“Rights and Choices: Prioritising Sexual and Reproductive Health for Women and Girls”

This year, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) marks World Population Day (July 11) with the theme “Rights and Choices are the answer: Whether baby boom or bust, the solution lies in prioritising the reproductive health and rights of all people.”

On the occasion, UNFPA Representative in Vietnam Naomi Kitahara emphasised the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the quality of the population in general and that of Vietnam in particular in the following op-ed:

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has exposed health care systems globally, highlighting serious gaps and challenges in the provision of sexual and reproductive health information and services. The allocation of resources away from these services is taking a toll on the health of women and girls. At this critical juncture, UNFPA marks World Population Day on July 11 with the theme “Rights and Choices are the answer: Whether baby boom or bust, the solution lies in prioritising the reproductive health and rights of all people.”

While the impact of COVID-19 on mortality and morbidity have been relatively well documented, the impact of the pandemic on human fertility trends, patterns and choices remains less studied.

As of July 9, 2021, there were 26,010 cumulative cases and 110 deaths recorded in Vietnam. While Vietnam has been generally successful in curbing the spread of the virus, even this exemplary country has not been an exception in facing the negative socio-economic consequences of the pandemic just like any other country in the world. And when it comes to the issue of fertility, we will only begin to see the pandemic’s impact in the coming months. As the lead UN agency for the analysis of population dynamics, UNFPA highlights five key dimensions of the pandemic which can impact fertility: high mortality, restricted access to family planning services, increased household burden on women, economic recession and uncertainty, and fewer births attended by skilled medical professionals.

First, with regard to high mortality, we need to recall that in the period 1918-1919, when the so-called Spanish Flu pandemic hit the hardest, we saw a birth deficit after the mortality peaked in many countries. Part of the reason is the compromised sexual and reproductive health status of women including the availability of healthy women giving birth.

Second, family planning supplies and services are often interrupted during the pandemic, particularly in low and middle income countries. In settings where supply and demand-side restrictions impede access to family planning services, there is a real potential for a rise in unintended pregnancies. At global level, UNFPA projected that 47 million women in 114 low and middle income countries may be unable to use modern contraceptives if the average lockdown persists for six months with high levels of COVID-19 related disruptions to health services, causing an additional seven million unintended pregnancies. In Vietnam, it is estimated that in the first quarter of 2020, COVID-19 reduced the utilisation of clinical family planning methods by 20 percent and non-clinical methods by 10 percent in the most disadvantaged areas.

Third, with lockdowns and school closures, students are at home, and parents have to face increasing workloads in housework and childcare. This domestic burden is exacerbated by the decline in the availability of formal and informal childcare services. When COVID-19 further increases the domestic burden on women, in contexts where access to family planning has not been disrupted, individuals and couples may postpone having children at least in the short term.

Fourth, the relationship between the country’s economy and fertility is a well-studied area. Economic recession and uncertainty may encourage couples and individuals to postpone childbearing at least in the short term, and can also work as an obstacle to fertility choices, making it more difficult for couples to realize their ideal family size.

And lastly, the COVID-19 pandemic can prevent pregnant women from delivering babies assisted by qualified medical personnel. Also fear of the pandemic can drive pregnant women not to avail of optimally scheduled antenatal care services, thus making it difficult to identify pregnancy-related risks and morbidity early enough. Child delivery without skilled birth attendance exposes women to heightened risks, thus affecting the outcome of the pregnancy.

In 1994, 179 countries in the world including Vietnam committed to sexual and reproductive health as a key pillar of sustainable development at the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo. The ICPD principles stipulate that “all couples and individuals have the basic right to decide freely and responsibly the number, timing and spacing of their children and to have the information, education and means to do so (ICPD Programme of Action, para 7.3)”. As a guardian of the ICPD, UNFPA stands firm in reiterating the ICPD principles, and advises all countries, including Vietnam, to safeguard against rolling back on the progress made in expanding and strengthening sexual and reproductive health and rights for all.

The answer in mitigating the negative impacts of COVID-19 is to prioritise sexual and reproductive health and rights by ensuring the continuous provision of crucial information and services for all people even in a crisis or under lockdown, uninterrupted care to pregnant mothers, and the investment of financial and human resources to achieve all of this.

As Vietnam seeks to build back better from the impacts of what the UN Secretary-General has called the biggest global crisis since World War Two, we cannot leave the country’s greatest assets – its women and girls – behind. Getting back on track and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals in this Decade of Action towards the 2030 finish line includes achieving ICPD and its vision of rights and choices for all, with women and girls at the centre./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Vietnamese, German firms sign contract for supply of container cranes

Germany’s crane supplier Kocks Ardelt Kranbau on July 8 signed a contract for the supply of container cranes with Dinh Vu Petroleum Service Port JSC of Vietnam.

