Thursday, November 11, 2010

Factory pledges to compensate enslaved laborers

A paper factory in the central highlands province of Dak Lak promised Thursday to pay 121 laborers whom they had enslaved for six months.

The payment will be completed by this December 12, according to a representative of Dak Lak Paper Materials Factory.

The laborers, all from Phuoc Son District in neighboring Quang Nam Province, were recruited to grow acacias in April for between VND1.8-2.1 million (US$92.4-107.8) a month.

However, according to the laborers, they weren't paid for months and were forced to engage in heavy manual labor without proper meals, adding that they couldn’t contact their families or leave their encampment in Dak R’mang Forest.

Some younger people managed to escape and enlist local agencies to rescue others.

According to the victims, they were introduced to recruiter Do Ngoc Lan, 44, via Ho Van Xia, chief of a hamlet in Phuoc Son District. Lan, meanwhile, told police he was contracted to do the recruitment by the factory.

Also Thursday, the paper factory paid VND20 million ($1,025) to the family of Ho Van Chuong, 32, who died from malaria while working in the forest.

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Korean bride murderer gets 12 years in jail

Korean bride murderer gets 12 years in jailThe mentally deranged South Korean husband who admitted to murdering his Vietnamese wife in July was sentenced to 12 years in prison on Thursday by a Korean court.

Prosecutors last month suggested life-in-prison for Jang Do Hyo as he committed the crime despite receiving treatment for his condition many times. Prosecutors argued that Hyo posed a future risk to society.

But the judge determined that Hyo was mentally ill during the murder and has showed regret afterward, local news website VnExpress said Friday, citing an AFP report.

The 47-year-old requires mental treatment in jail and will have to wear an electronic monitoring device for ten years after his release, according to an announcement made at the trial.

Hyo stabbed his 20-year-old wife Thach Thi Hoang Ngoc, of Can Tho, to death just eight days after her arrival in the country. They wed early this year through a marriage brokerage firm.

He told the police he heard a voice in his head asking him to kill Ngoc during their quarrel.

Since July 2005, Hyo has been treated 57 times for mental illness, but stopped taking medicine after the marriage. Police say Hyo was afraid his wife would discover his past problems.

Seoul authorities have compensated Ngoc’s family US$25,000.

Following the case, South Korea pledged to make Korean men looking to marry foreign women undergo a cultural education program.

More than one-third of South Korean men, most of them farmers and fishermen, married foreign women last year, according to figures released by Korean authorities.

Statistics from the South Korean Consulate General in Ho Chi Minh City showed that around 27,500 Vietnamese women had been granted marriage visas by 2008 and around 8,000 such visas were granted in 2009 alone. This means around 35,500 Vietnamese women had migrated to South Korea for marriage by the end of 2009.

Most of these marriages were conducted by illegal brokerage firms.

Over the last two decades, poverty has driven thousands of women from poor families, especially the Mekong Delta, to marry older men, mainly from South Korea and Taiwan.

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Korean bride murderer gets 12 years in jail

Korean bride murderer gets 12 years in jailThe mentally deranged South Korean husband who admitted to murdering his Vietnamese wife in July was sentenced to 12 years in prison on Thursday by a Korean court.

Prosecutors last month suggested life-in-prison for Jang Do Hyo as he committed the crime despite receiving treatment for his condition many times. Prosecutors argued that Hyo posed a future risk to society.

But the judge determined that Hyo was mentally ill during the murder and has showed regret afterward, local news website VnExpress said Friday, citing an AFP report.

The 47-year-old requires mental treatment in jail and will have to wear an electronic monitoring device for ten years after his release, according to an announcement made at the trial.

Hyo stabbed his 20-year-old wife Thach Thi Hoang Ngoc, of Can Tho, to death just eight days after her arrival in the country. They wed early this year through a marriage brokerage firm.

He told the police he heard a voice in his head asking him to kill Ngoc during their quarrel.

Since July 2005, Hyo has been treated 57 times for mental illness, but stopped taking medicine after the marriage. Police say Hyo was afraid his wife would discover his past problems.

Seoul authorities have compensated Ngoc’s family US$25,000.

