Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Vietnam’s second CSO awards go regional

The 2010 Chief Security Officer (CSO) awards will be presented to individuals not only in Vietnam but also in other ASEAN member countries, according to the organisers.

At the 2010 CSO Conference and Awards, the second in Vietnam and the first in ASEAN, slated for Dec. 9-12, CSOs from Vietnam will compete for 10 awards and those from other ASEAN countries for nine awards.

The organisers said the expansion will bring an opportunity for CSOs of Vietnam to exchange experiences with their regional colleagues.

By now, 61 candidates, including 36 from Vietnam, have registered for the awards, which rate not only professional skills, but also management capacity and prestige of the CSOs.

Alongside with the awards presentation, the event will include a CSO conference under the theme “The Evolving CSO from Incident Reaction to Proactive Management”.

CSOs together with State officials and foreign experts will discuss hot issues related to information security.

The CSO Awards organisers include the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Information and Communications, the Vietnam Computer Emergency Response Team (VNCERT) and the International Data Group (IDG)./.

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Foreign NGOs praised for contributions to Vietnam

Foreign non-government organisations (NGOs) have made practical contribution to Vietnam’s hunger elimination and poverty reduction and development, said the President of the Vietnam Union of Friendship Organisations (VUFO).

VUFO’s President Vu Xuan Hong stated this at a ceremony to honour contributions of foreign NGOS in Vietnam. VUFO presented its certificates of merit to 109 organisations on the occasion.

Foreign NGOs have granted nearly 1.7 billion USD as non-refundable aid to Vietnam over the past ten years, focusing on such areas as economics, health care, education and hunger eradication and poverty alleviation. They have also helped Vietnam deal with post-war consequences, natural disasters and social evils, President Hong said.

He noted that over 700 NGOs operating in Vietnam have actively contributed to expanding the friendship and cooperative relations between Vietnam and countries worldwide.

On the occasion, 61 NGOs pledged 157 million USD to help the country in poverty reduction in 2011.

Minister of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan along with representatives from relevant ministries, agencies and organisations attended the event./.

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Hanoi hospital upgrades get approval

The Hanoi People's Committee has approved the spending of almost 41 billion VND (2.09 million USD) to upgrade medical equipment at the Son Tay General Hospital.

It has also approved the spending of 27 billion VND (1.3 million USD) to upgrade the Mai Huong Daycare Psychiatric Hospital.

The spending for Son Tay General Hospital will be done between 2011 and 2012 and focus on buying modern emergency, recuperation, anaesthetics, blood transfusion and diagnostic equipment.

The committee has instructed the hospital management to list the medical equipment necessary for the upgrading and oversee the work.

The purpose of the work at the Mai Huong Daycare Psychiatric Hospital is to improve treatment quality for disadvantaged patients.

The hospital is required to work with relevant municipal departments to mobilise the money for the two-year project.

Its director, Dr Ngo Thanh Hoi, said work would start at the beginning of the next year with the capital drawn from the city's budget and government bonds.

"Much of our medical equipment and machines are obsolete and do not meet the patient requirements, especially as diseases have become more complex and difficult to cure," said Dr Hoi.

The money would help the hospital buy specialised equipment for the in-residence treatment of rural psychiatric patients.

Son Tay General Hospital has 400 beds, 27 wards and treats about 140,000 patients each year. The Mai Huong Daycare Hospital has just 50 beds.

Both are overcrowded with an average of three patients for each bed./.

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Landslides cut off parts of central VN

Torrential rains have caused a series of landslides in the mountainous central region, blocking many highways and roads for the last several days.

In Quang Nam province, a wall of earth and rock slid down Soi Mu Mountain in Nui Thanh district on Nov. 10, cutting off Ky Ha Port (Chu Lai) from National Highway 1A.

A 100-metre stretch of Road 618 is buried under 2 to 10 metres of rock and soil.

A minor landslide occurred in mountainous Son Tay Commune in Quang Ngai province on Nov. 11, cutting off the Tra Trung – Di Lang road.

On provincial road 622B, soil and rock cover a third of the road's width following a landslide, slowing down transport to Tay Tra district in Quang Ngai.

Also in Quang Ngai, a massive landslide blocked traffic on the road connecting Tra Bong and Tra Thanh districts as well as roads in Tay Tra district.

In Binh Dinh province, the floodwaters have been receding gradually since Nov. 11, but several stretches of Road 640 from Tuy Phuoc town to the eastern communes and Phu Cat District remain under up to a metre of water.

In the province's Van Canh district, soil and rocks on the Dai slope slid on to the newly built road below, covering 3km of it.

Seven people have been killed and two injured so far in the floods while one person is missing. Besides, 85 houses have collapsed and 117 are severely damaged.

The total damage is estimated at 513 billion VND (26 million USD).

The Binh Dinh People's Committee has asked the Government for 150 billion VND (7.7 million USD) besides 3,000 tonnes of rice, 400,000 doses of foot-and-mouth disease vaccines, 500,000 doses of cholera vaccines for pigs, and 20 tonnes of disinfectants./.

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Rural residents pay through the nose

Local residents buy food at Dong Da Market in central Da Nang City. Residents in rural areas miss out on price-stabilised products sold at wholesale markets and supermarkets in urban areas. — VNS Photo Xuan Quang

Local residents buy food at Dong Da Market in central Da Nang City. Residents in rural areas miss out on price-stabilised products sold at wholesale markets and supermarkets in urban areas. — VNS Photo Xuan Quang

HA NOI — Residents in rural areas are missing out on price-stabilised products that are mainly being sold at wholesale markets and supermarkets in urban areas.

Nguyen Thi Yen, from Suoi Ngoc Hamlet in Ha Noi's Tien Xuan Commune, said she had heard that some shops were meant to be selling price-stabilised goods in rural areas but that she had yet to encounter one.

Tien Xuan Commune has been asked to establish two shops to sell inflation-busting low-cost goods. However, Pham Van Tinh, the commune's Party committee secretary, said there had been a supply problem.

"There are no shops at the moment because the commune has not yet received any price-stabilised products."

Elsewhere in Da Nang City, six shops selling price-stabilised rice have been established. However, all of them are based in central districts where locals earn higher incomes than their rural counterparts.

In Hoa Vang District, which is largely populated by poor farmers, low-skilled workers and students, there are no outlets.

Rice is meant to be sold at 10 per cent below the market price at certain outlets. However, Le Thi Minh said she hadn't even heard of the programme. Furthermore, she said the price had actually risen almost daily.

It is a similar story in Cuu Long (Mekong) delta provinces where low-cost rice is sold mainly at supermarkets and wholesale markets in urban areas.

"I don't have a clue where to find one of these outlets selling price-stabilised food," said Le Thanh Chien, a farmer from Tan Quy Dong Ward in Dong Thap Province.

Nguyen Van Chien, deputy head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade's Domestic Market Department, said a lack of funds was hampering the programme.

Chien called on provincial authorities to implement the programme HCM City, Ha Noi and Da Nang had done.

"The price stabilising programme is aimed at the poor," he said.

Le Viet Tuoi, deputy director of the Da Nang Department of Industry and Trade, admitted that the programme had not been fully implemented.

He attributed the failure of the programme to a lack of co-ordination among relevant offices and the Da Nang Food Joint-Stock Company, which was tasked with implementing the scheme.

Tuoi pledged to take steps to ensure more people got access to below-market-price goods.

Vu Quang Tuan, deputy director of the Thai Binh Province Department of Industry and Trade, said it was easier to implement the programme in cities such as Ha Noi and HCM City.

"The department does not have the money to fund the scheme," Tuan said.

He added that in Thai Binh, there was a high proportion of poor farmers who could not afford expensive products such as canned goods.

"Farmers are put at the greatest disadvantage because they are endeavouring to supply agricultural products for the price stabilising programme but do not get access to cheap goods," Tuan said.

Participants at a workshop in Ha Noi last Thursday to review the "Vietnamese people using Vietnamese goods" campaign that was launched a year ago, were told that more than 58 per cent of consumers were interested in home-produced products.

They also heard that enterprises focused on urban residents because they had greater purchasing power than their rural counterparts.

Yet according to a survey conducted by the Central Institute of Economic Management, rural areas consumed 70 per cent of domestically made food stuffs, that 70 per cent of consumers lived in rural areas and that 97 per cent of retail outlets were located in those parts.

The institute also cited other surveys conducted by different organisations that showed that the number of rural customers was three times that in urban areas. — VNS

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Xe om drivers to receive ID badges

Xe om drivers wait for passengers in HCM City. Xe om and three-wheel vehicle drivers will wear their licence ID cards beginning on January 1 next year. — VNS Photo Truong Vi

Xe om drivers wait for passengers in HCM City. Xe om and three-wheel vehicle drivers will wear their licence ID cards beginning on January 1 next year. — VNS Photo Truong Vi

HCM CITY — Drivers of xe om (motorbike taxis) and three-wheeled vehicles will be required to wear a licence ID card on their shirts under a new regulation issued by the HCM City People's Committee, effective January 1.

To obtain the cards, the drivers must be at least 16 years old, pass a traffic health check and have a valid driving licence.

Drivers can apply for the card from a ward-level People's Committee.

The card, valid for five years, will be issued or reissued within three days after the required documents are submitted.

Nguyen Ngoc Tuong, deputy head of the HCM City Traffic Safety Department, said placing the xe om service under the management of city authorities would improve traffic safety and customer service.

Ton Van Khe, a xe om driver on Khanh Hoi Street in Ward 6 in District 4, welcomed the move, saying it would increase customer confidence in their services.

In May, Nguyen Van Thuan, head of Ministry of Transport's Traffic Safety Department, called for improved management of xe om and three-wheeled transportation services. — VNS

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Red Cross lifts ties in Laos, Cambodia

HCM CITY — The Viet Nam Red Cross will help its Lao and Cambodian counterparts train their staff, increase medical services and conduct free eye surgery for people in their border provinces.

Tran Ngoc Tang, President of the Viet Nam Red Cross, made the commitment at a Viet Nam-Laos-Cambodia Red Cross Leaders' Meeting in HCM City last Saturday.

Tang said co-operation between the three countries' associations had contributed to improving the living conditions of people in border provinces.

During the past four years of work in the field, the Viet Nam Red Cross has helped provide health care and services worth more than VND8 billion (US$410,000), he said.

The meeting reviewed the implementation of co-operation agreements between the three Red Cross organisations during the 2006-10 period. Participants also discussed co-operation programmes for the next five years.

The three associations would encourage all border provinces to better share information on natural disasters and diseases while increasing discussions on preventive measures, mutual assistance and improvement of health care during emergency situations, Tang said.

He noted that the three groups would also share information on their activities, international Red Cross movements and humanitarian co-operation programmes. — VNS

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