Addressing the signing ceremony in Brandenburg state, Vietnamese Ambassador to Germany Nguyen Minh Vu expressed his delight at close cooperation between Kocks Ardelt Kranbau and Vietnamese enterprises.

He highly valued Kocks Ardelt Kranbau’s move not to only export their products to Vietnam but also cooperate with Vietnamese firms to manufacture large cranes right in the Southeast Asian country for export to many markets around the world.

This brings benefits to both sides, the diplomat said, expressing his belief that the two companies will continue to expand cooperation in the future.

Kocks Ardelt Kranbau’s General Director Bernd Flaskamp affirmed that Vietnamese enterprises are leading partners of the German company.

The partnership between Kocks Ardelt Kranbau and Vietnamese businesses in the past time has recorded good results, he said, adding that cranes manufactured in Vietnam have good quality and meet international standards, and have been exported to many countries in South America, Russia, and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Both sides want to further expand export markets for these cranes, and promote more joint projects in the time to come, he said.

Flaskamp suggested the Vietnamese side create favourable conditions for experts from Kocks Ardelt Kranbau to soon come to Vietnam to assist Vietnamese partners in the production process.

Kocks Ardelt Kranbau is a leading supplier of cranes for loading and unloading cargo for major ports in Vietnam such as Hai Phong, Dinh Vu, Ha Long, Da Nang. Having present in Vietnam since 1989, Kocks Ardelt Kranbau has not only provided finished products to Vietnam but also cooperated with Vietnamese enterprises such as Lilama 18 JSC and Tan Cang – Cai Mep Towage Service JSC to manufacture cranes for export to other countries, in which the German firm provides production technology, training and quality management systems, and skilled experts to support the Vietnamese enterprises.

After the signing ceremony, the Vietnamese ambassador visited production lines of Kocks Ardelt Kranbau in Brandenburg./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

HCM City pilots home quarantine of F1 cases

The Ho Chi Minh City People’s Committee on July 8 issued a document guiding pilot quarantine of F1 cases at home amid the rapid and complicated developments of the COVID-19 pandemic in the southern hub.

F1 cases comprise those who have had close contact with COVID-19 patients and wore medical masks, have rapid negative results to coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 while waiting for PCR tests, or have already finished two-week quarantine at concentrated facilities and tested negative to the virus on the 14th day of quarantine.

The municipal People’s Committee asked localities to follow the Health Ministry’s guidelines in terms of infrastructure and equipment for medically-monitored people, persons living in the same houses and health workers.

Samples for testing must be collected at least five times on the first, seventh, 14th, 20th and 28th days since quarantine, or at least twice on the 20th and 28th days for those who have finished two-week quarantine.

The municipal Department of Information and Communications was asked to partner with the Health Department to adopt technological advances to better manage home quarantine.

As of July 8 morning, the city recorded 53,191 people undergoing quarantine, 15,007 of them are in concentrated quarantine facilities and the remainders at home or places of residence./

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Flyers from/to HCM City must provide negative COVID-19 test result: CAAV

Air passengers are required to present a valid negative coronavirus test result before travelling from/to Ho Chi Minh City, according to a new directive by the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV) on intensifying COVID-19 response.

The CAAV requests all airport employees, especially those working at HCM City’s Tan Son Nhat International Airport, to get at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine or have proof of a negative COVID-19 test conducted no more than 72 hours. Both rapid antigen and PCR test evidences are accepted.

The same policy is applicable to aircrew serving on flights from/to HCM City, who are also advised to refrain from leaving the airport to travel to the city. The aircrew should stay inside Tan Son Nhat International Airport before boarding the next flight, the directive says, adding that surfaces of air cargoes from/to the city must be disinfected.

It also ordered a halt of international flights to HCM City, except for those receiving permission of the National Steering Committee on COVID-19 Prevention and Control.

The CAAV requests airlines to instruct passengers to keep physical distance at airports, and increase the number of in-service airside transfer buses to make sure their passenger load does not exceed 50 percent of seating capacity per trip.

On July 8 afternoon, the authority issued an urgent notice requesting a reduction of seats available for sales on flights between HCM City and Hanoi, following a spike in COVID-19 cases in the country’s southern hub over the recent weeks.

Accordingly, national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines must sell no more than 700 seats on its flights between the two major cities in each direction daily while the limit for Pacific Airlines, Bamboo Airways and Vietjet Air ranges from 200 – 400 seats per day.

There are no restrictions on cargo flights, the notice adds.

The policy is applied from 0:00 hours July 9 throughout July 23./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Third batch of AstraZeneca vaccine donated by Japan delivered

The third batch of COVID-19 AstraZeneca vaccine, donated by Japan, arrived at Tan Son Nhat International Airport in Ho Chi Minh City on July 9 morning.

Japan has to date provided nearly 2 million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine as non-refundable aid for Vietnam, including almost 1 million doses delivered on June 16 and around 400,000 doses on July 2.

