province, was hospitalised with a fever, pale lips and peritonitis.

He is now recovering after surgery.

Users to pay $17 to own ‘vn' domain name

HA NOI — Users will have to pay VND350,000 (US$17) to own a"vn" domain name and pay up to VND40 million ($2,000) a year, under a circular issued by the Ministry of Finance.

HIV outpatient clinic opens in Ha Noi

HA NOI — A new HIV/AIDS outpatient clinic opened in Ha Noi's Soc Son District yesterday.

It is the 13th clinic for HIV patients in the city offering free treatment.

The clinic is expected to serve about 400 patients and to provide HIV-testing for 750 individuals in its first year of operation.

It will be co-managed by the district's health centre, USAIDS and Medecins du Monde – a non-governmental organisation established in France in 1979. — VNS

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VNA seeks closer multimedia ties

ISTANBUL — Viet Nam News Agency (VNA) General Director Tran Mai Huong says multimedia is becoming an inevitable trend for the survival of news agencies and Asia-Pacific news agencies should co-operate in developing a multimedia platform to share their products.

Addressing the 14th General Assembly of the Organisation of Asia-Pacific News Agencies (OANA) which was held in Istanbul, Turkey from November 24-27, the director general called on OANA to make adjustments in accordance with developing technologies and the habits of media consumers. "We are facing greater and more challenging competition as a number of our traditional key clients – some print newspapers – have already disappeared," he said.

"However, multimedia has become an inevitable trend for the survival of our VNA and like our fellow news agencies it is on that track."

He proposed the OANA co-operate in developing a multimedia platform on which member agencies can share video clips as they do with text news and photos.

"With this, member agencies can reduce production costs and raise prestige, as well as deliver more lively messages about our own countries," he said. General Director Huong and Mehr News Agency of Iran (MNA) Director General Reza Moqadassi signed a co-operation agreement between the two agencies while at the general assembly. The agreement lays a foundation for information exchange and professional co-operation, particularly for exchange of video clips and TV programmes in the English language which are of great importance in the present digital and multimedia age.

The participants at the General Assembly discussed and adopted the Istanbul Declaration which spells out the need for OANA members to increase co-operation in light of the globalisation of information and developments taking place in cyberspace. — VNS

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VN, China anti-crime cooperation reviewed

The Ministries of Public Security of Vietnam and China held a conference in Hanoi on Nov. 26 to review cooperation in anti-crime activities between the two countries.

Major General Do Kim Tuyen, Deputy Head of the General Department for Anti-crime Police, Head of the Department for Social Order Investigation Police, said that Vietnam and China have a traditional friendship and the cooperation between the two public security ministries has constantly expanded in past years, bringing efficiency in prevention and fighting criminal, economic and drug crimes.

The two sides also actively exchanged information and experiences in maintaining social order and safety.

The criminal investigation forces of Vietnamese and Chinese police coordinated closely and implemented many measures, gaining important results in the prevention and fight against crime, while maintaining order and security along the common borderline.

In border localities, criminal investigation forces of the two countries coordinated to fight many transnational crime rings and drug and human trafficking rings.

Bai Shaokang, Director of Criminal Investigation Bureau of the Public Security Ministry of China, agreed with Vietnam ’s proposal to set up a hotline to strengthen the exchange of anti-crime information.

The Chinese side also presented several proposals to complete a mechanism to coordinate prevention and crime fighting activities, especially the trading of children and women across the border./.

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VN-Russia Tropical Centre furthers int’l ties

The Vietnam-Russia Tropical Centre (VRTC) will broaden its scientific and technological cooperation with other countries, including ASEAN countries.

This was agreed by the Coordinating Committee for the VRTC at its 23 rd meeting in Moscow on Nov. 26 to review the VRTC’s performance in 2010.

At the meeting, the committee made decisions relating to the perfection of management methods and measures for the VRTC and discussed themes for new joint research and research with high potential for application in real life.

It agreed to build a new research station and new ecological centres in the Bi Dup-Nui Ba and Bu Gia Map national parks in Vietnam and strengthen material and technological facilities of the VRTC.

The committee accepted the VRTC Directors Board reports on the use of the centre fund in 2010 and the establishment of the Vietnam-Russia Science and Production Joint Venture.

The committee’s co-presidents – Senior Lieutenant General Nguyen Huy Hieu and Academician Dmitry Pavlop confirmed the opening of a VRTC Vietnamese representative office in Moscow .

The VRTC coordinating committee will hold its 24 th meeting in Hanoi in November 2011.

The Vietnam-Russia Tropical Centre was established in 1988 by the Vietnamese Ministry of Defence and the Russian Academy of Sciences.

A scientific research organisation, it focuses on tropical biology, medicines, and environmental pollution and treatments./.

