Ceremony marks 30th anniversary of re-establishment of Presidential Office

 

A ceremony was held in Hanoi on September 24 to mark the 30th anniversary of the re-establishment of the Presidential Office (September 25, 1992 – 2022).

 

The event saw the attendance of Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong, President Nguyen Xuan Phuc, former President Truong Tan Sang, and many other Party and State officials. In 1992, the office was officially re-established but, in fact, it has a history of nearly 80 years of construction and development in association with the history of the State of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and Socialist Republic of Vietnam at present.

 

In his speech, President Phuc lauded efforts made by generations of leaders, officials, and staff members of the office in the past nearly 80 years.

 

He requested them to further promote the achievements and tackle difficulties to further improve the effectiveness of the office’s research, consultancy, apparatus streamlining, and implementation of political tasks, among other activities. At the ceremony, President Phuc presented a first-class Labour Order, the noble distinction of the Party and State, to the Presidential Office./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

 

Trade and legal disputes part of game with UKVFTA

 

Vietnamese businesses must stay vigilant and do their homework to avoid trade and legal disputes in exporting to the UK to take full advantage of the UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (UKVFTA), which officially went into effect last May, said industry experts and policymakers.

 

The agreement was intended to provide both sides with the same trade benefits under the previously signed EU–Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA ) as the UK has left the EU.

 

UKVFTA aims to go even further than the EVFTA to boost trade between Vietnam and the UK with 65% of all tariffs having been removed so far. In the next six years, the agreement is to remove up to 99.2% of all tariffs on Vietnamese exports, with the Southeast Asian country to remove 48.5% of all tariffs on UK products in return.

 

Early signs have shown a positive effect on bilateral trade with Vietnamese exports experiencing a 16.4% boost at 5.76 billion USD compared to figures recorded in the same period before the agreement went into effect. Vietnamese agricultural products, in particular, have seen the strongest gain with a 16% increase compared to the previous year, reaching over 230 million USD.

 

The trade agreement has provided Vietnamese products with a competitive edge in the UK market over competitors who have yet to sign a trade agreement with the kingdom. Key Vietnamese exports to the UK included seafood, agricultural products, textile, footwear, wood furniture and handicraft.

 

Huge potential

 

The UK is considered a major target for Vietnamese exporters with a large margin for growth. The kingdom, prior to Brexit, was Vietnam’s third largest trading partner within the EU.

 

According to the MoIT, the UK imported 700 billion USD worth of products in 2019. Of which, Vietnamese products only accounted for 6 billion USD with key exports including textile, footwear, wooden furniture and rice.

 

Vietnam remained the world’s top producer of some of the UK’s major imports, including cashew nuts, pepper and coffee. The UK imported 23,000 tonnes of cashew, and 14,000 tonnes of pepper and last year Vietnam took the lion’s share with 16,000 tonnes of cashew worth 92 million USD and more than 5,600 tonnes of pepper worth 48 million USD.

 

However, Vietnamese coffee and rice exporters have not been able to take advantage of improved bilateral trade with Vietnamese rice and coffee only accounting for 0.45% and little under 5% of the UK’s imports, respectively.

 

Experts said a major hurdle for Vietnamese agricultural produce has been quality. The UK is and will remain a market with the highest standards when it comes to quality and safety. Vietnamese exporters must first acquire either Global GAP or Euro GAP (Good Agricultural Practice) along with a host of other internationally recognised quality standards such as the ISO, SA and ILO before they may attempt to enter the UK market.

 

In addition, they must seek to improve product quality as competition in the UK market is fierce with strong contenders including products from Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, South Africa and India.

 

Little understanding

 

Vietnamese businesses, however, will likely see an uptick in the number of trade and legal disputes in the years to come as a side-effect of increased bilateral trade, say industry experts and policymakers.

 

By the end of the first quarter of 2022, Vietnamese businesses have been involved in more than 210 trade defence cases related to anti-dumping or anti-subsidy activities with more than half of the cases arising in the last five years. The figure will likely continue to rise as the country has been ramping up its efforts to boost exports, said the head of the department of economic integration under the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) Lam Thi Quynh Anh.

 

“It has a lot to do with the nature of the new generation FTAs Vietnam has been committed to,” said Anh.

 

“New generation FTAs, the EVFTA and the UKVFTA for example, cover many more aspects than just commercial activities including labour rights, environmental preservation and fair trade with a focus on sustainable development,” she said.

 

This requires businesses to evolve and take a more comprehensive approach to exporting, which at the moment has been identified as a major weakness for Vietnamese exporters.

