Workshop discusses Mekong Delta sustainable development

A scientific workshop was held both online and offline in Hanoi on December 10 discussing ways to tap the potential and advantages of the Mekong Delta in the new context for the region’s rapid and sustainable development.

The event was co-hosted by the Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics (HCMA), the Party Committee of Can Tho city and Can Tho University (CTU).

In his speech, HCMA Deputy Director Assoc. Prof Le Van Loi affirmed the important role of the Mekong Delta in national development. Therefore, investment in the Mekong Delta is also meant for the sake of the country.

He held that human development is both a goal and a major driving force of regional development. In his view, people should be considered both the centre of and the key to sustainable growth and development. It is also necessary to ensure fairness in terms of development opportunities for residential groups, preserve and uphold special cultural values of ethnic groups and religions, and increase investment in universities and vocational colleges in the region.

Dean of the Party Building Faculty at the CTU’s School of Political Science Tran Thanh Hien suggested the Government issue more policies on vocational training for the workforce in the region, especially rural and female workers, thus offering more job opportunities with higher income to them.

He also proposed authorities of localities in the region improve business climate to draw investment at home and abroad, and diversify economic sectors to generate more jobs. Further attention should be paid to environment protection in projects, he said.

Participants at the event also offered recommendations to achieve rapid and sustainable development in the region.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Award promotes press circle’s role in mitigating marine plastic debris

Winners of the Press Award in “Mitigating marine plastic debris” were honoured at a ceremony in Hanoi on December 10.

A first prize, two second prizes, three third prizes, five consolation prizes and two auxiliary prizes were awarded.

Jointly held by VTC News, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Vietnam, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the management board of the project on reducing marine plastic waste in Vietnam, the award aims to promote the role of the press in efforts to mitigate marine plastic debris.

Organisers had received hundreds of works from 64 press agencies, units and individuals nationwide.

According to the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), global concerns about litter in the marine environment have been on the rise for several years. Studies show that between 8-12 million tonnes of plastic pollution leak into the ocean each year.

This number is expected to more than triple by 2050. Some experts estimated that, if the world continues on its current trajectory, more plastic than fish will be in the ocean by 2050. Studies have linked unsustainable production and consumption patterns to mounting plastic pollution, which impacts human health as well as the health of terrestrial and marine ecosystems.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Top Vietnamese legislator’s visit to deepen bilateral ties: Korean NA Speaker

Chairman of the Vietnamese National Assembly Vuong Dinh Hue will pay an official visit to the Republic of Korea (RoK) from December 12 at the invitation of Speaker of the Korean NA Park Byeong-seug.

On this occasion, the Vietnam News Agency’s resident reporter in Seoul interviewed Speaker of the Korean NA Park Byeong-seug. The following the full text of the interview.

Reporter: Next year, Vietnam and the Republic of Korea (RoK) will celebrate the 30th anniversary of diplomatic relations. Would you please assess the effectiveness of the Vietnam-RoK cooperation over the past years? Through the official visit to the RoK of H.E. Vuong Dinh Hue, Chairman of the National Assembly of Vietnam, what prospects can it open to bilateral relations in the near future?

Speaker: Before we begin, I would like to point out that I have so far declined all interview requests from many foreign news agencies until your request. This is my first interview with a foreign news agency. This shows how much Vietnam means to us. Over the last 29 years since our two nations established formal diplomatic relations in 1992, we have made incredible and significant strides in our relationship in all aspects, including the areas of economy and human exchange. In terms of economic relations, our bilateral trade volume has increased by an impressive 140 times over the last 29 years since 1992. For Vietnam, the RoK is its largest investor country, its second-largest ODA contributor, and its third-largest trading partner. For the RoK, Vietnam is our fourth-largest trading partner. In terms of person-to-person exchanges, 4.7 million, I mean nearly 5 million Koreans have visited Vietnam, while about 600,000 Vietnamese people have come to visit the RoK. This unparalleled level of achievements between our two nations in the fields of economic and human exchanges was possible thanks to the fact that we share historical, cultural, and even emotional similarities. It was also possible due to the dedicated efforts and commitment of the leaders of our nations, including my colleague parliamentarians.