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VNA urges closer regional ties in multimedia

VNA urges closer regional ties in multimedia

Vietnam News Agency General Director Tran Mai Huong said multimedia was becoming an inevitable trend for the survival of news agencies and Asia-Pacific news agencies should cooperate on developing a multimedia platform on which they can share their products.

Addressing the 14 th General Assembly of the Organisation of Asia-Pacific News Agencies (OANA) which was held in Istanbul, Turkey from Nov. 24-27, Huong called on OANA to make adjustments in line with developing technologies and the information accessing habits of media consumers.

“We are facing greater and more challenging competition as a number of our traditional key clients – some print newspapers – have already disappeared,” Huong said.

“However, multimedia becomes an inevitable trend for the survival of news agencies and our VNA, like other fellow news agencies, in on that track,” he added.

He called on OANA to cooperate on developing a multimedia platform on which member agencies can share video clips as they have done so far with text news and photos.

“With this, member agencies can reduce production costs and raise prestige, as well as deliver more lively messages about our own countries,” he said.

On the sidelines of the assembly, a cooperation agreement between Vietnam News Agency (VNA) and Mehr News Agency (MNA) of Iran was signed by VNA General Director Huong and MNA Director General Reza Moqadassi.

The cooperation agreement is aimed at diversifying news sources and promoting professional cooperation between VNA and MNA. It lays a foundation for information exchange and professional cooperation, particularly for exchange of video clips and TV programmes in the English language which are of great importance in the present digital and mutimedia age.

The two sides also pledged to extend their cooperation to all international forums at which they are represented.

The agencies attending the assembly and its parallel meetings of the 32 nd Executive Board Meeting (EBM) and the Editorial and Technique Committee Meeting (ETBM) were representatives from Asia-Pacific news agencies, as well as from media organisations in the Mediterranean and the Balkan regions.

The assembly aimed to assess achievements and implementation of activities put forward at the 13th OANA General Assembly held in Jakarta, Indonesia, in December 2007. The participants discussed and adopted the Istanbul Declaration which, among other things, spelled out the need for OANA members to increase cooperation in light of globalisation of information and developments taking place in cyberspace. The assembly also discussed ways of strengthening the mechanism for exchange of news, information and visual content between member agencies.

Participants stressed the importance of adopting multimedia in a world of global digital changes, the need for news agencies to stay aware of new trends and challenges in the era of new media, and to look for innovative ways to reach target audiences. They said these can be achieved partly through more OANA cooperation.

During the assembly, two seminars on the themes, “The future of news agencies in the digital age” and “The role of news agencies in the dialogue among civilisations and cultures” were also held with the participation of Bulent Arinc, Turkey’s Minister of State and Deputy Prime Minister and many other Turkish officials.

Hilmi Bengi, the Director General of Anadolu Agency of Turkey, assumed the presidency of OANA at the conclusion of the assembly and Anadolu will serve as its secretariat for the next three years.

The Trend News Agency of Azerbaijan and National Iraq News Agency were accepted as the 42nd and 43rd members of the organisation.

The 15th OANA General Assembly is scheduled to take place in Saudi Arabia in 2013./.

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Campaign to follow Uncle Ho’s moral life

Campaign to follow Uncle Ho’s moral life

The “Study and follow Ho Chi Minh’s moral example” campaign has made great impacts on society and gained important initial outcomes, said Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh.

The Party Chief, who is also the Head of the Central Steering Committee for the campaign, made the affirmation at the committee’s meeting in Hanoi on Nov. 26.

According to Manh, the campaign has continuously created clearer and stronger changes in work styles of Party members and State officials and raised their sense of following the late President’s example in the field.

The campaign has also helped drive back degradation in political ideology, ethics and lifestyle of Party members, State employees and the entire society, said the Party Chief.

He emphasised that the campaign had contributed significantly to the country’s accomplishment of socio-economic tasks as well as to building the Party purely and strongly and organising the party committee congresses at all levels successfully to prepare for the Party’s XIth National Congress.

Steering Committee members agreed that after four years of implementation, the campaign had become an important facet of all operations of the Party, the administration, and mass organisation at all levels, and made positive changes in awareness in Party members and people.

They also underlined the need to create a high level of consensus in the Party and the entire political system, firstly with those who hold key positions in all branches at all levels, on the significance, importance, goals, requirements, content and responsibility regarding the implementation of the drive.

In addition, they said the content of the campaign must be specific and combined closely with political tasks in each period and stressed the necessity to step up the spread of information on Uncle Ho’s moral example and outstanding individuals in the campaign./.

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Vietnam commits to tiger conservation

Vietnam stands ready to cooperate with foreign countries and international organizations in improving tiger conservation on its own soil and the region as whole.

Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Bui Cach Tuyen made this commitment at a historic tiger conservation forum held in Saint Petersburg, Russia, from November 21-24.