In total, Vietnam has so far received over 5.5 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines, including nearly 2.5 million doses from the COVAX Facility, over 400,000 doses ordered by the Vietnam Vaccine JSC, some 2.5 million doses granted by countries and more than 97,000 doses ordered from Pfizer/BioNTech.

As scheduled, an additional 2 million doses of Moderna vaccine will be delivered to Vietnam this weekend.

Minister of Health Nguyen Thanh Long said Vietnam has joined about 200 negotiations related to COVID-19 vaccines. About 105 million doses from different suppliers have been committed for Vietnam. According to the Ministry of Health, around 8.7 million doses will be delivered to Vietnam and will be given to Ho Chi Minh City and adjacent provinces which have been hard hit by the pandemic. Priority will be given to front-line medical workers and those aged above 65 and have underlying diseases.

The ministry will also send 30 mobile vaccination vehicles to serve vaccinations in the city./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Over 1 million people get help during Humanitarian Month

Over 1 million people received help during the Humanitarian Month (May 1-31) at a total value of more than 440 billion VND (19.1 million USD), reported the Central Committee of the Vietnam Red Cross Society (VRCS).

The month, themed “For a safe community”, was the first of its kind launched by the VRCS Central Committee as directed by the Party Central Committee’s Secretariat.

Accordingly, all municipal and provincial VRCS chapters embarked on activities to the welcome of the public, including offering free health care and holding nearly 3,000 sessions to raise public awareness of COVID-19 prevention and control measures.

They also distributed over 4.3 million masks, some 61,500 soap bars and hand sanitizer bottles, nearly 18,500 protective suits, along with large amount of daily necessities as well as cash to those in need.

A wide range of support models such as on-the-spot and mobile markets were launched in pandemic hotspots, together with other activities such as distribution of gifts, free meals for patients in need, and home repair for poor households.

During the month, the VRCS built 1,589 houses for the poor, organised 175 humanitarian fairs, offered over 30,300 free vouchers, free check-ups and medicines to more than 127,100 people, and collected over 76,600 units of blood./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Hanoi blogger imprisoned for subversive propaganda

A 69-year-old man in Hanoi was sentenced to five years and six months in prison for anti-State propaganda by the municipal People’s Court on July 9.

Pham Chi Thanh, residing in Dong Tam ward of Hai Ba Trung district, was found guilty of “creating, storing, distributing, or spreading information, documents against the State of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam” under Clause 1 of Article 17 in the 2015 Penal Code.

The indictment by the Hanoi People’s Procuracy said that in around February 2012, Thanh started a blog named “Ba Dam Xoe” to post his writings. In mid-2014, he opened a Facebook page named “Pham Thanh” and continued posting many articles on different websites.

In July 2019, he gathered the writings earlier posted on the internet in a book and then distributed it.

The 21 articles in this book contained fabricated information distorting and defaming the people’s administration.

Thanh also repeatedly gave interviews about his book’s distribution to foreign media outlets and some individuals in the country. Those interviews were posted on the internet and Facebook.

He distributed more than 220 copies of the book, including 194 delivered to others in Vietnam and abroad via the post. He also sold and presented some to other individuals.

From September 13, 2019 to May 21, 2020, Thanh gained more than 80 million VND (nearly 3,500 USD at the current exchange rate) from the book’s distribution, with most of the money transferred to his bank account. After deducting costs, he earned over 18 million VND, according to the indictment./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Vietnam Airlines pilots digital health passport

The national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines hopes that if the trial of “Digital health passport” is implemented successfully, the Government will consider and recognize this solution, towards promoting resumption of international routes.

The pilot launch of digital health passport by Vietnam Airlines is a part of the cooperation agreement signed by the national flag carrier and the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in May.

To be eligible to participate in the programme, passengers must be over 18 years old and have a certificate of negative COVID-19 test results issued by testing facilities registered with IATA. Those who want to participate in the programme should register on Vietnam Airlines’ website at least three days before their planned departure, download the IATA Travel Pass app to their mobile phones, create a digital ID comprising their photo and passport information and fill in flight details to receive information on entry requirements at the destination.

Before departure, passengers will be required to get tested at eligible clinics based on the IATA registry, then share the test results digitally and confirm flight status with the airline ahead of arriving at the airport.

This application is still in the development and testing stages, so passengers will still have to show hard copies of the COVID-19 test results at the request of authorities in the destination country.

To make it easier for passengers to use the application, Vietnam Airlines provides instructions with illustrations on its website at https://www.vietnamairlines.com/vn/en/plan-book /experience/iata-travel-pass.

The IATA Travel Pass is being piloted by many airlines around the world thanks to its feature of ensuring consistent information between parties including governments, testing facilities, airlines and passengers.

The electronic health passport has officially come into effect for EU member states from July 1, 2021, gradually opening the door for free travel within the Union and to international passengers./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency