Monday, January 10, 2011

Improving competitiveness key to lifting farmer incomes

HCM CITY — Policy makers, businesses, scientists and farmers met in HCM City yesterday to discuss ways to increase farmers' incomes.

The meeting talked about developing the value chain approach in rural areas used by the International Fund for Agricultural Development of the United Nations (IFAD) to help farmers reduce poverty.

At the event, leaders of provinces, which have IFAD projects, including Ha Giang, Cao Bang, Ha Tinh, Quang Binh, Gia Lai, Ninh Thuan, Ben Tre, and Tra Vinh introduced their local development potential in livestock and aquaculture and cultivation of rice, coconut, garlic, orange, peanut and others.

The Ha Giang Province representative said the province was offering incentives for investors in cow breeding and wanted more private investment in animal feed processing plants, food processing plants and supermarkets or trading centers to promote consumption of Ha Giang beef.

It was a good chance for businesses to dialogue directly with provincial leaders about the value chain approach to benefit farmers, said Vo Tan Thanh, director of the Viet Nam Chamber of Commerce and Industry in HCM City.

Local and international research institutes would also provide science and technology information at the meeting, he added.

Atsuko Toda, representative of IFAD in Viet Nam, said government, businesses and farmers should work together to increase competitiveness of the country's agricultural sector.

IFAD encouraged the private sector to invest in its projects, Toda said, adding it would support investors to reduce risks.

IFAD works for and with the poorest people in Viet Nam, including ethnic minorities, small-scale farmers and households headed by women. Strategies to reduce poverty and improve living conditions include building partnerships, strengthening institutional capacity and promoting participation.

Currently, IFAD has projects in 11 provinces in Viet Nam.

The two-day event organised by the Viet Nam Chamber of Commerce and Industry and IFAD in collaboration with the Ministries of Planning and Investment, and Agriculture and Rural Development also includes a fair featuring agricultural products from each province and agricultural co-operation models. — VNS

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Software to manage child Internet access approved

HA NOI — Central Thanh Hoa Province's Union of Informatics and Transfer Technology has successfully programmed software to help parents better control their children's access to the Internet, reports its director Nguyen Huu Hung.

The Manage Access Network (MAN) was designed to prevent access to websites that do not suit a child's age and development, he said. The list of forbidden websites could be updated automatically via the union's system or manually.

The software included measures to check or schedule access to the Internet for a day or a month.

MAN would also help users monitor the duration of access to host computers and automatically make payments.

The union is installing the software in the province's Quang Trung, Nguyen Van Troi, Dien Bien, Minh Khai secondary schools and Ham Rong high school.

A union survey shows that two-third of the students at the schools have home Internet access, but parents have little effective control of its use.

"This software is expected to join hands with parents to control their children's Internet use including access to on-line games and porn sites, " said director Hung.

It was planned to expand MAN to other provinces.

A 10-day free trial version of the programme is available at www.ccn.com.vn or the software can be bought for VND268,000 (US$13.4).

Vuong Hien, of Ha Noi, the mother of a 15-year-old son, said that she was always worried about what her child accessed on the Internet.

But the new software would help her control the content her son was allowed to access as well as the time he was on the Internet and its price was affordable.

The Culture, Sports and Tourism Ministry's Copyright Information Department granted the union software copyright last month. — VNS

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Staff shortage raises disease fears

Health workers examine residents in Ia Hru, Chu Se District in the Central Highland province of Gia Lai. Viet Nam's disease control faces difficulties including the shortage of preventative health workers and a low budget for the sector. — VNA/VNS Photo Sy Huynh

Health workers examine residents in Ia Hru, Chu Se District in the Central Highland province of Gia Lai. Viet Nam's disease control faces difficulties including the shortage of preventative health workers and a low budget for the sector. — VNA/VNS Photo Sy Huynh

HA NOI — A shortage of essential medical workers threatens the control of the contagious diseases that constantly stalk Viet Nam.

Flu, dengue fever, malaria, encephalitis and diarrhoea strike an estimated 3.5 million people throughout the country each year.

But Health Ministry figures show that only about 8,600 preventative health workers are available to meet the threat.

Of these, about 1,200 work in central facilities and meet about 77 per cent of demand; another 7,397 are in the provinces where they meet 54 per cent of demand.

Up to 75 per cent of the workers have not been professionally trained.

Still, they have to monitor formerly infected zones; inspect the environment; find the causes of outbreaks and mobilise people to take preventive and control measures to stop dieseases from spreading.

Too small spending is blamed for the shortage.

The budget for preventive medicine accounts for just 25 per cent of all medical spending.

Expenses

Medical worker Doan Tat Thang, of the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta Soc Trang Province preventive medicine centre, complained that although he and his fellow workers sometimes had to travel long distances to do their job, their expenses met only 30 per cent of cost.