Tuyen also pledged to fulfil the target of the Global Tiger Initiative as a key element in the effort to protect biodiversity.

“Vietnam is committed to full involvement in and stronger support for relevant regional or global programmes,” said the Deputy Minister. He cited the ASEAN-Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN-WEN) website, the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and Interpol as evidence of this.

He also pledged full participation in other bilateral and multilateral frameworks on conservation of tigers in particular and biodiversity in general.

The summit, hosted by Russian Prime Minister V. Putin, was the first international forum on conservation of an endangered wildlife species.

The event was attended by high-profile representatives from 13 countries home to wild tigers, namely India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Russia, Thailand, China and Vietnam. Also present were representatives of UN agencies and foreign non-governmental organisations engaged in biodiversity conservation.

At the summit, governments capped a year-long political process with about 127 million USD in new funding to support the plan known as the Global Tiger Recovery Programme. The funding will include a large loan package from the World Bank to some tiger range countries and millions in additional grants from the Global Environment Facility.

The World-Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) committed 50 million USD over the next five years on tiger conservation and set a goal of increasing that to 85 million USD.

The Global Tiger Initiative was raised by the WB President in 2008 with tiger range countries committed to doubling the current wild tiger population of close to 3,200 individuals by 2022./.

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Aid for thousands in four poor provinces

Nearly 5,000 poor households in four provinces will be given a helping hand to increase income and job opportunities during the next two years.

This is one of the main targets of a joint programme on green production and trade in Thanh Hoa, Nghe An, Hoa Binh and Phu Tho provinces.

The 4.1 million USD scheme has been organised by the Trade Promotion Department under the Ministry of Industry and Trade and five United Nations organisations.

More than 40 percent of the beneficiaries have a monthly income of less than 200,000 VND (10 USD).

"The four provinces were selected due to the high incidence of poverty, especially among ethnic minorities, the concentration of raw materials and local production of craft," said Do Kim Lang, deputy director of the department.

The programme will focus on boosting five crafts based on bamboo ware, producing and weaving silk, sea grass, lacquer ware and handmade paper.

"We want to help poor growers, collectors and producers to improve their products and link them to more profitable markets," said Lang.

Under the programme, raw bamboo and rattan material will be managed, exploited and developed in a sustainable way.

"Green here means that we will ensure environmental protection when exploiting raw materials, and ensure safe working condition for farmers," said Lang.

A total of 400ha of bamboo belonging to 150 households have been zoned in Chau Thang district in central Nghe An province.

More than 460ha of rattan have also been planted in the four provinces. Local farmers have received training on planting, harvesting and processing.

More than 500 people in the four provinces have already received basic training in making bamboo products. And more than 740 others have received advanced training to enable them to make complicated and fine art bamboo products. They have been provided with splitting machines and storage facilities.

The export value of bamboo and rattan products in the targeted provinces is expected to rise significantly if there is a well developed understanding of markets, marketing and design.

Service providers will also help run advanced training in business development and invite foreign designers to develop new product ranges for bamboo and rattan.

Handicraft enterprises will be invited on study tours in Vietnam , China and the Philippines . They will also be involved in domestic and international trade fairs./.

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17mln USD to be spent on education for minority groups

The Prime Minister has approved a 341 billion VND (17 million USD) project to improve educational facilities and training standards for students from nine minority groups with low populations from 2010-15.

The investment would help students to work their way out of poverty while preserving their own traditional identity, said Mong Ky Slay, head of the Ethnic Minority Education Department under the Ministry of Education and Training.

A ministry report showed that the nine groups live in poor disadvantaged areas, where literacy levels are between just 30-40 percent and only 15 percent of the people can speak the national language. Most children from the groups drop out of school after second or third grade and few make it to high school or higher education.

The project will focus on upgrading infrastructure and equipping schools with more teaching materials.

It will also pay for training to give teachers a better understanding of the minority groups they teach.

Each poor pre-school student will be entitled to 30 percent of the government minimum salary per month, which currently stands at 730,000 VND (37.5 USD).

Pupils enrolled in primary schools will receive assistance of 40-60 percent, students in secondary boarding schools will receive 60 percent while students at boarding high schools will receive 100 percent of the minimum salary.

All the students will be encouraged to follow further education and high school graduates wishing to attend colleges, universities or vocational schools will be given priority depending on their abilities and desires.

Van Trong Luu, deputy head of Kon Tum province's Minority Group Education Management Division said that students from the Brau and Bo Mam ethnic groups have been given care and support under Government and provincial policies including scholarships and meals.

However, those students are included in a socio-economic development programme for remote disadvantaged areas whereas this project is the first of its kind aimed at minority groups with low populations.

