Thursday, November 25, 2010

Israel helps HCM City improve water management

Israel will help Ho Chi Minh City train experts and officials in water management along with sharing its experience, advanced technologies and solutions in the field.

A memorandum of understanding to this effect between the municipal people’s committee and the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Labour of Israel was signed in Ho Chi Minh City on October 19.

Cooperation in water management will also include the organization of conferences, exhibitions, training courses and seminars in both HCM City – Vietnam’s biggest economic hub – and Israel .

Fact-finding trips in Israel will be organised for HCM City officials and experts working in the water sector, and business cooperation will be encouraged.

At the following reception for Israeli officials, Standing Deputy Chairman of the municipal people’s committee Nguyen Thanh Tai said the city had paid due attention to water management as it was one of the most fundamental issues.

Supplying sufficient water for 10 million people’s daily use and production was not only a matter of life but also an issue of security in the current context of global climate change, Tai said.

“Ho Chi Minh City is very interested in the successes, know-how, and experiences Israel has gained in managing its water resources effectively,” Tai said, admitting that his city was facing a shortage of clean water and infrastructural and technological facilities./.

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Study reveals teen enthusiasm for online games

As many as 68.4 percent of people aged under 20 play online games, according to a survey published in Hanoi on October 19.

The survey showed that secondary school students in the age group of 16 and 20 years were the largest group of the teenage online game players.

However, general school students only ranked second in terms of daily online game players, leaving the top spot to white-collar workers. University students took the third ranking.

The survey also confirmed that the situation of online games addicts was not as serious as mass media warned, as the rate of addicts based on World Health Organisation indicators was not high.

It also exonerated online game providers and the games themselves as the sole cause of the criticised addiction, citing responsibilities of families and schools as well as basic life skills of players.

The average sum of money paid by an online game player was found to be lower than other sorts of entertainments such as newspaper reading, sports and coffee drinking.

The survey was conducted by the Institute of Social Science on 1,400 people at random in six cities and provinces representing the three main parts of the country./.

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Vietnam attends ABU General Assembly in Japan

The 47 th Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union’s (ABU) General Assembly, with the theme “the Resilience of Broadcasting”, opened in the Japanese capital Tokyo on October 19.

The General Director of Vietnam Television (VTV) Vu Van Hien and the Deputy General Director of Radio of Voice of Vietnam (VOV) Dao Duy Hua are taking part in the assembly together with more than 400 delegates from 43 countries and territories worldwide.

Speaking at the opening ceremony, the President of Japan’s Broadcasting Corporation (NHK), Shigeo Fukuchi, stated that broadcasting plays an important role in safeguarding people’s lives and boosting mutual understanding between countries and regions through reliable information.

He confirmed that although the development of the Internet has created significant changes to global mass communications, the role of broadcasting remains unchanged.

In his message to the assembly, Japanese Minister of Home Affairs and Communications Yoshihiro Katayama, praised the ABU’s contributions to the development of the broadcasting sector as well as economic and cultural development in Asia-Pacific.

Japan will continue to support the regional broadcasting industry by providing training, equipment and production technologies, he stressed.

ABU Chairman and NHK Vice President in charge of external relations, Yoshinori Imai, said that Myanmar’s Radio and Television broadcasters had recently been admitted to the ABU, raising the organisation’s membership to 197.

During the two-day event, the delegates will discuss issues that radio and television stations are facing, including digitalising broadcasting technologies.

First established in 1964, the ABU is a non-governmental organisation which aims to boost the development of the broadcasting industry in Asia-Pacific, as well as linking its members together by exchanging information, programmes, technical consultations and services./.

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HCM City falls short on entertainment

Entertainment and recreational facilities for children in HCM City are unable to meet the increasing and diverse demands of children because they are hampered by funding and personnel shortages, officials say.

With the current situation, it was difficult to develop infrastructure and equipment for facilities catering to 1.7 million city children as well as 2.4 million teenagers, not to mention 600,000 disabled children, Nguyen Thanh Rum, director of the city's Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism said at seminar held by the city People's Council last week.

The shortage of qualified officials working in cultural and sports centres and children's houses led to ineffective operation of entertainment facilities, Rum said.

Fee collection at cultural centres and children's houses also hindered the participation of disadvantaged children, he said.

The 13,000sq.m Khanh Hoi Children's Entertainment Area in District 4, which attracts 1,500-2,000 children per day, was overloaded at weekend and holidays, said Nguyen Tien Dat, chairman of the district People's Committee.

"It is a free playground for children in the district, and its operation costs are mainly met through sales of food and beverages and parking fees," Dat said.

"The entertainment demand of children is very huge, especially for outdoor playgrounds, but the capacity of facilities is very limited," he added.

Tran Thi Dieu Thuy, deputy secretary of the city's Communist Youth Union, said most children's houses were struggling to improve their operations to attract more children with an average annual funding of 500 million VND (25,700 USD) from the State budget. Overheads at many houses accounted for as much of 70 percent of their expenses, she said.

Only 12 children's houses were operating effectively because of adequate financial support from the districts' budget, Thuy said.

Most of the children's houses did not have meeting halls or multi-purpose stadiums for cultural, art, sports and other outdoor activities.

Last year the children's houses in the city attracted just 600,000 children to participate in entertainment and recreational activities.

"The activities of cultural centres and children's houses were simple and backward compared with advanced entertainment forms designed for children's mental and physical development," said Dr. Nguyen Thi Hau, deputy head of the city's Institute for Development Studies.

