ACPHEED Secretariat Office launched in Thailand

The Secretariat Office of the ASEAN Centre for Public Health Emergencies and Emerging Diseases (ACPHEED) was soft launched on August 26 at the Bangrak Medical Centre in Bangkok, Thailand, to boost capacity of ASEAN in response to public health emergencies.

It serves a centre of excellence and regional resource for ASEAN member states in prevention, detection and response to public health emergencies and emerging diseases. The center also serves to maintain close relations with stakeholders including ASEAN member states, other ASEAN organisations, partners and relevant agencies.

The soft launching ceremony took place at the the Bangrak Medical Centre and saw the attendance of Anutin Charnvirakul, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Public Health of Thailand; ASEAN Secretary-General Dato Lim Jock Hoi, and ministers of health from several ASEAN nations.

The establishment of the centre was announced at the 37th ASEAN Summit and related meetings in November 2020, via video conference following the COVID-19 pandemic, where ASEAN state members have agreed to join hands to build a safer ASEAN Community./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Winners of ASEAN Plus Youth Volunteer Award 2022 named

Winners of the ASEAN Plus Youth Volunteer Award 2022 were announced at a ceremony in the central province of Quang Binh on August 26 evening.

They are 10 individuals and 11 organisations from 10 ASEAN member countries and China and Japan, honoured for their outstanding contributions to volunteer activities.

The awarding ceremony was part of the ASEAN Plus Youth Volunteer Forum and ASEAN Plus Youth Volunteer Award, jointly organised by the National Committee for Youth of Vietnam (NCYV) and the Central Committee of Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union (HCYU).

First Secretary of the HCYU Central Committee Bui Quang Huy expressed his gratitude for individuals, organisations and clubs’ contributions to volunteer activities for the communities, as well as to solidarity, peace and development in each country and the ASEAN Plus region.

He said that agencies in charge of youth affairs in ASEAN Plus countries will pay attention to considering and studying proposals and initiatives of youths and provide support to make them come true./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Vietnam’s National Day celebrated in Canada

The Vietnamese Embassy in Canada on August 26 held a ceremony to mark the 77th National Day of Vietnam (September 2), which gathered Canadian government and parliament officials, representatives from diplomatic corps, social organisations, and businesses, and Vietnamese expatriates.

In his speech, Vietnamese Ambassador Pham Cao Phong stressed that Vietnam is looking to the future with a foreign policy of independence, self-reliance, peace, friendship, cooperation and development, and diversification and multilateralisation of external relations.

Vietnam is a friend, a reliable partner and an active and responsible member of the international community, the diplomat affirmed.

He said the Vietnamese people are determined to protect independence, sovereignty, unity, territorial integrity, the people’s right to self-determination, and each citizen’s right to pursue happiness. Paul Thoppil, Assistant Deputy Minister at Global Affairs Canada, expressed his admiration for the 77-year journey of Vietnam, during which the nation made an impressive transformation, becoming one of the fastest growing economies in the world.

Thoppil said he is optimistic that Vietnam can become a strategic partner of Canada in the future, as the two countries continue to build a common vision of peace, stability and prosperity for ASEAN and its people.

He noted that as a country bordering the Pacific Ocean, Canada recognises the profound and growing importance of the Indo-Pacific and Southeast Asia.

The official stated Canada will strive to engage more deeply in the region, both bilaterally and through the regional architecture, as the sides share a common interest in ensuring the regional peace, stability, and prosperity./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Malaysian government to present 2023 budget earlier than scheduled

Malaysia’s government will present its budget for 2023 to parliament on October 7, earlier than originally scheduled, law minister Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar has said.

The budget was previously scheduled to be tabled on October 28.

The rescheduling of the budget comes as Malaysia looks to boost revenue in a bid to offset a jump in spending on subsidies for food, fuel and electricity amid rising prices.

The government expects to spend at least 18 billion USD on subsidies and cash aid this year, the largest amount in history.

Malaysia’s economy grew 8.9% in the second quarter, its fastest annual pace in a year, boosted by expansion in domestic demand and resilient exports./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

On-site auctions – prospects for Vietnam’s painting market

The recent organisation of a non-selling painting exhibition in Vietnam by Sotheby’s – the world’s largest, most trusted and dynamic marketplace for art and luxury – has demonstrated prospects of this art market.