The project will support the O Du, Pu Peo, Si La, Ro Nam, Cong, B'rau, Bo Y, Mang and Co Lao groups from the provinces of Lao Cai, Ha Giang, Dien Bien, Lai Chau, central Nghe An and the Central Highland province of Kon Tum; each has a population of 300-2,000 people./.

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Thursday, January 6, 2011

34% of women abused by husbands: report

One in three, or 34 percent, of married Vietnamese women have either suffered physical or sexual violence from their husbands at some time in their lives, a new report says.
 
When three main types of domestic violence - physical, sexual and emotional - are considered, 58 percent of Vietnamese women report experiencing at least one type in their lifetime, according to the study released Thursday.
 
The joint UN-Vietnam report, the first of its kind, also says that nine percent of women currently or formerly married are experiencing either physical or emotional violence.
 
Sampling 4,838 women aged between 18 and 60, the study shows that women are three times more likely to be abused by a husband than by any other person.
About 5 percent of women who had been pregnant reported being beaten during pregnancy. In almost all of these cases, the women had been abused by the father of the unborn child.
It says children are also victims. Almost one in four women with children under 15 years of age reported that their children have been abused physically by their husbands.
But there are regional variations.
In the southeastern region, 42 percent of women report having experienced physical or sexual violence by their husbands at some time.
Greater differences are also evident among ethnic groups, with reported lifetime prevalence rates of domestic violence ranging from 8 percent (H’Mong) to 36 percent (Kinh). Kinh is the dominant ethnicity accounting for nearly 90 percent of the population.
“Although domestic violence is widespread, the problem is very much hidden,” said Henrica A.F.M. Jansen, lead researcher of the study.
“Besides the stigma and shame causing women to remain silent, many women think that violence in relationships is ‘normal’ and that women should tolerate and endure what is happening to them for the sake of family harmony.”
In fact, one in two women said that before the survey interviews, they had never told anyone about instances of violence by their husbands.
“This report highlights the urgency of breaking the silence,” said Jean Marc Olive, WHO Representative in Vietnam. “All of us owe it to the women who suffer from domestic violence, and the women who took part in this survey, to step up, speak out, and end domestic violence.”
The study, undertaken as part of the United Nations - Government of Vietnam Joint Program on Gender Equality, was conducted by the General Statistics Office, with technical assistance from the World Health Organization (WHO).
Vietnam is heavily influenced by Confucianism which preaches submission and family harmony.
 

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Right names but wrong man

Vo Van Hung, handcuffed and escorted by uniformed policemen, was led into a police truck as his neighbors were wondering what causes his demise. It turns out the answer lies in the three names.

In this curious police mix-up, police in Dong Nai province should have arrested the other Vo Van Hung, born in 1958 in the central Da Nang city – who is charged with conning money.

This innocent Hung was born in 1959 in Soc Trang province in the south. Although his mugshot does not resemble the accused Hung’s face, he was detained for five days.

On November 11, three policemen stepped into his house and asked if he was Vo Van Hung, son of Vo Van Dong and Tran Thi Thanh. He said yes and was seized.

“I got handcuffed and taken away by the police in front of my neighbors,” Hung recalled.

Police later realized their mistake and released him.

“The police just took me [from prison] to Mien Dong bus station and showed me how to get back [home],” said Hung.

The hapless man has since requested a signed document testifying to his innocence but is yet to receive any.

Meanwhile, police captain Doan Van Den said he would gather Hung’s neighbors to announce the honest mistake.

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Vietnam probes alleged banknote bribery

Vietnam central agencies are initiating probe into a Hanoi-based company for allegedly taking US$10 million in return for securing an Australian firm a lucrative contract procuring polymer for printing banknotes in Vietnam.

The Central Anti-Corruption Committee said Thursday it has asked Swiss judicial agencies to provide information related to bank accounts and other suspicious transactions made by Hanoi-based CFTD Technologies Co, Ltd and its Australia agent - Securency International, a polymer provider.

Switzerland is where bribery payments were reportedly made by Securency, a subsidiary of the Reserve Bank of Australia, to foreign officials and firm executives.

Swiss Ambassador to Vietnam Jean Hubert Lebet told Tuoi Tre Switzerland has agreed to supply such information.

The case cracked open after Australian federal police in June last year launched investigations into Securency following claims in Australian daily The Age that Securency, which makes polymer for banknotes in 26 countries, paid lucrative commissions to overseas businesspeople for contracts.

According to The Age, Securency has paid more than US$10 million in commissions to Vietnamese executives from CFTD.

Since then, several Securency staff in Malaysia, Switzerland, the UK and Australia have already been arrested.

Tainted money

Back in early 2000s, Securency, a subsidiary of the Reserve Bank of Australia, won a contract to supply polymer in Vietnam, to be printed into banknotes by the Vietnamese CFTD company. The latter was authorized by the State Bank of Vietnam - the country’s central bank - to print plastic notes under a government’s plan to replace all paper notes in 2002.