Following the case, South Korea pledged to make Korean men looking to marry foreign women undergo a cultural education program.

More than one-third of South Korean men, most of them farmers and fishermen, married foreign women last year, according to figures released by Korean authorities.

Statistics from the South Korean Consulate General in Ho Chi Minh City showed that around 27,500 Vietnamese women had been granted marriage visas by 2008 and around 8,000 such visas were granted in 2009 alone. This means around 35,500 Vietnamese women had migrated to South Korea for marriage by the end of 2009.

Most of these marriages were conducted by illegal brokerage firms.

Over the last two decades, poverty has driven thousands of women from poor families, especially the Mekong Delta, to marry older men, mainly from South Korea and Taiwan.

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Hanoi adjusts fireworks display again, tightens security

Hanoi adjusts fireworks display again, tightens securityHanoi authorities have again scaled down a fireworks display planned for Sunday, following a deadly explosion this week, Vietnamnet reported Saturday.

In the latest move, Nguyen The Thao, chairman of Hanoi’s People’s Committee ordered that the display will take place at My Dinh Stadium’s stand B only, instead of both stands B and A.

According to news website VnExpress, most VIP guests, including international delegates, will sit at stand A.

Capital authorities also asked police to set up security around the staging area at stand B, VnExpress said, adding that all security measures for the grand festival will be strengthened as well.

On Wednesday two containers carrying fireworks exploded at the stadium, killing four people – one Singaporean and two Germans, and a Vietnamese.

The incident, according to Hanoi’s Police Department Director Nguyen Duc Nhanh, was caused by “mistakes” during transportation.

Two days after the explosion, Hanoi's committee of the Party announced that the city would cancel fireworks displays at 29 points around the city, except for My Dinh Stadium.

According to the committee, all the funds assigned for the country’s biggest-ever fireworks display, were instead sent to aid flood victims in the central region.

Asked about the possibility of saving money for flooded areas, considering all fireworks have already been imported from foreign countries, Municipal Party Committee Secretary Pham Quang Nghi told Vietnamnet that all fireworks, except for those planned at the stadium, were produced locally.

The city is also saving money by not buying more fireworks from other countries to make up for the loss after the explosion, he stressed.

In fact, municipal authorities have ordered the Hanoi International Manpower Supply and Trade Company Limited (Interserco) to buy new fireworks from Z212 Factory under the Ministry of National Defense, Vietnamnet reported.

Hanoi is also stepping up its fundraising efforts for flood victims in the central region, Nghi added.

So far, the city has sent VND5 billion (US$256,476) to affected provinces, according to Tuoi Tre.

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Biggest-ever parade marks Hanoi’s millennium

Biggest-ever parade marks Hanoi’s millennium

A grand meeting and biggest-ever parade was held at Ba Dinh Square on October 10 to celebrate the 1000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.

The meeting was attended by Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh, State President Nguyen Minh Triet, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, National Assembly Chairman Nguyen Phu Trong, Chairman of the Vietnam Fatherland Front (VFF) Central Committee Huynh Dam, and Secretary of the Hanoi municipal Party Committee Pham Quang Nghi along with former senior State and Party leaders.

Ambassadors, representatives from international organisations in Vietnam, centrally-run ministries, sectors and media agencies plus heroic mothers, revolutionary veterans, armed forces and labour heroes, and almost 40,000 people and soldiers representing millions of others in and outside the country also joined the event.

The celebration honoured the armed forces and highlighted the tremendous achievements Hanoi and the country have recorded during 1,000 years of history, national construction and development, and during the Doi Moi (Renewal) process in which Hanoi has been honoured as a capital city of peace and friendship.

To begin the celebration, a torch was lit at Hanoi’s Millennial Anniversary cauldron. The torch symbolises eternal vitality of the Vietnamese nation and the flame of Ho Chi Minh’s thoughts which has lit the revolutionary path towards the goal of a prosperous people living in a powerful country with a just, democratic and civilised society.

Party and State leaders, along with the delegates, saluted the national flag while the military band played the national anthem and 21 canons fired a salvo.