 

According to a recent study by the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI), 15% of the businesses surveyed admitted they possessed “none to little” understanding of the new generation FTAs, 60% admitted they only possessed a superficial understanding and just over 5% said they possessed “solid understanding” of the pros and cons.

 

To make matters worse, it showed little improvement over a study by the chamber done in 2019. Of over 8,600 privately-owned businesses in the study, only 3% said they possessed a “solid understanding”.

 

For example, when asked about the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) only one out of 20 businesses said they understood how the CPTPP would affect their business operations. Notably, nearly 7% admitted they possessed no understanding of the CPTPP.

 

Industry experts have voiced their concerns over Vietnamese businesses’ lack of preparedness and said they may soon face the consequences of the rising number of trade and legal disputes as the UKVFTA drives up bilateral trade.

 

Nguyen Thị Thu Trang, director of VCCI’s WTO and integration department, said in order to mitigate damage caused by trade and legal disputes Vietnamese exporters must take the initiative by conducting a comprehensive study of the trade agreement and employ the services of professionals if necessary.

 

She also urged government agencies and the media to step up efforts to raise awareness of the importance of fully understanding not just the opportunities but also the challenges and potential disputes that are part of the FTAs./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Vietnam merits seat at UN Human Rights Council: Washington Times

The Washington Times has published an article in which it supports Vietnam’s candidacy for the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) for the 2023-2025 term.

 

According to the article, the Southeast Asian nation continues to be highly appreciated at the UN with its appointment of officers to join the peacekeeping missions in South Sudan and the Central African Republic, as well as its active participation in talks to achieve the UN’s priority sustainable development goals.

 

Vietnam’s fight against the COVID-19 pandemic has also recorded many results, including the provision of masks and medical equipment to underserved countries.

 

The article said Vietnam is currently the coordinator of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) at the UNHRC. It has fulfilled the second Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of the council and is making recommendations of the third UPR.

 

Vietnam has also paid special attention to international conventions on the protection and promotion of human rights. It is currently a party to 25 conventions of the International Labor Organisation (ILO) and by 2020, Vietnam was home to 43 organisations of 16 different religions. In addition to joining the UNHRC and the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), Vietnam has actively promoted the UN conventions against torture and other cruel and inhumane treatment or punishment, and on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women.

 

The article said UN members generally recognised Vietnam’s important role in promoting the struggle for national independence, sovereignty and self-determination.

 

It affirmed that the country’s candidacy for the UN Human Rights Council will contribute to deepening its participation in the international system./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Vietnam shares experience in economic development towards social justice

 

Permanent Deputy Prime Minister Pham Binh Minh shared Vietnam’s experience in economic development towards social justice while attending a Sustainable Development Impact Meeting held by the World Economic Forum in New York on September 23.

 

The event took place on the occasion of the high-level week of the 77th United Nations General Assembly.

 

Addressing a discussion on promoting inclusive trade, Minh emphasised the message that international trade does not only serve the goal of pure economic growth but also needs to ensure the environmental sustainability and inclusive benefits for all.

 

To share trade benefits fairly, the Vietnamese representative proposed several priorities to promote inclusive trade through public-private cooperation, in which the people and businesses play central roles.

 

It is necessary to develop an overall, reciprocal and cohesive trade policy between green, digital and inclusive trade, and continue promoting the indispensable role of the rules-based, free, fair, transparent and inclusive multilateral trading system, he noted.

 

From the perspective of an economy that has joined 15 bilateral and multilateral free trade agreements (FTAs), including new-generation deals with high standards on labour and the environment, Minh affirmed that the important lesson that Vietnam has drawn is not to sacrifice social progress and justice, and the environment to pursue pure economic growth.

 

Many delegates attending the event also shared Vietnam’s development views and appreciated Minh’s proposals in promoting inclusive trade.

 

WEF Managing Director Mirek Dusek assessed that Vietnam is an important part of the world trade as well as the global supply chain.

 

He said Vietnam has not only gained great achievements in hunger eradication and poverty reduction but also has been making many positive contributions in the field of environmental protection and climate change response, becoming a model for other nations to follow./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Deputy PM chairs New York ceremony marking Vietnam’s National Day, UN membership

Permanent Deputy Prime Minister Pham Binh Minh has presided over a ceremony to mark Vietnam’s 77th National Day (September 2) and the 45th anniversary of Vietnam’s accession to the United Nations (September 20), with the attendance of representatives from the UN as well as leaders, ministers and officials of member states.

 

Speaking at the event on September 23 (local time), Minh briefed the participants on the country’s development journey over the past more than seven decades as well as its outstanding contributions since becoming the 149th member of the UN on September 20, 1977.

 

He stressed that the similarity of important values and principles has created the foundation for the cooperation and partnership between Vietnam and the UN. The values the UN has promoted are also the values generations of Vietnamese people have fought and sacrificed to protect – those are peace, national independence and justice, Minh stressed.

 

Amid international uncertainties, the Deputy PM once again affirmed the essential role of international solidarity and multilateralism, with the UN at the centre. He also asserted Vietnam’s strong support for and commitment to the UN’s role in leading and coordinating multilateral efforts to respond to global challenges. Minh expressed his hope that international friends will support Vietnam’s candidacy for the UN Human Rights Council for the 2023-2025 term so that it can contribute more to the UN’s mission of ensuring and promoting human rights.

 

UN leaders and representatives of countries expressed their impression with the achievements of the Vietnamese people over the past 77 years, from the struggle for national liberation and reunification to socio- economic development in recent years.

 

They welcomed Vietnam’s achievements in implementing its foreign policy of independence, self-reliance, multilateralisation and diversification as well as its active, balanced and responsible contributions to the common affairs of the UN and the international community./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Vietnam Airlines named among world’s Top 100 Airlines in 2022 by Skytrax

The national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines has been ranked 48th in the World’s Top 100 Airlines in 2022 announced at the World Airline Awards by Skytrax.

 

The ranking is based on more than 14 million customer surveys in more than 100 countries between September 2021 and August 2022.

 

In different categories of the 2022 World Airline Awards, Vietnam’s Bamboo Airways was ranked 15th among the world’s Best Regional Airlines, and second among Asia’s Best Regional Airlines.

 

Meanwhile, Vietjet Air was named the Best Low-Cost Airline in Vietnam.

 

The World’s Top 10 Airlines included Qatar Airways (Qatar), Singapore Airlines (Singapore), Emirates (UAE), ANA (Japan), Qantas Airways (Australia), Japan Airlines (Japan), Turkish Airlines (Turkey), Air France (France), Korean Air (the Republic of Korea), and Swiss International Air Lines (Switzerland).

 

This year marked the seventh time Qatar Airways has been named the world’s Best Airline since 1999./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

 

Vietnam-India Culture and Friendship Festival opens in Binh Duong

The Vietnam-India Culture and Friendship Festival kicked off in the southern province of Binh Duong on September 24.

 

The festival is the first among a series of events to be organised to celebrate the 50th founding anniversary of Vietnam-India diplomatic ties and a lead-up to the Horasis India Meeting in the province.

 

Speaking at the opening, Vice Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee Mai Hung Dung said the festival is vivid evidence of cultural exchanges between Vietnam and India.

 

The event will connect the people of the two countries and offer local residents a chance to experience typical cultural features of India, he said.

 

The Horasis India Meeting will run in Binh Duong from September 25-27, expected to see the presence of some 500 delegates, including officials, diplomats, and experts from Vietnam, India, and other nations worldwide.

 

The economic cooperation forum, co-hosted by Binh Duong province and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), consists of six plenary sittings and 26 dialogue and discussion sessions.

 

Beginning in 2009, the Horasis India Meeting has become the foremost annual meeting of Indian business leaders and their global counterparts./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency

 

Prime Minister inspects socio-economic infrastructure projects in Yen Bai

Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on September 24 visited the construction sites of several key socio-economic infrastructure projects in the northern mountainous province of Yen Bai.

 

The projects included one on building Thac Ba lake national tourism site by 2040. The site is expected to attract about 1 million tourists by 2030 and some 2.5 million by 2040.

 

Commenting on its planning, PM Chinh asked Yen Bai province to work with relevant agencies and localities to capitalise on the connection between the lake and Phu Tho-Tuyen Quang, Tuyen Quang-Ha Giang, and Noi Bai-Lao Cai expressways.

 

The building of a road around the lake will help fully tap all of its space, the government leader said.

 

He then went on a field trip to inspect a 4.25km embankment to prevent the Red River’s flooding in the area of Gioi Phien commune in Yen Bai city, and visited the under-construction Gioi Phien bridge, the fifth of its kind linking the centre of Yen Bai city on the left bank of the Red River to its right bank. He demanded the building progress of the bridge be shortened by at least six months.

 

Other sites inspected by the Government leader included an infrastructure project in Gioi Phien and Bao Hung communes and the construction site of the Tran Yen industrial park in Yen Bai city./.

 

Source: Vietnam News Agency