The incident attracted public attention after it was found that CFTD at the time employed Le Duc Minh for two months. Minh is the son of Le Duc Thuy, the then governor of the State Bank of Vietnam.

Speculations that Minh pulled strings led to an inspection in 2007 by the Government Inspectorate - a central agency responsible for financial investigation independent of the police - which found no wrongdoings.

The Inspectorate back then concluded that CFTD followed regulations in signing contracts and that Minh’s employment at CFTD was only coincidental which unjustly tarnished the governor’s reputation.

Vietnam started to switch to using polymer notes from 2002, since when several currency-related scandals broke including blurred polymer, tainted banknotes and fake ones.

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Court upholds 46 years in sadistic child torture

A local court Tuesday upheld its June verdict, handing out 23-year jail sentences each to a local couple for torturing their 14-year-old employee with boiling water, hot iron, coals and pincers.

The trial in the southernmost province of Ca Mau rejected their appeal and sentenced Huynh Thanh Giang, 30, and his wife, Ma Ngoc Thom, 33 to 20 years imprisonment each for “intentionally causing physical injury” to Nguyen Hao Anh and another three years for torturing him.

The pair owns the Minh Duc Shrimp Breeding Farm in the province where Anh worked as a housekeeper and caretaker.

According to the indictment, the couple regularly tortured the boy until he was rescued by police in late April.

They poured boiling water on Anh’s back, pressed a hot electric iron on his legs, stuffed hot coal in his mouth, and used pincers to break five of his teeth, prosecutors said.

Anh was found with broken teeth, burns, a broken nose, and a swollen face.

Accessories Luu Van Khanh, 17, and Lam Ly Quynh, 18, who worked with Anh at the farm and who turned a blind eye to the couple’s inhuman acts, were sentenced to 18 months in jail each.

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Transparency key to fighting corruption

People commute over Cha Va Bridge in HCM City. The bridge is part of the East-West Boulevard project which was involved in a corruption scandal. Several city officials were charged for receiving bribes in 2008. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Phan

People commute over Cha Va Bridge in HCM City. The bridge is part of the East-West Boulevard project which was involved in a corruption scandal. Several city officials were charged for receiving bribes in 2008. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Phan

HA NOI — The Vietnamese Government has gone a long way to addressing corruption but there is still lots to do in terms of transparency, accountability and people involvement, an anti-corruption dialogue heard yesterday.

The eighth semi-annual dialogue, which was co-organised by the Government Inspectorate (GI), the Office of the Steering Committee on Anti-Corruption (OSCAC), the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE) and the Swedish Embassy, discussed land-related corruption.

Viet Nam has taken great strides in terms of legal framework, preventive measures, administrative reform, inspections and prosecutions among others, according to a report presented by OSCAC at the dialogue.

Under the framework, corruption whistle-blowers and denunciators can now be rewarded and protected, while a draft inter-ministerial circular allowing corruption investigations and prosecution processes to be publicised is being developed.

Several ministries and many provinces, including Kien Giang, Ninh Thuan, Binh Thuan, Da Nang and HCM City, have posted legal information and procedures on their websites in an effort to promote transparency.

For its part, the Ministry of Education and Training has developed an anti-corruption action plan which requires all educational entities to implement the national anti-corruption strategy until 2020.

Swedish ambassador Staffan Herrstrom hailed the country's implementation of the United Nations' Convention on Anti-Corruption, its new Anti-Corruption Law and Strategy towards 2020 and the involvement of grass-root levels in the fight against corruption.

"Viet Nam has kept corruption high on the agenda by joining the international commitments," he said.

Land corruption

Regarding corruption in land use and administration, MONRE's deputy chief inspector Le Van Dat noted that most land-related corruption took place before the Law on Land came into effect seven years ago.

He said the ministry was working with relevant ministries to make amendments to the Law which will be submitted to the National Assembly in two years time in order to fix any loopholes.

Le The Chien from the GI noted that more than 90 per cent of disputes, complaints and denunciations were land-related.

He said that corruption in land administration usually occurred at commune level around major cities where land was illegally allocated to urban and industrial zones.

However, the issuance of land-use right certificates (LURC) was identified as the main factor behind bribery.

The Swedish ambassador noted from a recent study that 86 per cent of Vietnamese households think corruption occurs in land cases and more than 30 per cent of enterprises were willing to pay informal fees in LURC applications.

Dr Nguyen Quoc Hiep of the GI's Research Institute attributed the social acceptance of corruption to complicated laws and procedures, limited access to information and low ethics and responsibility among public officers.

Making it easier

As a result, he recom-mended legalising inter-mediary services, further simplifying the law and developing easy-to-understand procedural guidelines that could be posted online while developing an effective public complaints system.