In his speech, President Triet extended his best wishes and sincere thanks to people across the country, overseas Vietnamese and international friends for their special sentiments towards Hanoi on its 1000th grand anniversary.

1,000 years ago, in the autumn of 1010, King Ly Thai To issued the royal edict to transfer the capital from Hoa Lu to Thang Long, opening up a glorious period of development for the capital.

From that historic milestone to the Ho Chi Minh era, over 1,000 years of ups and downs, Thang Long-Hanoi has maintained its assured posture and indomitable spirit, deserving to be the heart of the whole country, he said.

“The 1000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi gave us a chance to highlight the noble traditional values and priceless heritage of our ancestors and express our deep gratitude to those who founded the country as well as President Ho Chi Minh, revolutionary veterans, and heroic martyrs who laid down their lives for national independence and freedom,” Triet said.

“We are responsible for preserving and upholding the ancestors’ traditions and raising them to a new level in the Ho Chi Minh era,” he further said.

President Triet called on the whole population to unite and use energy, brain power and talent to build Hanoi into a civilised, modern and beautiful capital capable of keeping pace with other cities in the world.

Following President Triet’s speech, there was a grand parade with ten helicopters flying above carrying the Party and National flags and banners saying “The 1000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi”.

The parade, the biggest of its kind, attracted the participation of representatives from different groups, including the army, war veterans, the youth, workers, farmers, intellectuals, State employees, entrepreneurs, religions, women and overseas Vietnamese.

The celebration concluded with art performance by 2,000 artists and actresses and with release of balloons and doves into the sky above historic Ba Dinh square./.

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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

PM visits flood hit areas, OVs grant relief aid

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and a government delegation Saturday paid a visit to Quang Binh, the hardest-hit province by flood.

Floods has claimed 42 lives, left 17 missing and injured 45 others. Losses are estimated at VND1.3 trillion (US$68.4 million).

PM Dung and the delegation visited Duy Ninh commune, Quang Ninh district, one of localities suffering greatest losses in the historical floods.

Praising solidarity of people in the flood-hit areas, PM Dung asked the provincial Party Committee and local authorities to coordinate with relevant agencies to seek for missing people and assist families with dead and injured persons, as well as control epidemics and surmount damaged infrastructure, especially houses.

He also asked the provincial officials to mobilised forces, especially the medical sector to focus on environmental hygiene to prevent disease occurrence.

He required the province to promptly recover social welfare projects, particularly schools and medical stations for children to return school and provide medical checks-up to people.

The same day, the State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs informed that overseas Vietnamese has contributed over VND400 million ($21,000) to help flood victims in central provinces of Vietnam.

The donation was raised by the delegation of overseas Vietnamese, who are in Hanoi for the celebrations of the millennium birthday of the city.

Tran Duc Mau, Deputy Chairman of the State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs said that the committee will channel the donation to the victims as soon as possible.
 

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PM visits flood hit areas, OVs grant relief aid

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and a government delegation Saturday paid a visit to Quang Binh, the hardest-hit province by flood.

Floods has claimed 42 lives, left 17 missing and injured 45 others. Losses are estimated at VND1.3 trillion (US$68.4 million).

PM Dung and the delegation visited Duy Ninh commune, Quang Ninh district, one of localities suffering greatest losses in the historical floods.

Praising solidarity of people in the flood-hit areas, PM Dung asked the provincial Party Committee and local authorities to coordinate with relevant agencies to seek for missing people and assist families with dead and injured persons, as well as control epidemics and surmount damaged infrastructure, especially houses.

He also asked the provincial officials to mobilised forces, especially the medical sector to focus on environmental hygiene to prevent disease occurrence.

He required the province to promptly recover social welfare projects, particularly schools and medical stations for children to return school and provide medical checks-up to people.

The same day, the State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs informed that overseas Vietnamese has contributed over VND400 million ($21,000) to help flood victims in central provinces of Vietnam.

The donation was raised by the delegation of overseas Vietnamese, who are in Hanoi for the celebrations of the millennium birthday of the city.

Tran Duc Mau, Deputy Chairman of the State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs said that the committee will channel the donation to the victims as soon as possible.
 

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