"We sometimes have to travel up to 80 km by boat and motorbike to spray chemicals to kill mosquitoes and control dengue fever," he said.

"It often takes us from early morning to late at night to complete the work."

Very few preventive medicine workers were willing to work in remote regions for the prevailing daily pay of just VND30,000 (US$1.5), said Dr Luu Thi Thu Ha from the southern delta's Dong Thap Province preventive medicine centre.

Many of the workers also wanted to attend training courses to improve their skills.

"I was unclear about how to write a report about an epidemic and how to manage my staff to employ effective preventive measures before I had a chance to join a training course last year," she said.

Target

Viet Nam needs an extra 5,500 tertiary-educated preventive medical workers; 1,000 post-graduates and 4,200 nurses and technicians to meet the strategy for national preventive medicine to 2020.

The target will not be easily met.

A lack of qualified lecturers will be a major hindrance.

"In addition facilities and equipment for the study and practice of preventive medicine at the medical universities are obsolete and do not meet demand," said Health Ministry's Science and Training Department director Truong Viet Dung.

The low rate of student enrollments for preventive medicine compared with other health disciplines was also a barrier, he said.

"The low salary and hard work makes preventive medicine unattractive." he added.

A 2009 survey revealed that the number of students applying to study general medicine accounted for 91 per cent; the figure for preventive medicine was 73.8 per cent.

But Ha Noi College of Medicine and Pharmacy graduate Nguyen Thi Linh, said she had decided to train as a general nurse instead of a preventive medical worker as the former would provide her with more employment opportunities.

"I can apply for jobs at hospitals or any medical centres as a general nursing graduate, while the opportunities for a preventive medical worker is limited," she said.

The health ministry planned to spend more for facilities, lecturers and training programmes to address the shortage, Dung said.

The ministry would also providepreventive-medical-training for diploma holders in other medical disciplines to encourage them to work in the field.

The Ha Noi Medical University was piloting the training programme and if successful, it would be applied at other medical universities.

Potential students might also be provided scholarships or made exempt from tuition fees.

The health ministry's preventive medicine department's deputy director Phan Trong Lan said the ministry would work to provide preventive medical workers with a variety of preferential policies to help improve their working and living conditions.

A five-year preventive medical training master plan is to begin next year to train 1,000 preventive medical workers by 2015. — VNS

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Innovators encouraged to combat corruption

Innovators encouraged to combat corruption

The Government Inspectorate and the World Bank on Nov. 29 introduced the Vietnam Anti-Corruption Initiative (VACI) for 2011 aiming to foster innovative ideas to raise public awareness on the enforcement of laws to prevent and combat corruption.

VACI 2011 will include a competition for selecting the best initiatives to enhance public uprightness and law enforcement to make the fight against corruption effective. These ideas must have a high degree of creativity and feasibility.

There will also be a section for sharing knowledge on anti-corruption laws and experiences drawn from the enforcement of laws against the scourge.

Undertaken by the Government’s Inspectorate, VACI 2011 is sponsored by the World Bank, the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID), the UK International Development Agency, the embassies of Sweden , Finland and Belgium , and others.

The same day, the Government Inspectorate and the WB jointly held a seminar reviewing Vietnam Innovation Day 2009 (VID 2009) which had the topic, “More accountability and transparency, less corruption”.

Twenty-five projects won VID 2009 prizes for 330,000 USD in total. As many as 152 projects were submitted.

Projects on raising ethnic minority students’ awareness on accountability and transparency in Vo Nhai, the northern province of Thai Nguyen and improving the quality and participation of the community in building, implementing and monitoring plans to reduce poor households in the central province of Ha Tinh were presented to the participants.

Deputy Inspector General Tran Duc Luong said VID 2009 reflected the community’s enthusiastic participation in preventing and combating corruption and it worked as an information channel to help people understand more about the fight against the menace and the Government’s policies in the field.

A WB representative noted that selected projects have figured out specific activities to coordinate the mass media and other partners in implementing and advertising the projects.

The representative said almost all VID 2009 projects showed high commitment and expectations of being maintained and then expanded so that they could seek particular evidence on their impacts on the community and foster bigger ideas for the sake of the community’s development./.

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OBA water supplies in rural areas discussed

A seminar on investment and the management of OBA projects which focus on clean water and hygiene in rural areas in the Mekong Delta region was held in Tien Giang province on November 29.

At the seminar, the participants, including staff from water supply systems, officials from various ministries and agencies, donors and the representatives of non-government organisations, shared their experiences in putting into action water supply projects using a newly-applied model known as OBA (outcomes-based technical assistance) which was launched by the East Meets West (EMW) Foundation.

The participants also had the chance to explore Tieng Giang province’s regulations and policies on private investment and management in rural areas and held a discussion on OBA models in several provinces such as Dong Thap, Long An, Tien Giang and An Giang.

Environmental programmes were also put on the table for discussion at the meeting, thus helping improve the effectiveness of water supply projects.

The EMW, a US non-government organisation, has helped private businesses in the central region to carry out over 150 small-scale works to supply fresh water to a number of rural areas, that benefit nearly 230,000 residents.

Since 2007, the organisation has applied a new model outcomes-based assistance and used it throughout the Mekong Delta region, particularly Tien Giang province. The organisation has also supported 24 private businesses to provide clean water for 8,700 households./.

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Sunday, January 9, 2011

Welsh photographer portrays AO victims

After travelling around 120 countries across the world, Philip Jones Griffiths has become well-known with his photos of the American war in Vietnam , which contributed to the anti-war movement in the US and the world as a whole.

His collection of 47 pictures on the aftermath of Agent Orange in Vietnam has been handed over to the Museum of War Relics in HCM City .

The Welsh photo journalist has devoted part of his career to Vietnam, from war era issues to the environmental recovery programme, which recently culminated in the inauguration of a fund for Agent Orange victims, named after him, in Ho Chi Minh City .

First arriving in Vietnam in 1966, Philip finished six years covering the war as a correspondent for the Magnum News Agency and published a book on Vietnam in 1971. The book, which focused on the sufferings caused by the war to ordinary Vietnamese people, shocked the world and stirred up the anti-war movement in the US.

The book, called Vietnam Inc, contributed to the lobby in the US demanding an end to the “nonsensical” war. The book was republished in 2001 and has become a classic photographic book which is sought after today.

After Vietnam Inc, Philip published three other books of photos including Agent Orange, which told the world about the aftermath of the toxic chemicals sprayed by the US military on Vietnam and its people.

The other books are called Vietnam at Peace, a post-war book of Vietnam and Dark Odyssey, a collection of his best photos.

Philip Jones Griffiths was awarded the insignia “For Peace and Friendship between Nations” by the Vietnam Union of Friendship Organisations in 2008./.

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HCM City to build on HIV success rate

HCM City plans to reduce the rate of new HIV infections to less than 1 percent in 2015 and maintain it in the following years, health officials said at a conference on Nov 27.

Since 2008, the number of new HIV infections, those who contract AIDS, as well as those who die of the disease has reduced consistently, they said.

Health Minister Nguyen Quoc Trieu, who chaired the conference that reviewed 20 years of struggle against the pandemic, praised the city for its unstinting efforts to contain and prevent the pandemic.

Lauding the achievements recorded in curbing the spread of the virus and disease, he said: "Compared with other localities, HCM City, with 25 percent of the nation's new HIV cases, has always taken the lead in fighting AIDS."

Dr Le Truong Giang, deputy head of HCM City AIDS Committee, expressed confidence that the city could build on its achievements so far to vastly improve results in the fight against HIV/AIDS over the next five years and beyond. He estimated the rate of new HIV infections among those above 15 years of age at 1.27 percent for 2010.

He said the number of newly infected HIV persons above 15 years of age would grow from 6,152 in 2011 to 7,102 in 2015, adding that if the city maintained the same HIV prevention campaign, it will have more than 33,000 new HIV infections five years from now.

Customers of sex workers are most vulnerable to the pandemic, while drug users, sex workers and men who have sex with men would also form a significant part of new HIV infections in coming years, Giang said.

He warned that HIV transmission among men who have sex with men could spread very quickly during the years to come. The rate of infection within the group could double in five years, from 9.38 percent in 2010 to 18.64 percent in 2015. Until 2007, HIV infections had increased sharply in the city, with 10,515 new cases and about 700 people dying of AIDS that year, the conference heard.

The city's first HIV case was diagnosed in 1990. The situation has improved a lot from 2008 onwards and the number of fatalities from new infections had reduced dramatically, Giang said, adding that several HIV/AIDS prevention programmes implemented by the city have taken effect.

Awareness campaigns have received strong support from peer educators, officials said at the conference. There are currently 58 groups of HIV peer educators in the city and they work hard to educate street youth, particularly those who are more vulnerable to contracting the virus.

The city's programme on free HIV consulting, treatment, awareness on mother-to-child HIV transmission and others has contributed to the city's success in curbing the pandemic spreading.

Every year, the city provides consultancy services and HIV tests to at least 100,000 pregnant women, of whom about 600 are found HIV positive. It has been able to save 150 children from contracting the virus. During the past five years, about 800 children have been saved.

The city's provision of free ARV treatment for HIV positive individuals has reached half of the city's people living with the virus, it is estimated. According to the AIDS committee, the city currently has been offering free treatment to around 40,000 HIV patients.

The free anti-retroviral treatment offered to every HIV/AIDS patient has also been very successful, helping save an estimated 10,000 patients from death, Giang said./.

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