A member of the National Assembly's Legal Committee, Nguyen Binh Quyen, described the corruption situation in the country as more serious and subtle despite legal and punitive improvements.

"People are ready to offer bribes when it comes to dealing with public servants regarding their benefits," he said, "And many officials are accustomed to accepting bribes."

Pham Chi Lan, a former economic consultant to the government, pointed to the poor capacity of law-enforcing staff as the biggest hurdle in the anti-corruption fight.

"We have a myriad of laws and regulations regarding corruption, but they are poorly implemented," she complained, "The oversight mechanism is weak, too."

She said the grass-roots population should be strongly involved in the fight against corruption, given that most of cases were brought to light by ordinary people.

Measures should be taken to raise awareness about information transparency, remarked James H. Anderson, a World Bank senior governance specialist.

Fiona Lappin, head of the UK Department for International Development in Viet Nam, recommended that public servants should receive a fair salary so that they would not be interested in taking bribes.

Tran Van Truyen, head of the GI, said it would develop appropriate measures based on all recommendations at the dialogues and submit them to the Government for approval.— VNS

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Aid for thousands in four poor provinces

Farmers dry woven bamboo trays and baskets at Hoang Thinh commune in Hoang Hoa District of Thanh Hoa Province. Poor households in several provinces will received help to increase their income and job opportunities under aUS$4million joint project between theMinistry of Industry and Trade and the UN. — VNA/VNS Photo Bui Tuong

Farmers dry woven bamboo trays and baskets at Hoang Thinh commune in Hoang Hoa District of Thanh Hoa Province. Poor households in several provinces will received help to increase their income and job opportunities under aUS$4million joint project between theMinistry of Industry and Trade and the UN. — VNA/VNS Photo Bui Tuong

HA NOI — Nearly 5,000 poor households in four provinces will be given a helping hand to increase income and job opportunities during the next two years.

This is one of the main targets of a joint programme on green production and trade in Thanh Hoa, Nghe An, Hoa Binh and Phu Tho provinces.

The US$4.1 million scheme has been organised by the Trade Promotion Department under the Ministry of Industry and Trade and five United Nations organisations.

More than 40 per cent of the beneficiaries have a monthly income of less than VND200,000 ($10).

"The four provinces were selected due to the high incidence of poverty, especially among ethnic minorities, the concentration of raw materials and local production of craft," said Do Kim Lang, deputy director of the department.

The programme will focus on boosting five crafts based on bamboo ware, producing and weaving silk, sea grass, lacquer ware and handmade paper.

"We want to help poor growers, collectors and producers to improve their products and link them to more profitable markets," said Lang.

Under the programme, raw bamboo and rattan material will be managed, exploited and developed in a sustainable way.

"Green here means that we will ensure environmental protection when exploiting raw materials, and ensure safe working condition for farmers," said Lang.

A total of 400ha of bamboo belonging to 150 households have been zoned in Chau Thang District in central Nghe An Province.

More than 460ha of rattan have also been planted in the four provinces. Local farmers have received training on planting, harvesting and processing.

More than 500 people in the four provinces have already received basic training in making bamboo products. And more than 740 others have received advanced training to enable them to make complicated and fine art bamboo products. They have been provided with splitting machines and storage facilities.

The export value of bamboo and rattan products in the targeted provinces is expected to rise significantly if there is a well developed understanding of markets, marketing and design.

Service providers will also help run advanced training in business development and invite foreign designers to develop new product ranges for bamboo and rattan.

Handicraft enterprises will be invited on study tours in Viet Nam, China and the Philippines. They will also be involved in domestic and international trade fairs. — VNS

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Friendship association extends condolence to Cambodia

Friendship association extends condolence to Cambodia

The Vietnam-Cambodia Friendship Association (VCFA) has offered condolence to Cambodia over the tragedy occurred in the Koh Pich (diamond) island in Phnom Penh on the evening of Nov. 22.

In a message sent to the Office of Permanent Deputy Prime Minister and President of the Cambodia-Vietnam Friendship Association Men Sam An, the VCFA expressed the deepest sympathy to the victims’ families and the Cambodian Government and people, saying it believed the Cambodian Government and people would mobilise all resources to soon overcome the aftermath of the tragedy.

On Nov. 25, representatives of Vietnamese agencies, businesses and people conducting business in Cambodia donated 2,770 USD which will be channelled to the Cambodia Red Cross.

A delegation of Ho Chi Minh City on Nov. 24 handed over medicines worth 50,000 USD and 100,000 USD in cash to the Phnom Penh authorities to help the city overcome the tragedy’s aftermath.

The death toll in the stampede was confirmed at 347, including 221 women, said the Cambodian Social Affairs Ministry and the investigation committee on Nov. 25 morning.