I am eagerly looking forward to meeting with His Excellency Chairman Vuong Dinh Hue. As a matter of fact, I have had a couple of direct and indirect meetings with him. Last year, I had a video conference with him. We also met and shared our views at the World Conference of Speakers of Parliament held in Vienna. From these encounters, I have a very positive impression that he is a person of strong determination to follow up on our discussions and move things forward. This made me trust him instantly and hope that we could be friends.

His visit will deepen our bilateral relations on multiple levels: between Heads of State, Speakers, and parliamentarians. During this meeting, I will discuss issues that require our joint efforts in the region, such as economic matters, human exchanges, and the current international political developments surrounding the Korean Peninsula as well as our cooperation on the global stage. I am very much looking forward to meeting him again. I would like him to know that we are making our best efforts to ensure a successful visit. Using this opportunity, I would also like to extend my best wishes to former Chairwoman Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan. Reporter: How do you view the parliamentarian cooperation between Vietnam and the RoK?

Speaker: First, Vietnam is a pivot country in our New Southern Policy. It is a very important strategic cooperative partner for us. This meeting will give us an opportunity to discuss how to elevate our strategic cooperative partnership to a comprehensive strategic partnership next year, which marks the 30th anniversary of our diplomatic ties. Our parliaments will also discuss issues that hamper logistics and human exchanges between our two nations, how to overcome these hurdles, and how to institutionalize what our governments have agreed to from a big-picture perspective. In terms of exchanges at the level of parliamentary leaders, I visited the Chairman of the Vietnamese National Assembly last year, and now His Excellency Mr. Hue is visiting us. The members of our parliaments even had a soccer match once. We have a plan to continue to boost our parliamentary friendship programme. It is in this context that we have appointed a senior parliamentary member to chair our Korea-Vietnam Parliamentary Friendship Group.

We are in a very solid relationship, as our parliamentary leaders visit each other almost every year. For me, Vietnam is the only Asian country that I have visited since taking office as the Speaker. During my visit to your nation last year, I was told that I was the first foreign parliamentary leader to visit Vietnam since the COVID-19 outbreak. I believe that we parliamentarians can openly exchange views on the topics that both governments may feel are difficult to talk about. We sometimes can pull our governments forward and even support what they do. In this sense, the role and commitment of the parliament is really critical. This is why we appointed a senior NA member of our party to serve as the chair of our Korea-Vietnam Parliamentary Friendship Group. I hope that the parliamentarians of our two nations will continue to build close cooperative relations down the road. Reporter: In your opinion, what are the rooms for further promotion of efficiency and cooperation between the two countries?

Speaker: As of now, around 8,000 Korean companies have entered the Vietnamese market, hiring over 1 million Vietnamese workers locally. Our nations have set a goal of expanding our trade volume to 100 billion USD by 2023. To make this happen, the following two things should be done. First, we need to move people, I mean the required workforce, across our borders more freely. In other words, we need to ensure the free flow of workforce required for us to invest in and trade with each other. Second, we need to brace for unexpected factors to ensure stability in the global value chain, I mean the supply chains. Only a few months ago, one of our industries was hit hard because of the lack of a single industrial material. The RoK and Vietnam share one challenge in particular: how to expand and solidify our supply chains amid the US-China rivalry. I will discuss such issues during our upcoming meeting.

As you know well, the RoK is home to some 200,000 Vietnamese people, while roughly 180,000 Koreans also live in Vietnam. Moreover, we have more than 60,000 Korean-Vietnamese married couples. So, I think that we will discuss how we can care for and support these couples.

I would also like to talk about one more thing. When I visited Vietnam last year, Vietnamese leaders asked me to accept more Vietnamese under our Employment Permit System and raise the quota so that more Vietnamese can work in the RoK. They also told me that their workforce could not enter the RoK due to the COVID-19 pandemic, asking me to allow them to enter our nation. After coming back to the RoK, I was able to raise the quota by a remarkable 70 percent or so and took follow-up actions to let Vietnamese workers enter the RoK first among other foreign workforces.

Reporter: To strengthen the role of the parliament, the Vietnamese National Assembly has put the promotion of the digital economy, women, peace, security, and cooperation in a post-COVID-19 world on its agenda. Do you think that these topics are needed for the Asia-Pacific region?

Speaker: I believe that they are very timely topics and clearly demonstrate what keen eyes Vietnamese leaders have to see through the fundamental issues of our region. First, in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, we have to tackle two challenges: how to overcome this crisis and how to design our post-COVID-19 future. Issues like digital transformation and women’s engagement are very important in this respect. Our nation is drafting our strategies to overcome this crisis with digital transformation and the Green New Deal, which means green growth. Given this, we can see that our two nations have much in common.

Women, security, and peace were stressed by the Vietnamese parliamentarians during the APPF meeting held in Hanoi three years ago. Three years later, these issues have finally made it to the agenda. Including the four topics suggested by your country, we are going to announce a total of 13 resolutions. Among them, the topic of women, in particular, gender equality and women’s social participation, are truly meaningful because they were the common items proposed and adopted by our two nations.

Disaster hits the vulnerable first. Even in this COVID-19 pandemic, the least economically developed nations, women, non-regular workers, and other groups in need are hit first and hardest. When it comes to women, there are issues like how to help them recover from their job losses and career disruptions. In the RoK, we have a subsidy programme for companies that hire these women. I personally believe that gender equality is a very critical and timely issue when we gear up to overcome this crisis and design a post-COVID-19 future by increasing their representation and engagement, creating jobs for them, helping them get back on their career path after career disruptions, and giving them more opportunities.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

VinFast’s car sales up over 15 percent in November

VinFast Trading and Service Limited Liability Company, a subsidiary automaker of Vietnamese conglomerate Vingroup, enjoyed a month-on-month increase of 15.3 percent in sales in November, to 3,829 vehicles.

The firm sold 2,489 Fadil, 421 Lux A2.0, and 919 Lux SA2.0 models in the month.

This was the 6th consecutive month VinFast has sold over 2,000 units of Fadil model.

The number of vehicles delivered to customers in the first 11 months of 2021 was 32,676, including 22,375 Fadil, 5,729 Lux A2.0 and 4,572 Lux SA2.0 units.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Reference exchange rate down 21 VND

The State Bank of Vietnam set the daily reference exchange rate at 23,175 VND/USD on December 10, down 21 VND from the previous day.

With the current trading band of /-3 percent, the ceiling rate applicable to commercial banks during the day is 23,870 VND/USD and the floor rate 22,479 VND/USD.

The opening-hour rates at commercial banks saw strong fluctuations.

At 8:35 am, Vietcombank listed the buying rate at 22,830 VND/USD, down 41 VND from December 9, and the selling rate at 23,100 VND/USD, down 75 VND.

Meanwhile, BIDV raised both rates by 50 VND to 22,860 VND/USD (buying) and 23,100 VND/USD (selling).

During the week from December 6-10, the daily reference exchange rate followed an upward trend for the first three days before turning around to drop on the last two days. It ended the week up 10 VND.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Over 217 billion VND donated to flood victims

More than 217 billion VND (9.43 million USD) has been distributed between November 2020 and December 2021 to assist 730,164 people across 12 provinces and cities in the central region, which was hit by severe floods in October last year.

The information was released at a conference reviewing aid programmes for the flood-hit localities over the past year held by the Vietnam Red Cross Society (VRC) on December 10.

Speaking at the event, Vice President of the VRC Central Committee Nguyen Hai Anh said with great support from organisations, businesses and individuals in Vietnam and overseas, ten programmes for emergency aid and recovery have been implemented in the 12 localities, with funding totalling 217 billion VND. Activities under these programmes have basically completed, he added.

The 12 central provinces and cities benefited were Thanh Hoa, Nghe An, Ha Tinh, Quang Binh, Quang Tri, Quang Nam, Quang Ngai, Thua Thien – Hue, Da Nang, Khanh Hoa, Binh Dinh, and Phu Yen.

The assistance focused on offering food, necessities, money, shelters, clean water, health services, livelihoods support, safe schools, and disasters risk management.

According to a Government report to the National Assembly on November 2 last year, since late September 2020, 235 people in the central region had been listed as dead or missing from storms and floods, which had also caused estimated economic losses of about 17 trillion VND.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

NA Chairman to pay official visits to RoK, India

Chairman of the National Assembly (NA) Vuong Dinh Hue will lead a high-ranking delegation of the Vietnamese National Assembly to pay official visits to the Republic of Korea (RoK) and India from December 12 – 19, according to the NA’s Foreign Affairs Committee.

The visits will be made at the invitation of Speaker of the National Assembly of the RoK Park Byeong-seug, Speaker of the Lok Sabha (House of Representatives) of India Om Birla, and Chairman of the Rajya Sabha (Upper House) of India Venkaiah Naidu, the committee said in its statement issued on December 10.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Trial begins for Hanoi’s ex-chairman accused of abusing position and power

The People’s Court of Hanoi has begun the first-instance trial regarding the purchases of the water cleaning agent Redoxy 3C to purify lakes in the city, causing tens of billions of VND in damage to the State budget.

The defendants in this case are Nguyen Duc Chung, former Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee; Nguyen Truong Giang, Director of Arktic Trading and Service Co., Ltd., and Vo Tien Hung, General Director of the Hanoi Sewerage and Sewerage One Member Limited Liability Company. They were all prosecuted for “abusing position and power while performing duties”.

There are 11 lawyers participating in defence for the defendants. Chung has five lawyers while Giang and Hung three each.

The court has summoned a representative of the Hanoi Sewerage Company as a civil plaintiff; a number of staff from the Hanoi Sewerage and Drainage Company, with related rights and obligations, including representatives of the Hanoi People’s Committee, representatives of the Arktic Trading and Service Co., Ltd and Nguyen Thi Truc Chi Hoa (Chung’s wife).

Chung has previously asked the court to summon all relevant people who attended a working session at Hoan Kiem Lake on the afternoon of July 31, 2016. Among them were Nguyen The Hung (then Vice Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee), a number of office staff from the Hanoi People’s Committee, and officials and technical staff of the Hanoi Sewerage Company.

Chung also proposed to summon those involved in the proposal and negotiation of purchasing Redoxy-3C preparations. He asked his lawyer to provide the court with translations from the audiotape of the meeting between him and other leaders of the Hanoi People’s Committee and the General Director of Watch Water Company (Germany) on the afternoon of June 25, 2016, at the headquarters of the Hanoi People’s Committee, among other documents.

After that, lawyers of Chung asked the court to summon more representatives of the People’s Committee of Truc Bach ward and the People’s Committee of Thanh Cong ward, and the representative of the Office of the Hanoi City Party Committee. The lawyer said that these two wards were related to the assessment of the effectiveness of lake water cleaning in the area.

The trial panel acknowledged the requests by defendants and lawyers and said during the trial process, they would summon those who deemed to be necessary for the procedures.

According to the indictment, in 2016, the Hanoi People’s Committee directed relevant units to treat, renovate and tackle water pollution in rivers and lakes in the city by searching for suitable advanced technologies. Defendant Nguyen Duc Chung, then Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee, chose the polluted water treatment technology of Watch Water Company (Germany), organised a tour to test and ordered the production of Redoxy- 3C for use in the treatment of water pollution in Hanoi.

Chung then instructed defendant Vo Tien Hung to buy Redoxy-3C product through Arktic Company, an intermediary company where Giang acted as the Director – attempting personal profit.

Arktic is wholly invested by Chung’s wife, Nguyen Thi Truc Chi Hoa, and has their son, Nguyen Duc Hạnh, represented in the business registration certificate. Hoa asked another person to represent her family in the ownership of 40 percent of this firm’s charter capital, while Giang acted as the owner of the remaining 60 percent. Hoa repeatedly falsified papers to change contributors to this company’s capital.

The procuracy held that the actions by Chung and the others have caused “serious losses”, totalling over 36 billion VND (nearly 1.6 million USD), to the State.

Source: Vietnam News Agency