Showing posts with label Vietnamese woman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vietnamese woman. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Vietnamese shoplifter arrested in Thailand

A Vietnamese woman was arrested Thursday for attempting to steal designer jeans at the Central festival shopping mall on Pattaya Beach Road in Thailand.

Four other members of the gang, who put the jeans inside paper bags lined with silver foil to avoid detection, escaped with merchandise to the value of US$8,300.

On Thursday, Pattaya Police Investigator Lieutenant Colonel Phatsa Detphakkun was notified that a Vietnamese woman had been caught stealing fashion products from the Ed Hardy store on the 1st floor of the Central Festival on Pattaya Beach Road. A team of officers was dispatched to investigate.

They arrived to find that the offender Nguyen Thi Hien, 23, had being apprehended and detained by the department store’s staff. In her right hand she was holding a large paper bag, which police confiscated as evidence.

Inside the bag were four pairs of True Religion brand jeans – one valued at $400, and three valued at $475 baht each inside the bag. In addition, the bag was found to be padded on the inside with silver foil to prevent detection of the stolen clothes by the security scanner.

The ED Hardy shop manager, Wanlapha Yaowalert, told police that she could see from the CCTV that there were four other members of the gang who had the same kind of bags, but they had managed to escape with stolen jeans valued at $8,300. She managed to apprehend Hien, and then called the police.

Hien was charged with shop-lifting and taken into custody. The police will continue in their search for the rest of the gang.

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Thursday, October 14, 2010

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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