President of the Overseas Vietnamese (OV) Association in Cambodia Chau Van Chi said that nine Vietnamese were killed and one remains missing in the stampede. Six out of nine injured Vietnamese have been discharged from the hospital, Chi added.

Cambodia observed a national day of mourning on Nov. 25 and pagodas across the city prayed for the spirits of people who were killed in the stampede.

Cambodian PM Hun Sen and his wife burnt incense at a memorial service held at the site of the bridge stampede which drew the participation of more than 400 Cambodian monks and hundreds of representatives from Cambodian agencies and local people./.

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$17m to be spent on education for minority groups

HA NOI — The Prime Minister has approved a VND341 billion (US$17 million) project to improve educational facilities and training standards for students from nine minority groups with low populations from 2010-15.

The investment would help students to work their way out of poverty while preserving their own traditional identity, said Mong Ky Slay, head of the Ethnic Minority Education Department under the Ministry of Education and Training.

A ministry report showed that the nine groups live in poor disadvantaged areas, where literacy levels are between just 30-40 per cent and only 15 per cent of the people can speak the national language. Most children from the groups drop out of school after second or third grade and few make it to high school or higher education.

The project will focus on upgrading infrastructure and equipping schools with more teaching materials.

It will also pay for teaching training to give teachers a better understanding of the minority groups they teach.

Each poor pre-school student will be entitled to 30 per cent of the government minimum salary per month, which currently stands at VND730,000 ($37.5).

Pupils enrolled in primary schools will receive assistance of 40-60 per cent, students in secondary boarding schools will receive 60 per cent while students at boarding high schools will receive 100 per cent of the minimum salary.

All the students will be encouraged to follow further education and high school graduates wishing to attend colleges, universities or vocational schools will be given priority depending on their abilities and desires.

Van Trong Luu, deputy head of Kon Tum Province's Minority Group Education Management Division said that students from the Brau and Bo Mam ethnic groups had been given care and support under Government and provincial policies including scholarships and meals.

However, those students were included in a socio-economic development programme for remote disadvantaged areas whereas this project is the first of its kind aimed at minority groups with low populations.

The project will support the O Du, Pu Peo, Si La, Ro Nam, Cong, B'rau, Bo Y, Mang and Co Lao groups from the provinces of Lao Cai, Ha Giang, Dien Bien, Lai Chau, central Nghe An and the Central Highland province of Kon Tum; each has a population of 300-2,000 people. — VNS

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One-in-three women abused by husbands

HA NOI — One in three ever-married women said that they had suffered physical or sexual violence at the hands of their husbands at some time in their lives.

The results from the National Study on Domestic Violence Against Women in Viet Nam were released in Ha Noi yesterday.

This research, the biggest and most thorough to tackle the issue so far in Viet Nam, was conducted by the General Statistics Office (GSO) and the United Nations (UN), and surveyed 4,838 women aged 18-60 from 63 provinces.

Nine per cent of married women said they were currently experiencing either of those two forms of violence.

When the three main types of partner violence - physical, sexual and emotional - were considered, more than half (58 per cent) of Vietnamese women reported experiencing at least one type of domestic violence in their lifetime.

The study found that women are three times more likely to be abused by their husbands than by any other person.

"It is a stark fact that women in Viet Nam are more at risk of experiencing violence in their homes than anywhere else," said Jean-Marc Olive, representative of the World Health Organisation in Viet Nam at the report launch.

Tran Thi Hang, GSO deputy general director said Viet Nam, for the first time, had detailed information about the prevalence, frequency and types of violence against women and the health repercussions of domestic violence.

Pregnant women are also at risk. According to the report, about 5 per cent of women who had been pregnant reported being beaten during pregnancy. In most of these cases, the women had been abused by the father of the unborn child.

"Physical and/or sexual and emotional partner violence in Viet Nam ranks in the middle compared to other countries that have carried out this type of research," said Henrica Jansen, the study's lead researcher.

"This result is only the beginning. Actions need to be taken in the fight against domestic violence."

"We still do not have a national targeted programme for domestic violence for Viet Nam like we do for HIV/AIDS," said Benjamin Swanton from Paz Y Desarrollo, a Spanish non-government organisation on domestic violence in Viet Nam.

Once there is a national targeted programme then the resources are addressed, all ministries get involved and the issue will then be tackled thoroughly, he added.

Although domestic violence takes a heavy toll on women, children are also victims. Almost one in four women with children under 15 years of age reported that their children had been abused physically by their husbands. —VNS

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Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Long jail terms upheld for couple who tortured teen

CA MAU — The People's Supreme Court in HCM City yesterday upheld the 23-year jail sentence given to a couple from south-ernmost Ca Mau Province for brutally torturing their teenaged worker.

In June, the Ca Mau People's Court had handed down the sentence to shrimp-farm owner Huynh Thanh Giang and his wife Ma Ngoc Thom for their barbarity towards Nguyen Hao Anh, 14.

Their two hired workers, Luu Van Khanh, 17, and Lam Ly Quynh, 19, both received an 18-month sentence.

Giang, Thom, and Quynh filed an appeal in the People's Supreme Court saying the sentence was too harsh.

At the appeal, Thom, incessantly complaining she was tired, denied the charges saying the boy had burnt himself in an accident.

She and her husband also wanted the court to order fresh forensic tests, claiming Anh had had several injuries on his body when he first came to work on their farm.

Anh, the son of a poor divorced couple, said he did not want the court to reduce his former employers' sentence but hoped the court will show sympathy to Quynh. However, Judge Pham Hung Viet also confirmed Quynh's sentence.

Anh's mother Pham Thi Thoa had sent him to work on the shrimp farm in Phu Hiep village for a monthly salary of VND500,000 (US$25) in October 2008.

His job was to break open snail shells to feed the shrimp, do housework, and look after the couple's child.

The two tortured him because he was "lazy."

Forensic tests found the boy had suffered injuries on two-thirds of his body.

The local police said the couple had confessed to beating him, throwing boiling water and chemicals on him, burning him with an electric iron, breaking five teeth with pliers, and forcing him to drink his own urine. —VNS

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Push for admin reforms to stop crises

Source: Office of National Assembly from www.luatvietnam.vn

Source: Office of National Assembly from www.luatvietnam.vn

HA NOI — The simplification of administrative procedures was important to overcoming crisis and turning challenges into opportunities, Government Office Minister and Chairman Nguyen Xuan Phuc said while opening an ASEAN-OECD workshop in Ha Noi yesterday.

Poor and unwieldy procedures burdened society, hindered enterprise growth and limited people's contributions to their communities, he said.

Building an intelligent regulatory system was the best way to prevent crisis and maintain sustainable growth.

Viet Nam was doing so through the Government's master plan to simplify administrative procedures known as "Project 30," he said.

The gathering, to discuss regulatory reform, emphasised the need to involve enterprises, social organisations and the public in simplifying administrative regulations to make Viet Nam's economy more competitive.

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) deputy secretary-general Mario Amano said Viet Nam was on track to meet its target of a 30-per cent reduction in compliance costs stemming from administrative procedures.

But the Government now faced the challenge of ensuring the changes benefited businesses and citizens.

Much remained to be done to implement the simplified procedures, he said.

Viet Nam should now take advantage of the momentum and broad political support to complete the implementation of the programme, strengthen its links with related government programmes and engage in a medium-term programme of regulatory reform.

OECD Regulatory Policy Division Directorate for Public Governance and Territorial Development administrator and policy analyst Daniel Trnka proposed the Government give the private sector an active and genuine voice.

It should also enhance dialogue with citizens and businesses to make Project 30 more efficient, he said.

The opinions of stakeholders must be taken into account in the formulation of legal instruments and not after their drafting had started, he advised.

New draft regulations were often published separately on ministry web sites and people were not always aware of them.

The analyst suggested the creation of a central web site where all new draft regulations could be posted.

Momentum

A communication plan for all relevant agencies, businesses and organisations to provide regular updates would also create reform momentum.

Policy makers needed to be more attuned to the needs of the "end-users" of regulations – those who were going to have to comply with new rules, he said.

USAID Viet Nam Competitiveness Initiative chief regulatory advisor Faisal Naru said consultation would help the Government minimise the risk of unexpected consequences and encourage public ownership of policies and commitment to them.

Uncertainty

An uncertain regulatory environment sapped investor confidence and entrepreneurial initiative, said Central Institute for Economic Management deputy director Nguyen Dinh Cung.

The result was a negative impact on the country's competitiveness,

Viet Nam did not have a single agency responsible to oversee the overall economic, social and environmental impacts of regulation and, as a result, policy makers did not have the information needed to ensure objectives were met after policies were issued.

Cung and advisor Naru provided figures showing the number of regulations governing businesses has increased dramatically since 2005.

These had caused many difficulties and unnecessary costs for citizens and businesses, they said in a jointly written paper dealing with the challenges of a better regulatory system for Viet Nam.

The Global Competitiveness Index 2010-11 ranks Viet Nam 120th of 133 countries in terms of the burden of government regulation, a drop of 14 places from 2009.

Viet Nam is also 20 places behind last year's ranking for transparency of policy making.

The OECD representatives suggested the Viet Nam Government build its capacity for impact assessment and move toward evidence-based policy making.

It should also provide the Government Office's Administrative Procedure Control Agency with the capacity necessary to lead and implement the regulatory reform agenda. — VNS

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