Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Vinamit closes factory after environmental violation exposure

Vinamit closes factory after environmental violation exposureVietnam’s leading fruit chips maker Vinamit temporarily suspended operations of its factory on Tuesday after it was found releasing untreated wastewater into a public drainage system last week.

While the suspension would make the company suffer losses of VND15-20 billion (US$770,020-1.02 million) a day, it would only resume after it has resolved the environment problems, Vinamit board chairman Nguyen Lam Vien said Monday.

Last Friday, Binh Duong’s environmental police found Vinamit had set up a pump some 50 meters from its wastewater treatment plant to dump wastewater into a land area within its precincts as well as the drainage system of National Road No.13.

Vinamit representatives first insisted that the wastewater was already treated, but initial investigation showed that it was yellow and smelly, prompting police to send two samples for further tests.

In July, 2009, Vinamit was caught dumping wastewater which wasn’t treated or treated improperly into the environment.

Locals, meanwhile, have complained that its wastewater, including used cooking oil, has overflowed on to the road many times, causing many people slip and fall.

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HCMC targets Crossfire in online games crackdown

HCMC targets Crossfire in online games crackdownHo Chi Minh City’s authorities on Tuesday ordered the closure of a role-playing game released by a company under the Ministry of Information and Communication.

The move is part of the city's crackdown on online games.

At a meeting with Internet service providers, the City’s Department of Information and Communications asked them to stop customers from signing on to the Dot kich (Crossfire) game developed by VTC Intercom and to get rid of digital content that contain illicit images from the game.

The providers, including FPT and SCTV, were required to act right away and report to the department by September 1. If they fail to do so, they will be punished, the department said.  

Released in 2008 by VTC Intercom, which is under the Ministry of Information and Communication, Crossfire has a lot of violent content with characters killing others with knives, guns and grenades, it said.  

The department has sent all violent images taken from Crossfire to authorities in 24 districts, requesting them to ask local Internet shops to stop providing the game’s content with such images.

A ten-day investigation into the conduct of VTC’s branch in HCMC over a year starting August 20, 2009 was also launched Monday.

Asked why the department had targeted Crossfire first, Le Manh Ha, director of the department, said previously they had met with three companies that had released games with a lot of shooting, of which VTC’s was the most violent.

The company’s representatives have also come to the meeting with no goodwill and intention of cooperating with the department, the director said.

Last week the department had proposed to the Ministry of Information and Communications that the provision of online games be cut from 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. instead of instituting online curfews at Internet cafes.

The response came after the ministry ordered the suspension of internet service to all internet cafes nationwide from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. from this September 1.

The department argued that there was no legal basis for a government body to order the suspension of internet service to internet shops after their official business hours, as not all Internet shops have broken the law.

In the meantime, FPT Online – subsidiary of the leading information technology firm FPT, on Monday committed it will not import and release games involving shooting with guns if governmental agencies asked them to do so.

FPT Online will also close the Dac Nhiem Anh Hung (Special Force) game from next April onwards, it said.

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HCMC targets Crossfire in online games crackdown

HCMC targets Crossfire in online games crackdownHo Chi Minh City’s authorities on Tuesday ordered the closure of a role-playing game released by a company under the Ministry of Information and Communication.

The move is part of the city's crackdown on online games.

At a meeting with Internet service providers, the City’s Department of Information and Communications asked them to stop customers from signing on to the Dot kich (Crossfire) game developed by VTC Intercom and to get rid of digital content that contain illicit images from the game.

The providers, including FPT and SCTV, were required to act right away and report to the department by September 1. If they fail to do so, they will be punished, the department said.  

Released in 2008 by VTC Intercom, which is under the Ministry of Information and Communication, Crossfire has a lot of violent content with characters killing others with knives, guns and grenades, it said.  

The department has sent all violent images taken from Crossfire to authorities in 24 districts, requesting them to ask local Internet shops to stop providing the game’s content with such images.

A ten-day investigation into the conduct of VTC’s branch in HCMC over a year starting August 20, 2009 was also launched Monday.

Asked why the department had targeted Crossfire first, Le Manh Ha, director of the department, said previously they had met with three companies that had released games with a lot of shooting, of which VTC’s was the most violent.

The company’s representatives have also come to the meeting with no goodwill and intention of cooperating with the department, the director said.

Last week the department had proposed to the Ministry of Information and Communications that the provision of online games be cut from 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. instead of instituting online curfews at Internet cafes.

The response came after the ministry ordered the suspension of internet service to all internet cafes nationwide from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. from this September 1.

The department argued that there was no legal basis for a government body to order the suspension of internet service to internet shops after their official business hours, as not all Internet shops have broken the law.

