Thứ Sáu, 12 tháng 8, 2011

Rubella becomes a nightmare for many pregnant women
A mother forced to give up her child because of rubella
An outbreak of the virus started in northern Vietnam in the middle of the year. The disease has forced thousands of pregnant women to decide whether or not to abort their child. However, even with new rubella diagnosis methods, the number of pregnant women who opt to take the test is still relatively small.
Doctors and difficult decisions
Associate Professor Le Anh Tuan, who is also Deputy Director of the Central Obstetrics Hospital, shared, “I’ve never seen such a great number of pregnant women undergoing abortions. Since January 2011, over 2,000 pregnant women have been hospitalised for rubella. Over half of them have been compelled to have abortions, due to possible effects of the disease on their babies.”
According to Tuan, at one time, the hospital diagnosed about 200 pregnant women per week with rubella. But many of these diagnoses were too late. The tests are able to confirm whether or not the patient is infected, but cannot pinpoint the time of infection.
It is also difficult for doctors to give advice on the effects the disease might have on the unborn child. These women are given advice based on past international research, he said.
Tuan added that doctors often advise infected mothers to undergo abortions if they are less than 12 weeks pregnant.
“In many cases, we just give them advice without suggesting abortion, but the mothers sometimes decide to abort on their own because of possible deformities,” he said.
Tuan said that a woman in Hanoi who got pregnant, after several in-vitro fertilisations, started showing hives in the 12th week of pregnancy. She was advised to go to Singapore for a test. A short time later, under the advice of doctors, she came back to the hospital for an abortion.
Despite prevention efforts, the Central Obstetrics Hospital recorded 20 newborn babies with the virus, four of whom died just after birth.
Since late June, the hospital has started using new testing methods with a 95% accuracy rate, but which cost VND1.5 million (USD72.7).
To date, the hospital has used these new testing methods on about 40 expectant mothers. They should be carried out between five and seven weeks of infection, although many expectant mothers find it difficult to define the moment of infection. Others are hesitant to take the test because they are close to the time of maternal leave.

    Thứ Tư, 10 tháng 8, 2011

    England riots: pressure to scrap police cuts as Birmingham mourns its dead


    Tariq Jahan speaks to the media
    England riots: Tariq Jahan, father of one of the three people killed in Birmingham, speaks to the media. Photograph: Carl de Souza/AFP
    David Cameron is facing growing cabinet pressure to rethink the coalition's policing cuts in the wake of the deaths of three young Birmingham men, who were hit by a car during violent disturbances in the city.
    As the Police Federation warned of a "catastrophe" if similar riots erupted after the cuts were introduced, a senior government source said the Home Office would be advised to take a fresh look at its plans to cut £2bn from police funding over the next few years. "The optics have changed," the source told the Guardian.
    Cameron said the cuts would not lead to a "reduction in visible policing". He is expected to announce some emergency funding when he addresses the Commons on Thursday, to cover the extra costs of policing this week's riots, as well as the possibility of insurance claims against police on the grounds they provided no protection to businesses in a riot.
    But there are fears in Whitehall that the Home Office plan to make savings in the police service could leave an "exposed flank" in any future riots. London's mayor Boris Johnson warned the government against cutting numbers. "The case was always pretty frail and it's been substantially weakened. This is not the time to think about making substantial cuts in police numbers," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
    The pressure on Cameron followed a day of rising tensions in Birmingham as community leaders and police appealed for calm following the death of Haroon Jahan, 21, and brothers Shazad Ali, 30 and Abdul Musavir, 31. The three were part of a group of around 80 guarding a petrol station and shops from looters in Winson Green when they were victims of a hit-and-run in the early hours of Wednesday. A murder inquiry has been launched, and a 32-year-old man is being questioned.
    Amid fears the deaths could spark inter-communal reprisals, the distraught father of Jahan made an emotional appeal to the community, revealing he had desperately tried to resuscitate his youngest son.
    Holding a photograph of Haroon, Tariq Jahan, said he was nearby and rushed to help. "I ran towards the commotion and the first guy I found was someone I didn't know. I started giving him CPR until someone pointed out that the guy behind me was my son on the floor," he said.
    "So I started CPR on my own son, my face was covered in blood, my hands were covered in blood. Why, why?
    "He was trying to help his community and he has been killed." Describing his son, a mechanic and keen boxer, as "a very well-liked kid", he said: "I can't describe to anybody what it feels like to lose a son. He was the youngest of three, and anything I ever wanted done, I would always ask Haroon to sort it out for me.
    "A day from now, maybe two days from now, the whole world will forget and nobody will care."
    In a message to the local community, he implored: "Today we stand here to plead with all the youth to remain calm, for our communities to stand united.
    "This is not a race issue. The family has received messages of sympathy and support from all parts of society."
    Visibly emotional, Jahan added: "I lost my son. Blacks, Asians, whites – we all live in the same community. Why do we have to kill one another? Why are we doing this? Step forward if you want to lose your sons. Otherwise, calm down and go home – please." Haroon, Shazad, and Abdul Musavir who ran a local carwash, were standing near the petrol station on Dudley Road when they were hit. Shazad, who had a degree in business management, had married in March and his new wife is pregnant. The three were said to be protecting property after a Jet petrol station had been robbed the previous day.
    One witness said four carloads of young African-Caribbean men had cruised down Dudley Road and suggested there had been no doubt what they were planning to loot.
    The Bishop of Aston, the Rt Rev Andrew Watson, warned of events "potentially having an ugly race dimension", following a heated meeting between local residents at a mosque. Anger was palpable. "Of course it was deliberate. No way was it an accident," said one eyewitness. "The driver went on to the pavement and rammed them. He knew what he was doing.
    "If the police don't sort this one out quickly, there will be race riots," added the man, who declined to be named, but who has given a statement to police.
    Mohammed Chowdhri, a family friend, said: "I have known Haroon since he was a baby, we are all absolutely devastated. He was fed up with the rioters and the looters and he was determined that they would not destroy our community."
    As shoes taken off by respectful mourners formed a growing heap at a local mosque, community leaders moved rapidly to spread Jahan's message and add words of their own.
    "These were bright young guys we've lost," said one man. "They knew the meaning of work and got themselves decent jobs. The brothers had a carwash which was another business which might have been targeted, and Haroon worked as a mechanic in a garage. "They were well-known round here.
    The bishop said that extended families were part of a very strong network in the community which added to the strength of feelings. Sobia Nazia, a cousin of the brothers, said: "They were brothers to everybody. They used to look out for everyone. They were heroes. I heard people describing them on Facebook as brothers to one and all."
    She added: "We don't want anything more to happen – just the culprits brought to justice. We don't want other families to suffer. It's the youth. They have no knowledge, they have no jobs and they are bored."
    Warnings of racial violence came in advance of parliament being recalled on Thursday and as Cameron announced contingency plans were in place to deploy water cannon at 24 hours notice if necessary as part of a police "fightback" to contain the rioting and looting that has swept England since Saturday.
    On Wednesday night hundreds of police in riot gear were deployed to Eltham, south-east London, where men were on the street for a second night as self-appointed protectors of the community. Police briefly clashed on Eltham Hill with about 200 men, some chanting "EDL" [English Defence League], and bottles were thrown.
    One local man, Jay Evans, told the Guardian there were a number of English Defence League members present "trying to jump on the bandwagon" but said they were "an extremely small minority".