Advanced equipment, tools and forms of entertainment activities should be made available to meet the diverse demands of children and ensure development of life-skills among them, Hau said.

Hau proposed that the city should encourage investment by individuals and enterprises to develop infrastructure and equipment for cultural, art, sports and entertainment facilities for children in the central districts so that more financial support from the State budget could be allocated to outlying districts.

Pham Phuong Thao, chairwoman of the city People's Council agreed with the participants, saying that entertainment and recreational areas for children not only failed to meet demand, but also operated inefficiently.

She blamed the situation on a shortage of land set aside for the development of entertainment areas for children, the lack of preferential policies to attract investors and poor management.

State budget funds would be allocated to develop an additional facility of the city's Children's House in the Thu Thiem New Urban Area in District 2 and playgrounds for children in ten parks in the city as part of the city's short-term plan, she said.

The city would also provide funding to build facilities in two districts without children's houses, Tan Phu and Hoc Mon, she added./.

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Honda Vietnam warns against iron radiator cover

Honda Vietnam on Sunday reiterated a warning against the radiator covers installed in its Air Blade motorcycle that may injure passengers.

Yuichiro Ishii, senior manager of Honda Vietnam’s Public Relations and Product Planning Department, said the company on January 29 issued the warning to its agencies nationwide, asking them not to install the accessory for the customers.

The company said it did not produce or supply the iron radiator covers for the Air Blade motorbike line.

The radiator covers made by Honda are made from plastic, and quite safe for passengers, according to the company.

In Ho Chi Minh City, a number of Air Blade motorcyclists installed the iron radiator covers in their bikes after removing the plastic ones.

But the sharp-edged covers have recently been blamed for cutting the toes of motorcycle passengers, especially children.

Many weird accidents have been reported as the covers, described as “sharp as razors,” severed or seriously injured the toes of people on the back seat.

The stainless radiator covers can be easily found in shops selling motorcycle spare parts on Nguyen Chi Thanh and Ly Nam De streets in District 5.

They have no labels, and no certificates of origin. The cheaper they are, the more likely they can injure passengers because they are thinner.

Nguy Duc, who owns a motorcycle repair shop on Tran Quang Khai Street in District 1, customers prefer the iron radiator covers rather than the plastic ones because they think their motorbikes look more beautiful with the iron ones.

What they do not know is the safety of motorcycle passengers, he said.

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HCMC residents ignorant of emergency number: study

Two thirds of Ho Chi Minh City residents do not know that telephone number 115 is for the city ambulance service, a study by the Trung Vuong Emergency Hospital has found.

Dr Huynh Thi Thanh Trang of the hospital’s emergency department said as a ratio more men know about 115 than women.

People aged between 15 and 30 know about the service more than those in other groups as do office workers, civil servants, and students, she said.

The survey found that most people who do know about 115 learnt about it from newspapers, TV, or the internet.

Trang revealed that even people who do know about the service prefer to take their relatives to hospital themselves.

“They are afraid the congested roads might delay the ambulance. Many take a taxi to hospital.”

The hospital explained that when people call 115 from the city, they are connected to the emergency department and an ambulance dispatched.

If the call is from outside the city, the hospital calls the nearest district hospital to seek help.

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Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Fatherland Front key in culture plan

HA NOI — Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung yesterday called on the Fatherland Front Central Committee to bolster its role in helping the country successfully implement social security strategies.

Two campaigns have been implemented in the last decade to help improve social security: encouraging people to build up the cultural life in their community and taking action to help poor people.

"The Fatherland Front has made great contributions to the success of both campaigns, which have become the highlight of its activities in the last 10 years," Dung told participants at the national meeting to review the implementation and achievement of the two campaigns in Ha Noi yesterday.

Almost all residential communities nationwide have taken part in the "Everyone unite to build cultural life in the residential community" campaign, which after 15 years since its launch in 1995 has seen recognised improvements in the cultural life of more than 50 per cent of the country's residential communities.

The ‘Day for the Poor' campaign has raised more than VND5.1 trillion (US$262 million) in its 10 years of implementation. The funds raised have helped millions of poor people begin and develop production activities, and given poor children the opportunity to get an education. A number of programmes like ‘Joining great hands' and ‘Homes for poor people in border areas and islands', which are part of the campaign, have helped build 150 welfare constructions for the people worth nearly VND150 billion ($7.7 million).

"The power of unity among all people is so great that it would help achieve the country's socio-economic targets and this power should be upheld," said Dung, who called for the continuity and expansion of similar campaigns.

The Government leader praised the pivotal role played by the Fatherland Front in the success of the two campaigns, and confirmed the Government's commitment to its close co-ordination with the Fatherland Front to launch and implement such meaningful and helpful programmes.

To expand the effectiveness of the two major campaigns, Party committees at all levels should put these programmes high on their agenda, Dung said while calling on relevant and authorised bodies to actively and closely co-ordinate with the Fatherland Front to help the campaigns develop ‘wider and deeper'.

The dissemination of information and mobilisation of all sources to get involved in implementing the campaigns were a key element to success, the PM said.

The Prime Minister urged the Ministry of Information and Communications to work with the Fatherland Front to promote the campaigns and exemplary works, acts and people.

Dung asked the Fatherland Front committees at all levels to develop inspection and management plans for the ‘Fund for the Poor', and urged them to ensure transparency and make the mobilisation of sources and the use of funds public at all levels. — VNS

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