The exhibition, named ‘Timeless Souls: Beyond the Voyage – Hon Xua Ben La’, featured over 50 works by Le Thi Luu, Le Pho, Mai Trung Thu and Vu Cao Dam, the four renowned early generation graduates from the École des Beaux-Arts de l’Indochine (EBAI) who migrated to France in early the 20th century.

Ace Le, an independent researcher and writer on Vietnamese art who was selected by Sotheby’s to co-curate this public exhibition, this is a unique exhibition for Sotheby’s itself, as the auction house mainly organises non-selling ones in Europe. Normally, Sotheby’s only exhibits when they buy and sell artworks.

“We are proud to stage Sotheby’s very first exhibition in Vietnam, in the vibrant town of Ho Chi Minh City, where we hope to reconnect the public with its rich cultural heritage through these exceptional and local works of art,” said Nathan Drahi, Managing Director, Sotheby’s Asia. Ace Le said that international statistics show that Vietnam is the best-growing art market in Southeast Asia.

This exhibition is its strategic investment into the country, said Ace Le. “The exhibition is held to pay tribute to fine art history and Vietnamese collectors and fine art lovers”.

“I hope that the exhibition will contribute to opening the door for international auction houses. They will recognise the benefit of cooperation with Vietnamese experts to develop the Vietnamese painting market,” he added.

Sharing the same view, painter Le Thiet Cuong said that the move of Sotheby’s will have a good effect, making other famous auction houses such as Christie’s not be able to stay still./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Sustainability and circularity a necessity for Vietnamese textiles

Sustainability and circularity are an inevitable path that Vietnamese textiles have to follow, according to Truong Van Cam, General Secretary of the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (VITAS).

Cam was speaking at a seminar on “Promoting circularity in Vietnamese textiles” on August 26.

He said a booming textile industry has become a thing of the past. The industry has shifted its focus from fast growth to sustainable growth. It is expected to grow by around 6% from 2022 to 2030 and achieve circularity between 2030 to 2045.

He also underscored VITAS’s PPP (Profit-People-Planet) as a well-suited model for textile firms to go green. Under the model, firms are required to operate profitably and, at the same time, improve workers’ living conditions and embrace green production.

The general secretary urged textile firms to keep themselves well-informed about circularity to not lag behind on the global green path. He also called on firms to weigh the costs and benefits of green transition to develop the best strategies for themselves, avoiding green-at-all-cost narratives.

Saskia Anders, director of the GIZ Fabric Asia Programme, revealed that the European Commission passed its strategy for sustainable and circular textiles this year.

Up to 16 regulations and other policy measures are being planned to make textile products that enter the European market more long-lasting, repairable, reusable and recyclable until 2030.

“There is a large interdependence between the first stages of product development and its end-of-life. Hence, the effort needs to be collaborative and the responsibility needs to be shared,” she said.

Nguyen The Chinh, former head of the Institute of Strategy and Policy on Natural Resources and Environment, defined circular economy as an economic model that allows efficient use of materials, longer product life spans, lower production wastes and less environmental impacts.

He said the Government always puts circularity high on its agenda and aims to encourage the reuse and recycling of production waste. He also said Vietnamese firms could learn from German firms in this regard to operate more circularly.

“In Germany, many firms reclaim CO2 from their factory emissions to sell it as input to other firms,” he said.

Cao Minh Ngoc, director of the RTS Vietnam Technology Solutions and Resources, underscored four factors that are posing a serious threat to water security in Vietnam, which are climate change, rising sea levels, drought and flooding.

An average of 30,000 cubic metres of used water go through a treatment plant and get released into the environment daily in industrial parks. However, he said the practice of pumping treated water into the environment is a waste of resources.

“The treated water could be pumped into other factories for reuse as long as the water meets the 01/2018/BYT standard issued by the Ministry of Health,” he said.

He also asserted that firms engaging in treated water reuse would be granted Green Certificates, which help them penetrate international markets more easily.