    Earlier, the home secretary Theresa May ordered chief constables to cancel "all police leave" to deal with the rioting crisis, saying "maximising the police presence on the street must be a priority", in affected areas.
    An emergency reserve of riot police has been put on standby as senior police tackle the unprecedented challenges of disorder, which has spread from London, to cities including Birmingham, Manchester, Salford, Nottingham, Bristol and Liverpool.
    Courts were sitting throughout the night, as the first of those to be prosecuted in connection with looting and violent disorder appeared, including a primary school assistant, and an 11-year-old boy.
    Visiting Birmingham on Wednesday, Cameron described the deaths in the city as "a truly dreadful incident", adding that the police were "working night and day to get to the bottom of what happened and bring the perpetrators to justice".
    Earlier, as he left a meeting of the government's emergency committee Cobra, he said every contingency was being looked at and "nothing is off the table" in providing police with the resources needed to tackle the disturbance.
    Police would get whatever resources they needed, and legal backing for whatever tactics they needed to employ. "We needed a fightback and a fightback is under way."
    The riots had shown "pockets of society" were not just broken "but frankly sick". He said the root cause was "mindless selfishness, and "complete lack of responsibility in our society."
    "When we see children as young as 13, looting and laughing, when we see the disgusting sight of an injured young man with people pretending to help him while they are robbing him, it is clear that there are things that are badly wrong in our society." Cameron said he expected prison sentences for those convicted of violent disorder, and that detectives were going through CCTV. Looters would be tracked down "picture by picture" and he would not let "phoney concerns about human rights get in the way of the publication of these pictures".
    In London, 820 people have now been arrested in connection with violence, disorder and looting – with 279 charged. In total across England there have been more than 1,300 arrested.
    Six forces are now receiving reinforcements as part of the national mutual aid operation set up to deal with the scale of the looting.
    London, Manchester, the West Midlands, Gloucestershire, Nottinghamshire and Avon and Somerset have all been sent officers. Sir Hugh Orde, the president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, said if other forces requested help they would be supported.
    Orde, who has been having regular discussions with the prime minister and the home secretary at Cobra, said: "Clearly these are challenging times. We are in an unprecedented situation but we are determined to do our best to ensure that forces have adequate mutual aid for anyone who requests it."
    A mobile reserve of police support units to provide a rapid response for forces, and made up of public order officers across the country, will be kept in one or two geographic locations to be called upon when needed.
    While West Midlands police forensic teams prioritised the Winson Green incident, the force said that 11 other people were suspected of involvement.
    The chief constable said: "Like everyone else in Birmingham, my concern now will be that that single incident doesn't lead to a much wider and more general level of distrust, and even worse, violence, between different communities."
    On the forecourt of the garage where the three died, members of the local Muslim and Sikh community came together for prayers in a candlelit vigil. Among the 50 men stood Tariq Jahan. Many applauded his appeal for communal peace, and as prayers ended, one cried out: "united we stand, divided we fall".
    On Wednesday night, police named the man found shot in his car in Croydon following rioting on Monday night as Trevor Ellis, 26. He suffered a gunshot wound to the head.

    The shocking story of the newspaper crime reporter who knew too much

    · Journalist kills himself as he is linked to four deaths
    · Police suspicion raised by use of unattributable facts
    Vlado Tanevski
    Vlado Tanevski, 56, had been charged with two murders and suspected of up to two more when he killed himself Photographer: Eastway
    When Vlado Taneski wrote about the serial killer stalking his hometown in Macedonia, his eye for detail was such that the story was soon riveting readers. The journalist's inside knowledge of the brutal murders of three elderly women in the tiny town of Kicevo ensured that newspaper editors gave his columns prominence.
    Yesterday the 56-year-old father-of-two killed himself by dunking his head in a bucket of water in the toilet at a prison in the town of Tetovo, after it was revealed he had been charged with the murders he had written about.
    "All these women were raped, molested and murdered in the most terrible way and we have very strong evidence that Taneski was responsible for all three," said police spokesman Ivo Kotevski speaking from the capital Skopje. "In the end there were many things that pointed to him as a suspect and led us to file charges against him for two of the murders," he added. "We were close to charging him with a third murder, and hoped he would give us details of a fourth woman who disappeared in 2003 - because we believe he was involved in that case, too."
    Of all the things which gave Taneski away, police point to his in-depth coverage of a story which is being reported as one of the most bizarre events to have befallen the two-million strong mini-state.
    The three women were aged between 65 and 56. Zivana Temelkoska, Ljubica Licoska, and Mitra Simjanoska were each beaten repeatedly and strangled with a phone cable. Temelkoska was murdered in May, Licoska in February last year and Simjanoska in 2005.
    They shared a common background in being cleaners, a job which Taneski's deceased mother had held for years.
    Each of the three bodies was discovered wrapped in plastic bags and dumped and discarded around Kicevo, a drab town southwest of Skopje with a population of fewer than 20,000. The fourth woman, aged 78, went missing in 2003, and her body has never been found.
    It was the ostensibly mild-mannered journalist's intricate account of the murders which led to suspicion.
    But what made it unmistakable was his inclusion of details police had chosen not to release. Unlike any of his journalist rivals, Taneski knew the type of phone chord the killer used as his "signature weapon" - reporting, without attribution, that the cord had been used to strangle as well as tie up the bodies of the women; and, even more brazenly, he speculated about the chronology of the murders.
    "On May 18, just after the gruesome murder of Zivana Temelkoska, he called and pitched the story to us," said Goce Trpkovski, a reporter at the daily Nova Makedonija.
    "He was very quietly spoken but also very persuasive. As a contributor we published his story as the main article on the crime pages the next day - under the headline 'A serial killer stalks Kicevo, too' - because the murders followed a series of killings in Ochrid, although they were nothing like this.
    "To tell the truth, I didn't believe the story - almost nothing happens in Macedonia, and suddenly we have two serial killers stalking our tiny country in a matter of months."
    What neither the staff at Utrinski Vesnik, another newspaper that he contributed to, or any of his many friends, could also believe, was how a man described as "unbelievably low-key and soft-natured" was capable of such crimes.
    Yesterday, his estranged wife told Canal 5, a local TV station, that she had enjoyed "an ideal marriage" with Taneski for 31 years. "He was always quiet and gentle. The only time I ever saw him get aggressive was when we were living with his parents," she told the channel.
    As police released more details yesterday, it did emerge there was also a darker side to Taneski's life. A large collection of pornographic videos and magazines was found in his summer house.
    And, adding to the fact the victims were cleaners, as was Taneski's dead mother, police noted all three bore a striking resemblance to her. He is believed to have had a troubled relationship with his mother, one which worsened considerably after his father killed himself in 1990.
    "There is obvious symbolism in the fact that his mother, like the victims, was a cleaner," said Antoni Novotni, a professor who heads the psychiatric clinic in Skopje. "This is pure speculation - as he was never my patient - but one explanation could be that he wanted to be caught by letting slip what he did in his articles," Novotni told the Guardian.
    "Perhaps he saw it as a way of resolving his inner problems, and getting rid of the burden which came with killing these women."
    Extract
    From a piece by Vlado Taneski, published in Nova Makedonija on May 19 2008
    The people of Kicevo live in fear after another butchered body has been found in the town. The corpse strongly resembles one discovered 20 kilometres outside Kicevo last year and there is a possibility that these monstrous murders are the work of a serial killer.
    Both women were tortured and murdered in the same fashion, which rules out the possibility that this could have been done by two different people. The Ochrid serial killer murdered three people [in 2007] but his victims were all street-based money exchangers and his motive was to rob them.
    The motive of the Kicevo monster remains unclear. Both women were friends and living in the same part of town. Police have a few suspects who they are interrogating.
    The latest body was found in rubbish dump. It had been tied up with a piece of phone cable with which the woman had clearly been previously strangled

    Belinda Stewart-Wilson — Will's Mum

    "It's all in the boys' imaginations, they're so rude about her. She's not really a prostitute or a stripper, but in their heads she's all of those things"
    Full name: Belinda Stewart-Wilson
    DOB: April 16, 1971
    Place of birth: London, England
    Occupation: Actress
    Her History in FHM's 100 Sexiest Women
    2011 #64

    Belinda Stewart-Wilson facts

    • Belinda is best known for her role as Will's hot mum in E4's The Inbetweeners.
    • She's also appeared in the likes of Look Around You, The Peter Serafinowicz Show and The Armstrong and Miller Show.
    • She used to have to wear an eye-patch to straighten up a squint she had as a kid.
    • For their next album Irish band Pugwash have written a song called 'Dear Belinda' for her upcoming 40th birthday.
     