In the meantime, FPT Online – subsidiary of the leading information technology firm FPT, on Monday committed it will not import and release games involving shooting with guns if governmental agencies asked them to do so.

FPT Online will also close the Dac Nhiem Anh Hung (Special Force) game from next April onwards, it said.

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Rape of transsexual woman stirs legal debate

The rape of a transgender woman in the north-central province of Quang Binh has sparked a serious debate among legal professionals after judicial authorities declined to prosecute the three perpetrators.

The German Press Agency dpa quoted officials in the province as saying the victim had not reclassified her legal gender from male to female on Wednesday, August 25. Because Vietnamese law only applies to the rape of women by men, the case could not be prosecuted, they said.

“The laws don’t regulate how to deal with this case, so even if the group raped her ten times, we would not be able to sentence them,” Nguyen Van Thin, chief judge of the provincial People’s Court, told dpa.

According to Ho Chi Minh City Law newspaper, the unidentified woman was gang-raped by the three men on April 4. She reported the crime to local police the following day. After the men were arrested, they confessed to the crime in custody.

The province ran into problems when the authorities found that all of the victim’s identification documents indicated her gender as male.

She said she had undergone a sex change operation overseas four years ago and now, as a woman, she insisted the rapists be punished, the newspaper said.

Some experts said, legally speaking, the victim is still a man and the case is thus not covered under the law. They said that Vietnamese law does not recognize the grievances of transgender rape victims.

Other legal professionals did not agree. They said the law only stipulates that “those who use force, threaten to use force, or abuse the defenselessness of their victims, or use other tricks in order to have sexual intercourse with the victims against their will” are guilty of rape.

Because the regulation makes no reference to the genders of either the offender or the victim, anyone who commits the crime can be prosecuted under current law.

Judge Pham Cong Hung, from the HCMC People’s Supreme Court, said that what the three men did to the victim was enough to hold them guilty of rape and there should be no question about it.

Hung also believed that the victim should be treated as a woman.

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Nine dead, one lost as Mindulle hits central Vietnam

Nine dead, one lost as Mindulle hits central VietnamAt least nine people died and one went missing in typhoon Mindulle, the National Committee of Search and Rescue reported Wednesday.

The victims were swept away by floods or fell to their death while attempting to strengthen their houses in the storm.

On Monday, Mindulle grew from a tropical depression into a full-blown typhoon.

It weakened, two days later, after injuring at least 58 people and damaging over 40 boats and nearly 32,000 houses, according to the committee.

Mindulle is the third major storm to come out of the East Sea this season.

Damage to tens of thousands of acres of farmland, dykes and bridges were reported throughout the north central region. Formal statistics pertaining to the extent of the damage have, so far, not been released.

In the meantime, the National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting warned that, while the typhoon has been downgraded, rains will continue in the central coast and the northern region and could lead to flash floods or landslides.

In July typhoon Conson, the first storm of the season, left at least one dead in Vietnam after killing 68 in the Philippines.

‘A rare accident’

Also on Wednesday rescuers in Da Nang City said they have found ten fishermen who were listed as missing at the beginning of the week.

The Hoa Minh crewmembers were found drifting some 22 nautical miles from the Son Tra Peninsula in severely weakened condition.

Huynh Van Tu, one of the fishermen, said their boat broke down Monday afternoon in the throws of the typhoon. They radioed for help from the Da Nang Maritime Search and Rescue Co-ordination Center (MRCC).

The crew of the SAR 412 reached the fishing boat, but couldn’t approach it due to heavy rains and big winds, the fishermen remained on board, MRCC Director Tran Van Long said.

Rescuers threw the fishermen a tow rope which they secured to their boat, he added.

When the boats were some 15 kilometers off the coast, the tow broke and the fishing boat went missing, according to Long.

“It was a rare professional accident,” he said.

Some locals still raised questions the MRCC’s capacities.

Cao Van Minh, chief of Boat team No. 4 in Hoa Minh District, said when the accident happened they advised the MRCC rescuers to return to the site and focus on areas along the coast.

But, the MRCC refused to redirect their efforts and continued the search in accordance with official directives, Minh said. Local fishermen, meanwhile, weren’t allowed to search the sea for the victims.

In the end, it was local fishermen that managed to find the victims after taking on rescue efforts Wednesday morning.

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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Nine dead, one lost as Mindulle hits central Vietnam

Nine dead, one lost as Mindulle hits central VietnamAt least nine people died and one went missing in typhoon Mindulle, the National Committee of Search and Rescue reported Wednesday.

The victims were swept away by floods or fell to their death while attempting to strengthen their houses in the storm.

On Monday, Mindulle grew from a tropical depression into a full-blown typhoon.

