Showing posts with label Thuan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thuan. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Two remanded in police custody for baby smuggling

Hanoi's Hoan Kiem District police have prosecuted and remanded a man and a woman in four-month custody for allegedly smuggling newborn babies.

Dang Quang Hy, 66, and Bui Thi Le Thuan, 48, were arrested by the Hoan Kiem Police's Investigative Unit on November 24.

The police had earlier called Thuan in for questioning after discovering her bringing up a month-old girl.

Thuan admitted to police that she was caring for the baby for Hy and his wife until the baby was sold and would be paid VND100,000 (US$5) per day.

The police, after examining Thuan's house in Hoan Kiem District, found two handwritten documents by mothers volunteering to give up their babies to Hy. They also found similar documents at Hy's house in Thanh Luong ward in Hai Ba Trung District.

At the police station, Hy admitted he had collected five newborn babies aged between three days to a month old, and claimed four of the babies had been successfully sold for VND10-17 million ($510-867) each.

However, police investigations revealed that Hy had sold a baby for VND35 million ($1,785) to an adoptive parent in the northern province of Phu Tho.

The police took the baby that Thuan had been caring for and placed the infant in the Hanoi Center for Orphans and Malnourished Children.

"Further investigations are now underway," said Director of Hoan Kiem Police Hoang Quoc Dinh.

Under current regulations, child smugglers can be sentenced to between three years and life imprisonment depending on the level of infringement, purposes and consequences of smuggling, said Hanoi-based lawyer Nguyen Thai Hoa.

Violators would also be liable to administrative fines of between VND5-50 million ($255-2,550), he said.

Nearly 1,950 cases of woman and child trafficking cases have been discovered, involving more than 4,700 victims over the past six years, following the implementation of a national action program on women and children trafficking prevention and control, according to statistics from the Ministry of Public Security.

Related Articles

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Two remanded in police custody for baby smuggling

HA NOI — Ha Noi's Hoan Kiem District police have prosecuted and remanded a man and a woman in four-month custody for allegedly smuggling newborn babies.

Dang Quang Hy, 66, and Bui Thi Le Thuan, 48, were arrested by the Hoan Kiem Police's Investigative Unit on November 24.

The police had earlier called Thuan in for questioning after discovering her bringing up a month-old girl.

Thuan admitted to police that she was caring for the baby for Hy and his wife until the baby was sold and would be paid VND100,000 (US$5) per day.

The police, after examining Thuan's house in Hoan Kiem District, found two handwritten documents by mothers volunteering to give up their babies to Hy. They also found similar documents at Hy's house in Thanh Luong ward in Hai Ba Trung District.

At the police station, Hy admitted he had collected five newborn babies aged between three days to a month old, and claimed four of the babies had been successfully sold for VND10-17 million ($510-867) each.

However, police investigations revealed that Hy had sold a baby for VND35 million ($1,785) to an adoptive parent in the northern province of Phu Tho.

The police took the baby that Thuan had been caring for and placed the infant in the Ha Noi Centre for Orphans and Malnourished Children.

"Further investigations are now underway," said Director of Hoan Kiem Police Hoang Quoc Dinh.

Under current regulations, child smugglers can be sentenced to between three years and life imprisonment depending on the level of infringement, purposes and consequences of smuggling, said Ha Noi-based lawyer Nguyen Thai Hoa.

Violators would also be liable to administrative fines of between VND5-50 million ($255-2,550), he said.

Nearly 1,950 cases of woman and child trafficking cases have been discovered, involving more than 4,700 victims over the past six years, following the implementation of a national action programme on women and children trafficking prevention and control, according to statistics from the Ministry of Public Security. — VNS

Related Articles

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Child carer held over abuse claim

Police in Thuan Giao Commune, Binh Duong province, have put a baby-sitter in custody for abusing a three-year-old girl pending further investigation.

They began an immediate investigation after a video clip of Tran Thi Phung abusing the toddler was posted on the internet on Nov. 24. The inquiry led them to the home where the incident occurred.

Phung was filmed pulling the little girl's hair and continuously splashing cold water in her face and up her nose at a day-care centre she operates in Binh Thuan 1 Village. Phung has run the centre illegally for more than 10 years.

She admitted her behaviour after watching the video clip.

After learning of the abuse from police, the girl's parents took her to the hospital for a check-up and she was diagnosed with bronchitis. The infection could have been caused by so much cold water hitting her face.

Chairman Nguyen Van Trung of the Thuan Giao Commune People's Committee said local authorities would inspect the day-care centre and asked the local police to investigate the case.

Trung said inspectors had proposed punishing five illegal nursery centres in the commune but there are still many others operating illegally in the locality due to high demand./.

Related Articles

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Fatherland Front chief visits flood-hit provinces

Vietnam Fatherland Front Chairman Huynh Dam has paid a fieldtrip to the south-central provinces of Khanh Hoa and Ninh Thuan, which were hard hit by floods in early November, and handed relief aids to victims.

During his visit to Khanh Hoa on November 5, Dam, who is also member of the Party Central Committee, offered condolences to families with beloved ones killed or left missing by floods.

He called on local authorities and social organisations to continue with rescue efforts as well as sending more relief aid to worst-hit regions to help them recover production and bring their life back to normal as soon as possible.

“Hunger and flood-borne epidemics should be prevented”, emphasised the leader of the nation’s largest social organisation.

He also announced the front’s decision to earmark 500 million VND (roughly 25,500 USD) from the central relief fund as aid to Khanh Hoa.

On November 6, the Fatherland Front Chairman visited neighbouring Ninh Thuan province, where he handed over 1 billion VND to the provincial administration as relief aid to flood victims.

Dam also visited and presented gifts for families of dead victims.

Also on November 6, Ninh Thuan welcomed convoys of trucks carrying supplies for flood victims in the worst hit Phuoc Nam village, Thuan Nam district.

The Saigon Trade Corporation (SATRA) from Ho Chi Minh City , for example, sent 10 tonnes of rice worth 100 million VND to distribute to 2,000 most-suffering families.

The Thanh Nien (Youngsters) newspaper and the La pagoda, located in Ho Chi Minh City , sent 3.5 tonnes of rice, 350 boxes of instant noodles, hundreds of brand-new clothing items and medicines worth 100 million VND for victims in Phuoc Nam village.

Monk Thich Nhuan Tam said he felt hit at heart seeing sufferings by flood victims and pledged to continue raising funds to alleviate their plight./.

Related Articles

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Ninh Thuan wants nuclear plants relocated

nuclear

Ninh Thuan Province has asked the government to relocate the country’s first two nuclear plants that are proposed to be built there for reasons it has declined to make public.

Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai has asked the Ministry of Industry and Trade to study the request but a spokesman for the central province, Le Van Binh, refused to reveal details.

The National Assembly last year approved construction of two plants with a capacity of more than 4,000 MW each in Thuan Nam and Ninh Hai Districts.

Work on the first, initially estimated to cost $3.4 billion, will begin in 2014, with its first unit beginning operation in 2020, according to the Electricity of Vietnam.

But Russian State Nuclear Energy Corp Rosatom, which won the bid to build it, has increased the estimate to $8 billion.

The Russian group will also set up a center for training personnel and an atomic energy research institute, Vietnam News Agency quoted Rosatom chairman Sergey Kirienko as telling President Nguyen Minh Triet at a meeting in Hanoi last Wednesday.

It will also initially train around 70 Vietnamese, Kirienko added.

Vietnam has already sent 40 technicians and experts to Russia for training while seven Vietnamese universities have started courses in the field.

By 2030 the country hopes to have eight nuclear plants to meet its skyrocketing electricity needs, according to the government website.

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Ninh Thuan wants nuclear plants relocated

nuclear
Photo: Reuters

Ninh Thuan Province has asked the government to relocate the country’s first two nuclear plants that are proposed to be built there for reasons it has declined to make public.

Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai has asked the Ministry of Industry and Trade to study the request but a spokesman for the central province, Le Van Binh, refused to reveal details.

The National Assembly last year approved construction of two plants with a capacity of more than 4,000 MW each in Thuan Nam and Ninh Hai Districts.

Work on the first, initially estimated to cost $3.4 billion, will begin in 2014, with its first unit beginning operation in 2020, according to the Electricity of Vietnam.

But Russian State Nuclear Energy Corp Rosatom, which won the bid to build it, has increased the estimate to $8 billion.

The Russian group will also set up a center for training personnel and an atomic energy research institute, Vietnam News Agency quoted Rosatom chairman Sergey Kirienko as telling President Nguyen Minh Triet at a meeting in Hanoi last Wednesday.

It will also initially train around 70 Vietnamese, Kirienko added.

Vietnam has already sent 40 technicians and experts to Russia for training while seven Vietnamese universities have started courses in the field.

By 2030 the country hopes to have eight nuclear plants to meet its skyrocketing electricity needs, according to the government website.

Related Articles