    Why we love Belinda Stewart-Wilson

    Belinda Stewart-Wilson is probably a name you don’t know. Her best-known character’s name - Polly McKenzie – is still maybe a name you don’t know. You’ll know her (personally) as Will’s mum. Yup, his mum is the reason that you wish you lived next to Will and had to hitch a ride to school every day. Alongside Neil’s sister, she makes family characters fully worthwhile, and gives Jay endless ammunition of ‘your mum’ lines.
    Belinda herself was not someone you’d have seen often at school – her dad was in the army and her family often moved to different military posts. Still, things were soon normal for the Londoner, as the family moved back to the capital when her dad became an Equerry to the Queen. What’s an Equerry? Well, Wikipedia pretty much says they are an attendant, but what they actually do we have no idea. Still, there’s a long list of previous equerries on Wiki too, including Belinda’s dad, so he was important. She even met the Queen a bunch of times, which gives her a touch of class added to her hotness.
    Before she became the figure of every Inbetweener’s imagination (except Will), Belinda was forging her way in the likes of Holby City, and has recently been appearing in the ITV sci-fi show Primeval. She says comedy is more her thing though, and has also appeared in the likes of Broken News and The IT Crowd. Hot and funny, the perfect mum. As long as she’s not your mum.

    Will's mum's hot stuff in the buff

    Breast scene of the movie? ... Belinda Stewart Wilson
    Breast scene of the movie? ... Belinda Stewart Wilson

    Most Read Stories

    WILL'S mum would go down even more a storm with The Inbetweeners boys if this is how she greeted them.

    But for those hoping this is a new still from the show's upcoming movie spin-off, you're in for disappointment.

    Actress Belinda Stewart Wilson has stripped topless for new film drama All That Way For Love.

    The star of the hit TV show - who plays Polly McKenzie - displays no signs of coyness as she gets down and dirty with an onscreen lover.

    Romp ... Belinda Stewart Wilson and Andrew Simpson get to know each other
    Romp ... Belinda Stewart Wilson and Andrew Simpson get to know each other

    The movie tells the story of a young Irishman, Simon (Andrew Simpson), who travels across Africa to reach his girlfriend.

    He ends up hitching a ride with warring European couple Kate, played by Belinda, and Casper (Derek De Lint).

    During the journey, the idealistic lad romps with seductress Kate.

    He'll be the envy of Simon, Jay and Neil for years to come...
    Quantcast   Tell us what you think by adding a comment on this article. You can now sign in using your Facebook or Twitter account by clicking the logos below, or you can register for a MY Sun account

    Scientists fear hydropower projects pose major environmental threat
    Dozens of scientists have called for the suspension of the Dong Nai 6 and Dong Nai 6A hydropower projects due to their potentially negative impact on the environment.
    Scientists underline the likely environmental impact due to the projects
    The Vietnam Union of Science and Technology Associations (VUSTA), Cat Tien National Park’s management board and Vietnam River Network (VRN) co-organised a seminar in the southern province of Dong Nai to analyse an environmental impact assessment of the proposed projects.
    Pros and cons
    At the seminar, the project investor, the Duc Long Gia Lai Group Joint Stock Company, emphasised the importance of the hydropower plants in boosting the country’s power supply and mitigating the current power shortage.
    The projects could supply sufficient power for the central highlands provinces of Dak Nong and Lam Dong, as well as the southern province of Binh Phuoc, contributing some VND143 billion (USD6.93 million) to local budgets annually.
    Dr. Dao Trong Tu said he understood the significance of the projects in terms of ensuring national energy security, but pointed out the environmental impact caused.
    According to Tu, the high density of hydropower projects along the Dong Nai River may have a negative impact on the environment, ecological system and livelihood of those living off the river. The projects could affect the sanctuary in the middle and the upstream areas while changing the river’s current.
    Dr. Vu Ngoc Long, Deputy Director of the Institute of Tropical Biology, said Cat Tien National Park was home to a wealth of rare and precious species.
    He was concerned that “the construction of Dong Nai 6 and Dong Nai 6A hydropower projects could create a negative impact on the extraordinarily biodiversity present in Cat Tien National Park, threatening the conservation efforts made by the park over many years.”
    Pham Thi Cam Nhung, Co-ordinator of the World Wildlife Fund for Nature in the Greater Mekong Sub-region agreed that the plants would greatly affect the park’s ecological system. Noise from engines and explosives used in the construction would affect animal breeding and wildlife.
    Waste and wastewater from the construction would pollute the environment for many types of aquatic creatures, she emphasised.
    Do or don’t?
    Dr. Dao Trong Tu said construction of any hydropower project would have an environmental impact. However, this didn’t mean that he was totally opposed to hydropower development. He just called for careful and accurate assessment of environmental impact of these projects.
    Dr. Vu Ngoc Long said, “As a scientist, I do find it difficult and costly to deal with the negative environmental impact such projects can have. It could be infeasible to totally avoid all negative environmental impacts of these two projects.”
    Dr. Le Anh Tuan, from Can Tho University’s Institute of Climate Change Research recommended the projects should be suspended. He listed three reasons, including possible shortcomings during their operation, low economic efficiency, and an incomplete and unpersuasive environmental impact assessment.
    “As an environmental activist, if possible, I’d not support the construction of these hydropower plants. If the investor insisted on the construction, an independent consultancy group should be set up with members from different agencies. More efforts should also be made to conduct more careful environmental assessments and prepare effective solutions.”
    At the end of July, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung approved the national power development plan for the 2011-2020 period that included the Dong Nai 6 and Dong Nai 6A hydropower projects.
    Dr. Vu Ngoc Long said the projects’ construction sites are living habitats for several rare species
    Scientists carrying out environmental studies on the affect of the projects
      “Economic area” turns into a ghost town
      A project to build a new resettlement area in Thanh Hoa Province has remains half-complete and mostly abandoned after a decade, with nobody to take responsibility.
      Houses abandoned for years
      As planned, local government of the central province of Thanh Hoa would have carried out a project o build up a ‘new economic area’, composed of 25 households, in Yen Giang Commune, Yen Dinh District. However, the project is still only half finished after 10 years.
      Currently, dozens of houses have deteriorated after having been being abandoned for several years. Even though it was designed as an economic area, it still hasn’t been equipped with electricity, water supply or a road system.
      Abandoned houses
      Only two of the houses in Yen Giang Commune economic area are inhibited. These families have lived in bad conditions right from beginning.
      Ms. Hong, a resident in the area, said, “We moved to this area after we got married. At first, we were very happy because we thought we would live in the conditions promised by the local government when the project was finished. But nothing about it met our expectations. We’ve had to struggle. There is no electricity, no water and bad roads. But now, because of our financial situation, we have no choice but to stay here.”
      The project, which began construction in 2000, was designed to provide accommodation for 25 young families with two to three children each. The idea was to have a low population density, while supporting underprivileged families at the same time.
      Not according to plan
      Families were selected, and each provided with a 200 square metre lot, along with some money to cover the construction of the house foundation and the drilling of a water well.
      Initially, the project was welcomed by the people of Yen Giang Commune. Dozens of houses were built in the area and many young couples moved there with high expectations.
      However, while these families were in the process of getting bank loans to build their new homes, the entire project became stagnant. None of the other basic amenities - electricity, water, roads - were ever delivered.
      Luu Hong Lam, a resident of the area, shared, “At first, we were very happy. More than ten families were living in the area some years ago. However, with the lack of electricity and water, and and no roads most of them were forced to go back to their old houses. It’s been a decade, and this place is still half-completed.”
      Mr. Ha, another local man, said, “We are struggling with a lack of electricity and water. But the government’s behavior has only added to our problems. We still haven’t even received money to drill a well.”
      Shirking responsibility
      When asked about the project, Nguyen Van Hao, Chairman of Yen Giang Communal People’s Committee, said, “I took the office after the project had already started, so I know nothing about the implementation process. I only know that just two out of 25 targeted families are living in the area due to the conditions there.”
      Another official, Ngo Thi Hoa, Chairman of Yen Dinh District People’s Committee, said “I don’t know much about this project. I heard that many houses have been abandoned for years, and those still living there are facing a lot of difficulties.”
      Do The Hanh, Deputy Director of the provincial Department of Agriculture and Rural Development explained, “Ten years ago, the project was to be carried out across Thanh Hoa Province. However, a short time later, funding for the project was cut off without informing the the people who were living there.”
      Those who live there face a tough situation
      Run-down houses

      Thứ Ba, 9 tháng 8, 2011

      1. What does Susan have to do on Saturday morning?

      A. walk the dog

      B. clean the house

      C. go to the doctor

      Ted: Oh, I was wondering if you’d like to get together and do something, like catch a movie or take a walk down by the lake.
      Susan: I’d love to, but I’m really going to be busy all day on Saturday.
      Ted: What do you have going on that day?
      Susan: First, my mom asked me to help clean the house in the morning, and then I have a dentist appointment at 12:30. I can’t miss that ’cause I’ve canceled twice before.
      Ted: Well, what about after that?
      Susan: Well, I’m going to be running around all day. After the dentist appointment, I need to meet Julie at 2:00 to help her with her science project that’s due on Monday morning at school.
      Ted: Okay, but are you free after that?
      Susan: Hardly. then I have to pick up my brother from soccer practice at 4:30, and my mom asked me to cook dinner for the family at 5:30. I feel like a slave sometimes. Then, I have to clean the dishes and finish reading my history assignment. Who knows how long THAT’ll take.
      Ted: Wow, sounds like you’re going to have a full day. Hey listen, why don’t I come over later in the evening, and we can make some popcorn and watch a movie.
      Susan: Oh, that’d be great, but our video machine is broken.
      Ted. Huh. Well, let’s just play a game or something.
      Susan: Sounds good, but give me a call before you come. My mom might try to come up with something else for me to do.


      2. Where does Susan have to go at 12:30?

      A. to school

      B. to the dentist
      C. to the science museum

       3. What time is Susan meeting with Julie?

      A. 12:00 PM

      B. 1:00 PM

      C. 2:00 PM

      4. What will Susan do after she cooks dinner?

      A. clean the dishes

      B. play soccer with her brother

      C. call a friend

       5. Why can’t they watch a video at Susan’s house?

      A. They can’t decide on a video.

      B. Susan’s mother is going to use it.

      C. The machine isn’t working.
       
      Ted: So, Susan, do you have anything planned for this Saturday?
      Susan: Uh, I’m kind of busy. Why do you ask?
      Dong Van stone plateau popular with visitors
      The Dong Van Stone Plateau in the northern mountainous province of Ha Giang attracted 30,000 tourists, including over 10,000 foreigners, helping raise the province’s tourism revenue to VND41 billion (USD1.98 million) in July.
      The Dong Van Stone Plateau
      Covering a total area of nearly 2,400 sq.m., the Dong Van Stone Plateau housed 34 percent of the province’s population.
      The recognition of Dong Van as the first geopark in Vietnam and the second in Southeast Asia by the Global Network of National Geoparks (GGN) in October last year had created an impetus for local tourism development.
      Ha Giang province developed community cultural villages and tourism infrastructure in an effort to lure more than 350,000 tourists in 2011, bringing in around VND300 billion (USD14.55 million) in revenue.
      Also, since 2007, Ha Giang province invested over VND989 billion (USD48 million) to build 91 water reservoirs on the Dong Van Stone Plateau, of which 37 have been completed and put into use.
      The operation of the reservoirs helps solve long-lasting water shortages and improve the lives of ethnic minority people in the province’s four poor mountainous districts, namely Quan Ba, Yen Minh, Dong Van and Meo Vac.
      They also help boost economic development and maintain political stability in the border area of the nation.
      Luxurious tour providers target domestic market
      High grade tourism services have been thought, by default, as the services reserved only for VIP foreign travellers. However, this perception has changed since tour organizers have realized the high potentials from the domestic market.
      Luxury tours usually do not have fixed itineraries. The clients who take luxury tours are always high income earners, who do not regret spending money on luxurious trips. And because they pay high, they always demand high quality of services.
      Therefore, high grade tour organizers do not offer the tour packages with the fixed destinations. In general, they only offer the tours with only the information about the standards of hotel rooms, meals and the first destinations. Meanwhile, travelers would choose the services, destinations themselves, and all of their requirements must be satisfied by tour organizers, including the things which seem to be impossible.
      Therefore, there has been no limitation on the fees for luxurious tours. The profits earned from high grade tours are always directly proportional to the capability of tour organisers to satisfy clients.
      Luxury Travel, the first Vietnamese travel firm which specializes in luxury tourism, has said that every year, it serves some 10,000 VIP clients, while its revenue reached 30 million dollars in 2010.
      It is not a surprise at all that there was the tour organized by Luxury Travel which had the sky-high tour fee of USD1000 per day per traveler. The travel firm always offers excellent services for luxury tours with luxurious cars and good looking drivers who can speak English well, with the tour guides who can speak two foreign languages fluently and have deep social knowledge. Especially, the tour guides have been trained in psychology to understand travellers well.
      Since the tour fees are always high, luxury tours only targeted international VIPs – politicians, businessmen, famous persons, or MICE (meeting, incentive, conference, and exhibition) tourists. Meanwhile, the domestic market has been ignored, because tour organisers believe that Vietnamese people would not spend too much money on travel.
      However, they have changed their mind when they have realised that more and more Vietnamese people have booked outbound tours recently. Big travel firms such as Saigontourist or Vietravel, which have designed a lot of outbound tours to far markets, including the Europe, Australia, the US, South Africa, Japan and South Korea, have reported all have reported satisfactory numbers of bookings.
      However, analysts have noted that the outbound tours with offered discounts still can attract more travelers, even for the tours with high quality services.
      This has been explained by travel firms that many Vietnamese high income earners still want to design tours themselves instead of using the services of travel firms. They also think that it would very difficult to change the habit: Vietnamese VIPs would father to take a lot of self-designed trips within a year, during which they do not regret spending money, than taking super tours provided by travel firms.
      However, Nguyen Duy Hieu, Head of the Marketing Division of Viet Premier Tours, thinks that Vietnamese VIPs choose to travel by themselves because they cannot find high grade tours for them.
      According to Hieu, VIPs take super luxurious tours remain an unfamiliar trend in Vietnam, because there are not many firms which can provide the tours specifically designed for them. It is also because the provided services still cannot satisfy their demand.
      Viet Premier Tours is offering the first 6-star tours in Vietnam, targeting Vietnamese businessmen. The services of the 6-star tours include high grade cars, first class air tickets, 5-star meals, 6-star hotel room rates and the high quality services to be provided in accordance with travellers’ demands.
      “The most important things that travel firms need to have are that they well understand what VIP travellers want and they can organise tours in a professional way,” Hieu said.
      Touring The Thu Bon River
      The Thu Bon River basin covers an area of over 10,000 square kilometers in Quang Nam Province and is ranked fourth for hydropower potential in Vietnam. But to the local people, the river is considered the lifeblood that has helped raise many generations of residents on both banks.
      Part of the Thu Bon River with cloud-covered mountains in the background
      Originating from Ngoc Linh Mountain in Dak Glei District, Kon Tum Province, the Thu Bon River flows into the sea via Cua Dai Estuary in Hoi An Town in Quang Nam Province. A tributary runs to the Vinh Dien River to pour water into the Han River in Danang City. And before going to the sea, part of the Thu Bon River courses through the Truong Giang River to pour into An Hoa Tam Quang Bay in Nui Thanh District.
      From Vinh Dien up to Giao Thuy T-junction, one can see mulberry fields along the river banks. A folk art was born here, using literary figures to show the intelligence, optimism and sentiments of the locals.
      For a long time, the Thu Bon River has been famous for the craft of raising silkworms and weaving fabric, and for the endless green mulberry farms stretching along its banks. Along the banks are many well-known craft centers such as Thanh Ha for pottery, Phuoc Kieu for bronze casting, Kim Bong for carpentry, Tra Que for vegetables, Ma Chau for silk, Phu Chiem for rice paper and Que Minh for conical hats.
      Along the banks are numerous wharves and markets reflecting the rural lifestyle, and simple villages steeped in memories. The Trung Phuoc floating market is the busiest trading place in the region.
      The Thu Bon River is likened to the Ganges River in India because it is a silt source forming the delta. Strangely, despite cultural interchange, the very northern and southern banks of the Thu Bon River have their own cultural differences characterised by voices, routine activities, festivals and even relics from each area. In the southern bank, the Champa culture still figures in daily activities, customs and festivals for local residents.
      The Thu Bon Goddess Festival falls on the 12th day of the second lunar month, and is held solemnly in My Luoc Village, where a water procession is the most important part of the ceremony. Locals scoop water from the Thu Bon River and pour it into the jars, then carry them on their heads back to the village in deference to the river.
      In the upstream district of Hiep Duc, locals set up a long house with an altar on the top to suspend a boat. The rituals around the boats aim to honor the “river mother” in the spiritual lives of locals.
      For tourists who are interested in a river tour or an eco-tour to the countryside of Vietnam, taking a boat ride on the Thu Bon River may be their most enjoyable experience when they come to Quang Nam-Danang.
      They can also visit Dai Buong, an orchard village similar to those found in the southern region with rambutan, durian and mangosteen. Tourists will have the chance to enjoy durian wine, which has an unforgettable flavor.
      In Hon Kem-Da Dung area, where the river is narrowed by the cliffs on either bank, novelist Thai Ba Loi stood and gazed at the Thu Bon River and regretted: “On the river, hydropower dams were built, thousands of hectares of forest have been destroyed. Sand is exploited excessively. With such unethical behavior toward nature, people must reap what they sow.”
      If the Thu Bon River, a water mother who opens her arms to hold the holy land which is home to the epic legends of Quang Nam, a traditional cultural stream filled with the colors of the central region’s countryside, and an attractive tour itinerary, is not protected from being destroyed by humans, it cannot retain its beautiful images in the minds of people who love the land.

      Education Minister: Low marks for history not a disaster
      Minister of Education and Training, Pham Vu Luan said that it would not be considered a “disaster” if students nowadays rush to learn foreign languages and informatics, while they pay less attention to literature or history.
      Minister of Education and Training, Pham Vu Luan
      Luan, in the interview given to local press agencies on the sideline of the ongoing National Assembly’s session, admitted that few students want to follow social sciences studies, and that the marks in history at the university entrance exams are too low, which is the problem that needs to be solved. However, Luan believes that this is the problem of not only Vietnam, but of the whole world.
      He said that in order to build a “solid foundation”, it is necessary to make investment for tens of years. Sometimes, things are being done today, but the achievements can be enjoyed only by the next generations. He stressed that it is necessary to keep calm to analyse the education.
      Hundreds of students got zero mark from the latest university entrance exams. What would you say about that?
      University entrance exam is the competitive exams. Therefore, the exam questions should be designed in a way which allows to classify excellent, good, or weak students. The low marks in history are the problem of the computer age.
      Therefore, you can see that the phenomenon is also taking place in the US and many other countries in the world as well, not only in Vietnam. Students now do not want to study history, because the social science does not have much voice in the modern life, while the students good at history do not have many opportunities to find good jobs.
      Informatics is really a hard subject, and it is not attractive to every one. However, without information technology, people cannot live in the modern society. Therefore, people have to learn informatics. Meanwhile, they can find the opportunities to have high income with the informatics knowledge. Therefore, though it is a hard subject, people still rush to learn it and find it interesting.
      Everything depends on the era where you are living in, and depends on the development tendency. History has become less attractive, and the marks in history have decreased. This is not only the story of Vietnam or Asia alone. This is the story of the age, of the current generation, and this has been created by the technology revolution, by the changes and the demands of the labor market.
      But experts have pointed out that it is the problematic teaching method which does not encourage students to learn history?
      It is true. However, we should not only blame on the teaching method. I think that the main goal of teaching history is to help students understand the national traditions and foster patriotism, national pride and sense of responsibility. If we just ask students to remember knowledge today, they will forget tomorrow.
      I once discussed with Historian Duong Trung Quoc about the plan to join forces with the History Institute to change the current teaching method. However, it is really not a simple task. We need to make comprehensive changes, including the goals, curriculums, contents and teaching and learning methods.
      You have said that history has become less attractive because of the tendency in the modern times. What would you explain the fact that Vietnamese people and students know Chinese history better than Vietnamese history?
      I agree with the note, but this is not the story of the education. This is a social story. Vietnamese people have knowledge about Chinese history not because we teach Chinese history at schools, but because they watch many Chinese historical films or read Chinese stories. You should not make mistakes here. It is not happen that Vietnamese students learn Chinese history and then love Chinese history.
      Vietnam opposes China’s violations of sovereignty
      Vietnam has protested over China’s acts of violating the sovereignty and jurisdictional rights of Vietnam and asked that it immediately cease and refrain from recurrence of similar acts.
      Spokesperson of the Vietnam Foreign Ministry Nguyen Phuong Nga made the statement on August 8 in reply to reporters’ questions about Vietnam ’s reaction to a report by China ’s Xinhua news agency on August 2, that China had conducted a scientific survey in the East Sea.
      According to Xinhua, from June 13-July 30, the China Geological Survey cooperated with a French unit to use the Chinese research vessel Tan Bao Hao to conduct a scientific survey in sea areas stretching from the western part of the Hoang Sa (Paracel) archipelago (called “Xisha” in Xinhua’s report) to the northern part of the Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelago (called “Nansha” in Xinhua’s report).
      “Regarding operations of the vessel Tan Bao Hao, the Vietnamese Foreign Ministry’s representatives met the Chinese side and stated Vietnam’s points of view, lodging Vietnam’s protest against China’s acts, which violate the sovereignty and jurisdictional rights of Vietnam, asking China to immediate cease and refrain from recurrence of similar acts,” Nga said.
      Child sexual abuse on the rise in Vietnam
      Vietnam has seen an alarming increase in cases of child sexual abuse in recent years, with some victims as young as six years old.
      Ten year-old girl NHL (second, L) talks to journalist about the old man who abused her when she was on her lottery ticket sale
      At a recent conference on child abuse in Hanoi, the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs (MOLISA) reports that most sexual abuse offenders are acquainted with their victims, either as 'friends' of the family, babysitters or neighbors. Only in a small number of cases are they complete strangers.
      In some shocking cases that have caused much outrage in the public, parental incest occurs where the father or stepfather assaults the victim.
      Alcohol has been identified as one of the contributing factors to the crime, as most offenders have been known to make the assault under the influence of alcohol.
      The number of child sexual abuse across the nation has increased considerably from 200 in 2005 to 1,427, a sevenfold increase, in 2008, according to the MOLISA report.
      In 2010, the number of victims dropped to about 1,000 but the actual figure is believed to be higher as many victims failed to report the crime to the authority due to a sense of shame, family dishonor, social discrimination or private settlement between the victim’s family and the offender.

      As worrying as the growth in the number of child sexual abuse is the increasingly younger age of the victims.

      In the Mekong Delta provinces within the 18 months from 2009 till June last year, 13.5 percent of the girl victims under six were assaulted and 37.2 percent of the victims were in the age group of 6-13.

      Heart-breaking cases on the rise

      NHM, 15, lives in the southern Tay Ninh Province and is one of the victims of incestuous sex abuse -- raped by her own biological father in their home after her mother passed away.

      “He forced me to take the place of my mother when he was drunk,” said the young girl to us in her shabby, desolate small house, with practically no furniture in it but an altar with her mother’s picture on top.

      “Many times, I wanted to tell my grandparents about it but in the morning he became a different person -- a good, gentle father who is devoted to hard work to care for me and my sisters. So I forgot about all that happened the night before.”

      NHM was only taken to hospital for abortion by the father when she was about five months in pregnancy and the neighbors began to notice her unusual large belly.

      After the abortion, her father continued to subject her to sexual abuse. One day, exhausted mentally and physically, NHM went to see her grandmother and told her the truth.

      The father was subsequently arrested and sentenced to six years in prison.

      When we met, NHM talked happily with us about being placed in the foster care of a charitable institution and that she could now return to school.

      “I was adopted by a charitable organization. Now I live in a new home, go to a new school and most importantly, nobody knows about my past so no one looks down on me or discriminate against me,” she said.

      NHL is another heart-breaking case of child sex abuse.

      A 10-year-old orphan who lived with her poor grandmother, she had to walk around the city to sell lottery tickets, earning VND50,000 – 70,000 (USD2.5 – 3.5) a day for daily food.

      In the middle of 2009, she was lured into a 60-year-old neighbor’s house where he sexually abused her and then gave her VND5,000 (USD0.24)

      This went on for more than a year until the abuse was discovered in August 2010 when his neighbors caught him committing the act of assaulting the little girl in his house. The man was seized and handed over to the police.

      With no other source of income for her grandmother and herself, NHL still has to walk the streets of HCM City to sell lottery tickets, where every day she still faces the threat of falling victim to another sexual offender lurking around the corner.
      A new way of literary creation in Vietnam
      The writer Vinh Quyen had over ten works of literature published, most of which were novels and short stories. Of course all of these were written in his native language, Vietnamese. It was not until 2008 that he quietly began to write his first work in English, Debris of Debris. Vinh Quyen was a graduate of the Faculty of Sino-Nom, but had not mastered the English language. For this reason, before he started to write the first lines, he attended on-line English translation courses and pored over a dozen English novels… All of this was done in secrecy. The person he chose to disclose his secret to was me!


      Vinh Quyen was introducing his writing at the College of Saint Benedict, MN, 2009. Photo by Tran Thanh Lieng
      One late Autumn afternoon in 2008, Vinh Quyen walked by while I was having some beer at a sidewalk restaurant. I waved to him; he threw himself into a seat. After some glasses of beer, he said he had been looking for me and wanted my help. I asked him what the deal was. He said he was writing a novel in English, and he was searching for someone ‘well-trained’ in the language to correct his prose. He added that there were a lot of people who had a very good command of English, but in addition to having real proficiency and literary sensibility, the person must also have an understanding of the historical background of the novel.
      I accepted because I both respected him and loved literature. However I was really thinking about it as just something fun to talk about while drinking. Then, the next morning when I checked my email, I was astounded to find a file named ‘Debris’ that was 97 pages long! Even more surprising was that the author said that the document he sent was only one third of his manuscript. To tell the truth, when I first looked at that forest of English words I was panic-stricken, and felt regret for having promised my help. To make the things worse, there were a lot of grammatical errors in his manuscript. However, that feeling of being overwhelmed was gradually replaced by inspiration. Despite the errors and troubles in expressing ideas, which are natural in the work of a self-taught man, Vinh Quyen’s pages also revealed the sensibilities of an avid reader of English language literature. But it was his story that especially attracted me, and that might serve as an explanation as to why I spent more than a year trying to perfect the more than 250 pages of text that was Debris of Debris.

      *

      As the title suggests, the characters of the novel had the fate of debris. Debris made up the historical setting, the society, the family. This debris is even internal to each individual.

      The novel opens on the day the Vietnam War came to an end. The life of peace that came after 1975, however, itself contained countless consequences left over by more than 20 years of war, particularly for the city-dwellers in the South of Vietnam.


      Individuals like Kha, for example, who was a young teacher of literature. He was born in a feudal family. None of his family members joined the resistance. Such a personal and family history was more than enough to create many difficulties for him under the new regime: he was forced to relocate to a rural area; a place of challenge; a place for the re-education of the petit bourgeoisie. And so the wedding between him and My Thuong, who turned out to be the daughter of a revolutionary martyr, was annulled. Marriage with a person like Kha might bring present obstacles to the advancement of her career...

      Or like Phuc, Kha’s fellow teacher, who came from a traditionally anti-communist family. He secretly took part in the counter-revolutionary organization. After being discovered and imprisoned, he pretended to be insane for years. His act was so flawless that even his wife and children believed that he had truly lost his mind. Eventually he was moved to a mental ward, where he was able to contact friends and arrange for him and his family to flee the country. Unfortunately, his boat was attacked by pirates, and he was killed while he tried to protect his wife from being dragged away and raped…

      Like Thuy, Phuc’s wife, who suffered from maltreatment and abuse from the government and society because of the activities of a husband whom she respected but had no love for. Meanwhile, finding herself in a hopeless love with Kha, Thuy seems to have no way out...

      Like Son, a son of a Saigon Army Colonel, who was persuaded by friends to take part in the patriotic students’ movement. Later he was arrested, put in jail and shipped to Con Dao Prison. In the Spring of 1975 Son returned home, only to find that all his family had left for the United States. Despite his participation in the movement, the new government refused to offer him any work because he could not provide definitive proof to their ever-looming question: Might he have been serving in his patriotic activities as a plant for the CIA?

      Like Phan, a medical student, who joined the city patriotic students’ movement. After being hunted down and injured by the Saigon Police, Lai, a prostitute, provided him with protection and looked after his wounds. The time the two spent together brought with it a pleasant spring, and love. Afterwards, Phan disappeared into the jungle to become a liberation soldier. On the day of victory, just as he’d promised himself, Phan returned to marry Lai. But the idea of such a “romantic” marriage was rejected by society. In order to set her husband free, Lai left without a word. After many years of trying, and failing, to find her, Phan happened to meet her by chance one day, working as a prostitute...

      Like Binh, who was a member of one of the student groups for the resistance. On the day of victory he decided to stay in the jungle because he believed he lover would reject him because of his face, which had been burnt by a napalm bomb...

      Like Mr. Hoanh, the commander of students and special forces in the city. Before he went to the North for training in preparation for The Liberation of the South Campaign, he encouraged his young wife to approach the plain-clothes police officer in order to get information for that would help the resistance. During a moment of depravity and weakness, she had conceived a child with the police officer. She felt too guilty to go and see her husband on the day of peace...

      Like Quang, like Long, like Binh. Like Man...

      And the Americans were no exception. Like Thomas, a military reporter, who spent enough time working in the battlefields of Vietnam to get to know a lovely interpreter named Hien. During the year in which they did not see each other, Thomas was taken as a prisoner of war and moved to the jungle. Ironically, it was Hien who worked as the interpreter for Thomas’ interrogations. One night, taking advantage of an American helicopter raid over the camp, he tried to make an escape. It was also Hien who arrested him, but she offered him a chance to get away. After the war, Thomas became a well-known veteran writer. He returned to Vietnam to look for Hien, but nobody had any memory of such a girl...

      +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

      These are people who never surrendered to their plights, or even to their destinies as ‘debris’. They each had their own way of adapting to the new economic and political atmosphere during the first ten years of peace. This recovery process was especially hard for intellectuals in the South, who were involved in the former regime, or did not participate in the revolution before 1975. In the space of just one night they lost all that they had possessed in the old society, and commenced a new life under a new regime. In their own country, in their own families, they had to integrate into a new system of politics, a new economy and a new culture and language... But something else came along with these changes. They gradually had to find a way to heal themselves of old wounds, find a place in the new society and find their own happiness.

      Like Kha, who became a writer; like Binh, who went into forestry, although he died at a young age from exposure to Agent Orange; like Thuy, who eventually found her place living with Kha...

      Not all of these individuals, in their search for human dignity and love, found what they were seeking...

      *

      Being from the same generation as the characters in Debris of Debris, reading it brought back an entire period of my own life - a part which before was just a constant memory. This is what prompted me on to the last line of Vinh Quyen’s work.

      Another inspiration was the fact that, at least I felt, the work represented a new phenomenon in Vietnamese literature: writing works in English, sharing ideas directly with the outside world.

      At the end of 2009, with the help of Edward O’Connell, our American friend, Vinh Quyen and I went to the US to introduce his writing at the College of Saint Benedict, MN. This College published the novel Debris of Debris for the in-house use, with a limited number of copies.

      Presently, Vinh Quyen is completing the manuscript, and looking for a publishing house that would be able to bring his first English work into the homes of readers throughout the world.

        Thứ Hai, 8 tháng 8, 2011

        Giant projects’ broken dreams
        Many billion-dollar foreign direct investment (FDI) projects have been registered in Vietnam since 2006, accounting for one-fourth of the total FDI commitment in the country.
        Vung Ang Economic Zone - illustration photo
        Those projects are expected to have significant influence on the economy, but few have been implemented so far. Ninh Kieu finds out why.
        After three years’ delay, Taiwanese consortium Formosa Plastics Group started developing a giant steel manufacturing and seaport complex in central Ha Tinh province’s Vung Ang Economic Zone.

        Formosa representative Hsu Chih Hao told VIR that the $8.9 billion project would be operational in 2014, creating 10,000 jobs, and be one of the five largest steel factories in the world.

        During February-May 2011, Formosa disbursed around $150 million for the project, not including the $30 million the group gave Ha Tinh People’s Committee to clear the site.

        Formosa’s commitment to this mammoth project is what the Vietnamese government wants other foreign investors to replicate.

        Twenty-one, billion-dollar projects with committed capital of $61 billion have been registered in Vietnam since 2006, according to the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI).

        Such giant projects in the fields of manufacturing, information technology, oil refinery, energy and real estate account for more than one-fourth of total FDI commitment capital in Vietnam. Commitments to billion- dollar projects even made Vietnam become one of the world’s most attractive places for investments in 2008 with registered capital recorded at $74 billion.

        “If the investors implement those gigantic projects, this will have a very big influence on the economy,” said Nguyen Mai, chairman of Vietnam Association for Foreign Invested Enterprises.

        Not only creating jobs, the development of such projects also helped ease foreign currency shortages caused by a widening trade deficit, Mai said, adding that their disbursement was also a gravitational force for FDI inflows into Vietnam.

        Vung Ang Economic Zone Management Authority reported that many foreign and domestic investors in the zone had followed Formosa to push up the implementation of their projects since Formosa started construction in February, 2011. However, investors of only four billion-dollar projects have walked instep with Formosa.

        Asia Coast Development LLC and New City Properties Development Company are constructing $4.2 billion and $4.3 billion tourism projects in Ba Ria-Vung Tau and Phu Yen provinces, respectively. Intel operates its $1 billion chipset factory in Ho Chi Minh City and Posco, one of the world’s largest steel makers, last year inaugurated its $1.2 billion steel factory in Ba Ria-Vung Tau.

        Most investors blame site clearance difficulties. Site clearance issues were also blamed for stalling Formosa’s project in Ha Tinh for three years, the group said.

        A representative at Vung Ro Petroleum, which registered to build a $1.7 billion oil refinery in Phu Yen province, also claimed site clearance issues had held the project back for two years.

        China Steel Sumikin Vietnam – a consortium between China Steel Corporation, Sumitomo Metal, Sumitomo Corporation, Sumikin Bussan and Formosa – had to delay construction of its $1.15 billion steel factory in Ba Ria-Vung Tau province last August due to the similar difficulties.

        But, this is not the only reason for investors’ indolence. Mai said many investors had delayed billion-dollar projects due to poor financial health.

        The $9.8 billion Ca Na steel manufacturing project in Ninh Thuan, registered by debt-ridden Vinashin and Malaysia’s Lion Group, is a typical exam. This was to have been the largest FDI project in Vietnam. However, the investors did nothing to push the project forward, despite Ninh Thuan People’s Committee urging investors to implement their commitments. Early this year, the provincial authority decided to revoke the investment certificate and change the project into an industrial park.

        Poor financial ability also forced Phu Yen People’s Committee and Quang Nam People’s Committee to end the destinies of two, billion-dollar projects, the $1.68 billion Creative City and $4.15 billion Dragon Beach Resort as the investors declined to pay deposits for their projects.

        “During the past years, we have been focusing on luring new FDI commitments, rather than quality of projects. This is why we saw lots of billion-dollar projects registered in recent years,” said Mai.

        He said those stalled FDI projects were having serious impact on residents who had to move to other locations due to site clearance work. Furthermore, delays at those mammoth projects mean land resources are used ineffectively.

        “They took investment opportunities from other investors, but have done nothing so far,” Mai noted.

        Dang Huy Dong, Vice MPI Minister, admitted that the commitment at billion-dollar projects did not mirror the real quality of FDI inflows into the country. Although FDI commitments to Vietnam have been declining for three years, Dong believed the result was not bad because “we have carefully appraised projects to reject unrealistic billion-dollar ones”.
        Businesses engage in online flame wars
        A number of companies have used social networking, forums and blogs as a way to defame their rivals, causing big losses for some.
        The internet is a tool for some, a headache for others
        The issue was highlighted at a meeting held in Ho Chi Minh City on August 5, which attracted attorneys and business leaders.
        There are around 29 million internet users in the country, accounting for just under 34% of the population. And several businesses claim that their rivals have taken advantage of this as a means to slander them.
        Pham Gia Auto Mechanic Ltd. Co. is among the companies who have complained about these practices. The Deputy General Director, Pham Truong Son, said that negative talk on a forum called otosaigon.com reduced their business revenues by 65%.
        The business losses, Son says, are a result of an article that was published on the website. Since, the company has apologised, but Son says that the business has not fully recovered from the incident.
        The forum manager of the site was fined VND25million (USD1,213).
        According to Nguoi Lao Dong newspaper, Kymdan Mattress Company has claimed to be victims of the same type of slander. In April they noticed an article claimed to have been written by a customer who smeared the quality of product and the post-sale service on another site, yeutretho.com. Kymdan asked them to remove the article believed to be false.
        A number of electronic stores and mobile phone shops have reported similar activities on blogs and internet forums. These articles, they say, pose as being honest reviews of products and services, but are, in fact, of dubious origin.
        Web legislation
        Hoang Kim Chien, an official from the Ministry of Justice, said fines for actions of smearing businesses online are not strict enough. The highest fine is VND100 million (USD4,854).
        Chien said that the cooperation between enterprises and consumer protection agencies is still weak, and that complicated legal procedures often leads to businesses who are victims of online smear campaigns to negotiate with violators instead of pressing on in the court system.

        Chủ Nhật, 7 tháng 8, 2011

        No flexibility offered on work permit regulations
        Foreigners who are struggling to get their employer to process work permits on their behalf could still face deportation, an official confirmed.
        Le Quang Trung, Deputy Director of the Ministry of Labour, Invalid and Social Affairs’s Employment Department
        Le Quang Trung, Deputy Director of the Ministry of Labour, Invalid and Social Affairs (MoLISA)’s Employment Department, told DTiNews that a work permit remains a necessity.
        Many foreigners who are willing to comply with the regulation are unable to do so as their Vietnamese employer is unwilling to go through the application process on their behalf. What do you suggest foreigners who are working for a Vietnamese employer do, if their employer is not willing to apply for a work permit?
        The Government’s regulations and Decree No. 46 amending and supplementing some articles of Decree No. 34 on managing foreigners seeking to work in the country also relate to foreign workers who come to Vietnam as part of foreign invested projects. Six months after the new decree takes effect on August 1, foreign workers who have not received a work permit or have yet to apply for a permit will be expelled from the country.
        Obviously, Vietnam is in desperate need of workforce in several fields including high-tech industries, services, scientific research and education, so it will provide more favourable conditions for those who apply to work in these fields. In the meantime, the country will put a stop on groups of foreign employees with lower qualifications, particularly manual workers.
        Do you think it is reasonable for the employee to face deportation for not having a work permit, while the Vietnamese employer only faces the sanction of a fine?
        More attention has been paid to how to deal with employers who employ unregistered foreign employees. The department has proposed to make public the names of companies that have failed to conform to the regulation, along with fines they have had to pay. The aim is to heighten the deterrent for employers. I believe that all enterprises try to promote the prestige of their brand name. With the possible negative impact to their prestige when their names are made public along with their violations, enterprises may become more responsible.
        The regulations seem to be based on the idea that foreigners will seek employment in Vietnam while being resident abroad (having an 'invitation' to work letter). But it seems vague and restrictive for foreigners who have devoted many years of their lives to developing the country. How can a foreigner easily move to another job offering better pay and conditions if their labour contract and accompanying work permit have become invalid through leaving their previous employer? - Will they be obliged to re-apply for another work permit?
        The Government of Vietnam highly appreciates the significant contributions made by foreign employees to the country’s development. However, like any other country in the region, Vietnam requires a foreigner who wants to work in the nation to get a work permit. In fact, there have been some changes in the new regulation that provides more favourable conditions for foreigners to get a work permit, including a halving of the processing time to get a work permit to ten working days. Re-application procedures will take only three working days. A work permit in Vietnam can have up to 36-months validity, which is longer than several other countries.
        In a case where a foreigner wants to move to another job with better pay and conditions, a work permit is still required, along with documents to prove their ability to fulfil the new job.
        A work permit remains a necessity
        Can you clarify if foreigners married to Vietnamese nationals require a work permit or are they exempt via their permanent or temporary residency permit?
        Any foreigner who has a foreign nationality and works in Vietnam must have a work permit. Those who have adopted Vietnamese nationality will be exempted from this procedure.
        Why has the government chosen to implement a work permit system that ties the right to work to a specific employer, rather than a more realistic system where the employee has the right to work in general, in any sector legally entitled to employ foreign staff, similar to the US Green Card system? Doesn’t this leave the foreign worker at an unfair disadvantage in terms of job mobility?
        For years, Vietnamese authorities have been paying much attention to updating and supplementing regulations on managing foreign employees in order to meet Vietnam’s commitments upon the World Trade Organisation (WTO) entry. Decree No. 46 amending and supplementing some articles of Decree No. 34 on managing foreigners seeking to work in the country has included both regulations on tighter management over low-qualified foreign employees and incentive policies for the high-qualified groups. However, in the time to come, local authorities will continue to study regulations on this issue in order to supplement the decree.
        Emergency talks called to calm global markets turmoil
        The European Central Bank is due to hold emergency talks on whether to start buying Italian debt to contain spreading turmoil on financial markets.
         
        World leaders fear more turmoil when markets reopen on Monday
        The BBC's Business Editor Robert Peston says the ECB is split on the move.

        Growing worries over debt in the eurozone and the US caused sharp falls on world stock exchanges last week.

        Finance ministers from the G7 major economic powers are also to hold emergency talks on how to calm the markets before they reopen on Monday.

        Italy is the latest and biggest economy to be hit by the eurozone crisis.

        The price Italy pays on its government bonds has shot up amid growing doubts it can keep its debt level so high while economic growth is so slow.

        Spain, too, has been caught up in the crisis - hammered by high unemployment, high government debt and anaemic growth.

        The high levels of debt coupled with low growth and an uncertain response among eurozone leaders to the situation has sparked fears that both countries could become engulfed in the same cycle which has led to Greece, the Irish Republic and Portugal already being bailed out.

        Last week, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said authorities in the eurozone were failing to prevent the sovereign debt crisis from spreading.

        Both Italy and Spain insist they can service their debt.

        On Friday, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said he was bringing forward austerity measures and would balance the government budget by 2013, one year ahead of schedule.

        Last week, the gap between German bonds - the safest in Europe - and Spanish and Italian debt reached a record high since the euro was introduced in 1999.

        There have been rumours that the ECB was preparing to buy Spanish and Italian bonds to try to help those countries. Last week the ECB bought Irish and Portuguese bonds but did not include Spanish and Italian debt in its purchases.

        The BBC's Business Editor Robert Peston says the ECB's governing council is divided on whether to buy Italian bonds.

        A decision not to buy would risk further turmoil in share and bond markets on Monday, he says.
        Not impressed

        Finance ministers and central bankers from the G7 are to hold emergency talks by telephone before markets open in East Asia on Monday morning, aiming to craft a global response on the eurozone debt crisis and ease fears over rating agency Standard & Poor's downgrading of US credit-worthiness.

        The rating agency Standard & Poor's (S&P) on Friday downgraded America's top-notch AAA rating to AA+.

        S&P, one of the world's three major rating agencies, failed to be impressed by a last-minute deal in the US last week to raise the US debt limit by up to $2.4tn (£1.5tn) from $14.3tn.

        It staved off a potential US government default on its debt but was only achieved after months of wrangling between Democrats and Republicans in Congress.

        The credit rating downgrade is seen as a major embarrassment for President Obama's administration. It could also raise the cost of US government borrowing.

        An economic adviser to the White House condemned the S&P move.

        "It smacked of an institution starting with a conclusion and shaping any argument to fit," said Gene Sperling, the head of President Obama's National Economic Council.

        White House spokesman Jay Carney said on Saturday that last week's debt deal had been "an important step in the right direction", but that "the path to getting there took too long and was at times too divisive".

        He said the US must now "do better".
          Landslides pose great environmental threats in Can Tho
          Landslides have become a pressing issue in Can Tho City and cause damages worth hundreds of billions of VND.
          Landslide at Rach Cam market claimed two lives
          Vuong Thi Lam, head of the Mekong Delta city of Can Tho’s Steering Committee for Flood and Storm Prevention and Control, said from April-June, the city recorded 11 landslides, claiming several lives and caused serious property damage.
          A pressing issue
          Landslides have left nine dead or injured, destroyed 230 houses, stalls and stores, and caused damages estimated at hundreds of billions of VND since 2007, Lam noted.
          Landslides have also been a major concern in Binh Thuy District over the last seven months.
          One incident in Long Hoa Ward’s Rach Cam Market, on May 9, destroyed 12 stalls, killing two and injuring five.
          Another landslide was recorded at Provincial Highway No. 918 near Rach Cam Bridge in the same ward on June 18. The incident disrupted traffic for several days and caused damages of VND1 billion (USD48,508).
          Thot Not District reported four landslides in June that affected up to 24 local households and caused property damages estimated at VND2.1 billion (USD101,867).
          In Phong Dien District, a landslide happened at river banks in My Khanh Commune on May 2, causing damages of VND100 million (USD4,850).
          According to the committee, on April 24, a landslide occurred at a bank of Rach Ngoc River in Ninh Kieu District’s An Hoa Ward, causing two houses collapse and amounting to damages of around VND50 million (USD2,425).
          Since May 12, cracks and sink holes could be seen along a 200 metre-long section of the river banks in An Binh Ward. Just three days later, cracks with from two to five metres long were found in two houses and sink holes were discovered in five others.
          Lap explained that the sharp rise in population has forced a lot of people to opt to live along river banks, leading to the increasing number of landslides.
          Prevention and control
          Lap called for more efforts to work out effective measures for preventing and controlling landslides in the city.
          Pham Van Quynh, Director of the city’s Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Deputy Head of the Steering Committee for Flood and Storm Prevention and Control, emphasised the importance of boosting education on natural disaster prevention and mitigation for local cadres and residents.
          The committee’s Chairman, Dao Anh Dung, requested that local agencies to be prepared for such situations.