It weakened, two days later, after injuring at least 58 people and damaging over 40 boats and nearly 32,000 houses, according to the committee.

Mindulle is the third major storm to come out of the East Sea this season.

Damage to tens of thousands of acres of farmland, dykes and bridges were reported throughout the north central region. Formal statistics pertaining to the extent of the damage have, so far, not been released.

In the meantime, the National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting warned that, while the typhoon has been downgraded, rains will continue in the central coast and the northern region and could lead to flash floods or landslides.

In July typhoon Conson, the first storm of the season, left at least one dead in Vietnam after killing 68 in the Philippines.

‘A rare accident’

Also on Wednesday rescuers in Da Nang City said they have found ten fishermen who were listed as missing at the beginning of the week.

The Hoa Minh crewmembers were found drifting some 22 nautical miles from the Son Tra Peninsula in severely weakened condition.

Huynh Van Tu, one of the fishermen, said their boat broke down Monday afternoon in the throws of the typhoon. They radioed for help from the Da Nang Maritime Search and Rescue Co-ordination Center (MRCC).

The crew of the SAR 412 reached the fishing boat, but couldn’t approach it due to heavy rains and big winds, the fishermen remained on board, MRCC Director Tran Van Long said.

Rescuers threw the fishermen a tow rope which they secured to their boat, he added.

When the boats were some 15 kilometers off the coast, the tow broke and the fishing boat went missing, according to Long.

“It was a rare professional accident,” he said.

Some locals still raised questions the MRCC’s capacities.

Cao Van Minh, chief of Boat team No. 4 in Hoa Minh District, said when the accident happened they advised the MRCC rescuers to return to the site and focus on areas along the coast.

But, the MRCC refused to redirect their efforts and continued the search in accordance with official directives, Minh said. Local fishermen, meanwhile, weren’t allowed to search the sea for the victims.

In the end, it was local fishermen that managed to find the victims after taking on rescue efforts Wednesday morning.

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German bank denies pulling the plug on natural preserve

German bank denies pulling the plug on natural preserveA German banking group has denied media reports alleging that they have suspended funding for a preservation effort in the Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park, a UNESCO world natural heritage site, in Quang Binh Province.

“Current reports by local and Internet media claiming that the funding of the project has been suspended are wrong,” Dr. Charis Pöthig, KfW Bankengruppe’s Press Officer told Thanh Nien Weekly via email. “The funding of the project is going on as planned.”

Pöthig did confirm a recall of EUR200,000 in June. Local officials have admitted that implementation of the plan, so far, has been poor. The two sides say they are now cooperating to appoint new project managers and ensure that the massive ecological problem goes forward without a hitch.

The Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park covers 85,000 hectares and contains Asia’s oldest limestone mountain range. It was recognized as a world heritage site by UNESCO in 2003.

The park also offers an ideal site for researchers and explorers of grottoes and caves. In 2005, British explorers discovered a new cave which they claimed was the most magnificent in the world.

In September 2008, an ambitious resource management project was launched under an agreement between Vietnam and Germany. Philanthropists set aside EUR15.77 million for the project, of which EUR9.8 million was deemed nonrefundable assistance and EUR4.6 million was considered low-interest loans. The rest is money supplied by the Vietnamese government.

The project area covers portions of 13 communes in the province’s Bo Trach, Minh Hoa and Quang Ninh – a total area of 225,000 hectares. The project will establish another 30,000 hectares of strictly protected land and seek to involve local residents in planting and managing new forest areas.

The project management unit has proved sluggish in carrying out the goals, authorities said, leading to the KfW recall.

“Recalling EUR200,000 in funding was a purely administrative measure, prescribed by the disbursement regulations that do not allow funds to be kept in project accounts for too long,” Pöthig said, adding that the funds are still available for later disbursement in the project.

Meanwhile, the People’s Committee of Quang Binh Province is rushing to get the project back on the right track.

During a provincial government meeting held on August 12, Nguyen Huu Hoai, chairman of the Quang Binh People’s Committee, admitted that the project management board had proven incompetent.

The provincial People’s Committee will either assign a new director to the project management unit or take the managing role from the provincial Department of Planning and Investment, Tuoi Tre newspaper cited Hoai as saying in a report issued on August 17.

On August 18, Nguyen Viet Thao, director of the project management unit, told the paper that they would follow through on their commitments to KfW, cease the use of controlled bushfires to clear the forest floor, and step up park enforcement.

The KfW had expressed concerns to Vietnamese authorities about possible poaching and illegal logging, particularly along National Road 20. Thao said those concerns are being looked into.

Thao added that park authorities are in the process of implementing a tree planting plan outlined in the KfW’s 2010 budget.

Pöthig also said they would prepare a review of the progress shortly.

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