Tran Hoang Phu Xuan, director of the fashion firm Faslink, asserted that two million cups of coffee are consumed every day and the decomposition of the untreated coffee grounds releases a huge volume of methane, a greenhouse gas.

Her firm has embraced circularity by recycling coffee grounds into coffee-derived yarns, which are later used to make T-shirts. The yarns provide five times more UV protection and three times more odour control than cotton./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Unemployment insurance fund to soon complete payments for COVID-19-hit employees

More than 339,000 employees affected by the COVID-19 pandemic have received a total of 963 billion VND (41.12 million USD) from the unemployment insurance fund as of 5:30 pm on August 25.

A supporting package for the group has been launched by the Vietnam Social Security (VSS) under the National Assembly (NA) Standing Committee’s Resolution No. 24/2022/UBTVQH15. To date, 90% of the employees registering for the assistance have received payments from the package.

Meanwhile, the VSS chapters in 19 provinces and cities nationwide have completed related payments in their localities.

Unemployment insurance fund to soon complete payments for COVID-19-hit employees hinh anh 2

Illustrative photo (Source: VNA)

As of December 31 last year, there were more than 414,000 registered employees having yet to obtain their sums, which amounted to over 1.15 trillion VND.

The NA Standing Committee has requested the disbursement of the financial support be completed by September 10 at the latest./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

PM requests more efforts to further develop northern mountainous, midland region

Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on August 27 requested ministries, sectors and northern mountainous and midland provinces to well organise the implementation of policies, and action programmes to promote socio-economic development in the region, as the Party and State have adopted sufficient and sound policies and programmes.

PM Chinh made the request when chairing a conference announcing the Government’s Action Programme implementing the Politburo’s Resolution No.11-NQ/TW on directions to intensify socio-economic development and ensure national defence and security in the northern midland and mountainous region by 2030, with a vision to 2045, held in Lao Cai province.

According to the leader, the region has a particularly important strategic position in terms of politics, economy, culture, society, the environment, national defence, security and foreign affairs. It also boasts a lot of potential and advantages in trading with China and other member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Over the past time, the Party and State have issued and effectively implemented many policies to promote potential and advantages and create motivation for the development of the region. In addition, the Government and the Prime Minister have regularly directed and met with localities to discuss tasks and solutions to remove difficulties and foster their socio-economic development.

As a result, the gross regional domestic product (GRDP) has been continuously improved. The average growth rate in the 2005-2020 period reached about 9.3%, with the GRDP scale hitting 688.9 trillion VND (29.4 billion USD) and GRDP per capita being 54.1 million VND. Exports also increased sharply, from 3.3 billion USD in 2013 to 41.7 billion USD in 2020, with the export growth rate hitting 57.8% per year.

However, many potential and advantages of the region have not been properly exploited and brought into full play, PM Chinh noted, adding that its competitiveness is not high, and the economic scale is still quite modest and infrastructure is still limited, especially in remote areas.

Therefore, he asked the relevant ministries, sectors and localities to focus on resources to address the existing shortcomings, particularly bottlenecks in transport infrastructure, logistics, digital transformation and climate change response; speed up the disbursement of public investment; and intensify economic restructuring associated with renewing the growth model. The Ministry of Planning and Investment should work closely with other related ministries, sectors and localities to seek measures to boost investment promotion and attraction in the region, he said, asking for an improvement in its business and investment environment to ensure transparency, fairness and competitiveness.

At the conference, representatives of the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank gave recommendations on sustainable poverty reduction and transport and tourism infrastructure development for the region, while representatives from the Japan External Trade Organisation (JETRO) and the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) showed their hope that the region will have opener policies and synchronous infrastructure so that their countries’ enterprises can expand cooperation and development in the region.

The Prime Minister and delegates witnessed the hand-over of investment certificates and memoranda of understanding on investment cooperation in 14 northern mountainous and midland provinces, namely Ha Giang, Cao Bang, Lao Cai, Bac Kan, Lang Son, Tuyen Quang, Yen Bai, Thai Nguyen, Phu Tho, Bac Giang, Lai Chau, Dien Bien, Son La, and Hoa Binh./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency