VFF Central Committee has two new vice presidents

The 9th-tenure Vietnam Fatherland Front (VFF) Central Committee decided to appoint two new vice presidents at its 8th session held in Hanoi on March 15.

Participants agreed on the appointment of Nguyen Thi Thu Ha, member of the Party Central Committee and Deputy Secretary of the Party delegation to the VFF, to the VFF Central Committee and Presidium. She will serve as Vice President and Secretary-General of the VFF Central Committee in the 9th tenure (2019 – 2024).

They also supported the appointment of Hoang Cong Thuy, member of the Party delegation, to the VFF Central Committee and Presidium and as Vice President of the VFF Central Committee.

Addressing the meeting, Truong Thi Mai, Politburo member, Permanent member of the Party Central Committee’s Secretariat and Chairwoman of the Party Central Committee’s Organisation Commission, thanked the VFF Central Committee for supporting the personnel nominated by the Politburo and the Secretariat.

She expressed her belief that with their capability, morality, and experience, the two new Vice Presidents of the VFF Central Committee will make many substantial contributions and fulfill the tasks assigned by the Party, the VFF, and the people./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Lao Cai province welcomes first Chinese tourists after three years

– Eighty Chinese tourists entered Vietnam via the Lao Cai International Border Gate on March 15 afternoon, marking the return of Chinese travellers to the northern mountainous province of Lao Cai after a three-year hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The visitors came to Vietnam after China included Vietnam on the list of countries to which group tours are resumed on a trial basis from March 15.

Coming mainly from Yunnan and Anhui provinces of China, they will have a four-day-and-three-night tour of Ha Long city in Quang Ninh province and Hanoi capital.

A tourist from Anhui province said she is happy to visit Vietnam, and that she waited for the trip for a long time but it was not until COVID-19 was brought under control in China that she could travel to Vietnam.

Truong Thi Hai Yen, a representative of the Tung Lam Travel and Trading Co. Ltd which serves the Chinese tourist group, said the firm has made thorough preparations to meet visitors’ demand and provide the best services.

For his part, Vuong Trinh Quoc, head of the economic zone management board of Lao Cai province, noted that to welcome Chinese tourists, relevant authorities have been ordered to create the best possible conditions for handling entry procedures. The management board has also worked to repair and upgrade infrastructure to facilitate entry and exit activities.

The arrival of the first group of Chinese visitors is expected to help reactivate the Chinese tourist market after a long pandemic-triggered stagnation./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Da Nang hopes for further investment from RoK city

Secretary of the Da Nang municipal Party Committee Nguyen Van Quang said he hopes that the city of Daegu in the Republic of Korea (RoK) will cooperate with the Vietnamese central city and invest more in its hi-tech sector, along with education, training and tourism.

During a local reception on March 15 for Mayor of Daegu Hong Joon-pyo, Quang said Da Nang now has partnerships with many Korean localities, including Daegu, in various fields such as investment, trade, tourism, education, people-to-people and cultural exchanges. The RoK is also one of the key tourism markets of Da Nang.

According to him, a number of Vietnam’s models are using experience from the RoK such as the new rural development model. Da Nang is also focusing on developing hi-tech industries. Da Nang residents enjoy travelling to the RoK and vice versa.

He spoke highly of the mayor’s proposals regarding education and cultural exchange towards human development for economic growth, and wished that the two localities would strengthen cultural exchange activities, towards celebrating the 20th anniversary of their friendship and cooperation.

Hong, for his part, expressed his impression on Da Nang’s investment in human education. He said Daegu is developing hi-tech industry and education-training. So far, the Da Nang-Daegu flight service has resumed, opening up investment and cooperation opportunities in fields that both sides have advantages./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

As Laos builds more hydropower dams, citizens say electricity rates remain too high

Laos, which aims to become “the battery of Southeast Asia,” generates plenty of electricity via its many hydropower dams. But rates for its citizens remain high – another burden amid surging inflation for many other products – and some villages still lack electricity.

Laos exports hydropower to its immediate neighbors, including Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Myanmar, as well as Malaysia and even Singapore, to help them meet growing power demand while reducing their use of fossil fuels, whose emissions contribute to climate change.

Landlocked Laos already has built dozens of dams on the Mekong and its tributaries under a plan to sell about 20,000 megawatts of electricity to neighboring countries by 2030, and more are in the works, including one near the historic town of Luang Prabang. But most of that electricity will be sold to Thailand.

Citizens are now urging the government to review its dam-building policy and future plans because they cannot pay for electricity.

“Electricity rates are too high for ordinary people to afford,” said a resident of Luang Prabang province, who like other sources in the story requested anonymity so as to speak freely. “The dams built in Laos have affected the Lao people, so power should be free or low cost for everybody.”

The resident also said he wants the government to review its dam-building policy so that it not only generates income for the relatively poor county, but also serves the public by providing affordable electricity rates.

Électricité du Laos, or EDL, the state-owned company based in Vientiane that operates the country’s electricity generation and manages the import and export of electricity, raised electricity prices for residents about 1.5% annually between 2013 and 2018.

In 2022 and 2023, EDL increased electricity prices by 2%, making it even more difficult for ordinary Laotians who earn monthly salaries of about U.S.$70-80 to pay their power bills.

Heavily indebted

One key reason that electricity rates have remained high is that the government has become heavily indebted to foreign countries to build hydropower dams, Phoxay Sayasone, the country’s minister of energy and mines, told the government on March 10.

More than two-thirds of the country’s current hydropower capacity in operation is exported, and he said the power sector’s contribution to Laos’ gross domestic product is approaching 15%.

“Dams built in Laos with borrowed money are the property of the country and the people,” a resident of the capital, Vientiane, said. “If the debt [from electricity-generating projects] cannot be paid, it will be passed on to the next generation.”

Borrowing massive amounts of money to build the hydropower dams has contributed to the country’s growing levels of debt, jeopardizing its macroeconomic stability, according to a World Bank report issued in May 2022.

The report noted that Laos’ public debt levels increased considerably since 2019, hitting 88% of gross domestic product in 2021, with the energy sector accounting for more than 30% of the government’s total debt.

Nevertheless, the government plans to derive 75% of Laos’ electricity from hydropower and 14% from coal by 2025, with the rest coming from mainly other renewable energy sources, according to the Ministry of Energy and Mines.

A resident of Champassak province said he has lost hope that the government will reduce electricity rates because of the rampant inflation the country is experiencing along with devalued currency and corruption in state-owned enterprises.

“Laos’ electricity provider always said that it would reduce electricity rates for the Lao people, but up until now, it has not done so due to inflation and economic instability in the country,” he said.

EDL says it has increased the country’s electrification rate to about 95% of households, up from about 30% before 2000. But some say the figure is incorrect because nearly all rural villagers still lack power.

“Rural villagers don’t have electricity because they are scattered around [the country], and it’s too expensive to link up power lines to all villages,” an EDL employee told RFA.

Radio Free Asia Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300,

Improved air quality in Southeast Asia in 2022, report says

The quality of air in most Southeast Asian countries was better in 2022 compared to previous years, though its cities performed relatively worse, a new report said.

Cambodia was among the best performers as PM2.5 concentrations declined in seven of nine Southeast Asian countries last year, according to the World Air Quality Report by IQAir, a Swiss company that monitors the world’s major cities’ air quality in real-time.

“Countries in the Southeast Asia region have continued their efforts to decrease PM2.5 concentrations to safe levels recommended by the WHO guidelines,” IQAir’s fifth report released Tuesday night said.

“Industry, power generation, vehicle emissions, and open burning remain top contributors of PM2.5 in the area.”

PM2.5 are hazardous airborne particles smaller than 2.5 micrometers in diameter, which is about 30 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair.

According to the World Health Organization’s air quality guideline, an average annual exposure of PM2.5 should be no more than 5 micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3) to avoid serious health risks.

Indonesia’s air, ranked 26 globally, was the worst in Southeast Asia in 2022, with an annual average of 30.4 µg/m3. It was also the worst ASEAN performer in 2021, though it had improved this last year by 11%.

“Air pollution in Indonesia is driven by coal-fired power plants, forest fires, and peatland degradation, while major cities are especially impacted by vehicle emissions,” IQAir said.

Only Laos (27.6 µg/m3) and Vietnam (27.2 µg/m3) had higher annual averages than in 2021. The duo was ranked 29 and 30 on the global list of 131 countries and territories.

All three countries were coded Red, which meant the annual average PM2.5 in their air exceeded WHO guidelines by 5 to 7 times.

Myanmar was ranked at 35 with a national average of 24.4 µg/m3, while neighboring Thailand (18.1 µg/m3) was ranked 57 and Malaysia (17.7 µg/m3) was ranked 59.

During the forest fires of March and April 2022, PM2.5 concentrations spiked 400% higher than WHO recommended levels in northern Thailand where people “are especially vulnerable to negative health impacts from air pollution,” the report said.

The Philippines, ranking 69, had a 14.9 µg/m3 annual average last year.

Meanwhile, Cambodia experienced a 58% reduction in its annual average PM2.5 concentration in 2022, with a record low of 8.3 µg/m3, making it the least polluted country in the region.

Its capital Phnom Penh also had the cleanest air among Southeast Asian cities with 8.3 µg/m3, ranking at at 97.

Among other capital cities, Hanoi performed the worst in the region, with 40.1 µg/m3, and ranked 18 globally. Jakarta followed it at 20 with a 36.2 µg/m3 annual average.

Vientiane was ranked 30, Yangon 35, Bangkok 52, and Metro Manila 62.

Out of the 296 regional Southeast Asian cities in the report, all but eight exceeded the WHO’s limit. Indonesia and Thailand featured the most frequently in the list of the most polluted regional cities, while Vietnam, as well as Indonesia, had least polluted ones.

Only 10% breathing air that poses no health risk

IQAir said it collected 2022 data from over 30,000 air quality monitoring stations across 7,323 locations in 131 countries, territories, and regions.

A scientist with Greenpeace International said such complex data “can inspire communities to demand change and hold polluters to account.”

“Too many people around the world don’t know that they are breathing polluted air… Everyone deserves to have their health protected from air pollution,” Aidan Farrow, an air quality scientist, said.

Air pollution reached alarming levels in 2022, with around 90% of the analyzed countries and territories exceeding WHO’s air quality guidelines, IQAir said.

Experts and scientists consider air pollution the world’s biggest environmental health threat, with poor air quality accounting for over six million deaths yearly.

The total economic cost equates to over U.S.$8 trillion, surpassing 6.1% of the global annual GDP, according to the World Bank’s global health cost report released last year.

The IQAir report said only 13 countries and territories had “healthy” air quality. None of them are from Asia, Africa, or South America.

Chad topped the list of most polluted countries last year with a national average of 89.7 µg/m3, more than 17 times higher than the WHO guideline. It was followed by Iraq with more than 16 times higher than the WHO PM2.5 annual guideline.

Pakistan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Kuwait, and India rounded up the top eight that exceeded the WHO guidelines by more than ten times.

The report said Oceania continues to have the cleanest overall air quality in the world, with the highest number of cities below WHO air quality guidelines.

Despite being one of the worst air pollution offenders for decades, China demonstrated improved air quality in 2022, with almost 64% of the 524 cities analyzed in mainland China reporting reduced annual PM2.5 levels. Two cities in its Xinjiang region, Hotan and Kashgar, were ranked the 2nd and 30th most polluted in the world, based on data IQAir gathered between 2017 and 2022.

“China’s coal usage continues to be a point of concern. China is responsible for a large portion of the world’s coal production and usage,” the report said.

“Coal combustion is a significant contributor to the country’s PM2.5 emissions profile along with other sources such as industry, biomass burning, road dust, and road vehicles.”

Radio Free Asia Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300,

Nearly $500 million in US imports blocked due to Uyghur forced labor

The U.S. Customs and Border Patrol has already blocked nearly $500 million worth of imports from entering American ports this year because it was made “wholly or in part” by Uyghur forced labor, the agency’s acting head said at an event in Washington on Tuesday.

The move comes as more Western governments are clamping down on companies whose products and supply chains involve forced labor by the mostly Muslim Uyghurs in Xinjiang, the far western part of China.

At the Forced Labor Technical Expo at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, acting CBP commissioner Troy Miller launched a new website that tracks shipments blocked due to forced labor and said that 3,605 shipments worth $816 million had been blocked due to suspected forced labor across all of last year.

But he noted that the value of blocked shipments this year had already reached nearly two-thirds of last year’s figure, with some $496 million worth of imports across 1,910 shipments blocked before Feb. 26 thanks to the December 2021 Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act.

“That being said, shipments identified for further examination under UFLPA represent 0.01% of all shipments entering the U.S. since the implementation of the act,” he said. “Overall, this obviously a very small number of shipments subject to CBP’s enforcement actions.”

The agency’s job is a balance of stopping shipments linked to forced labor while also “swiftly” processing legitimate cargo, Miller said, adding that he wished to see the number of intercepted shipments go down as U.S. businesses learn they risk losing their shipments.

“As required by law, we continue to take enforcement action to inspect and detain goods when we receive credible allegations that goods are connected to Xinjiang,” he said, but “importers must take responsibility to know their supply chains and address the risk of forced labor.”

‘Orders come from the top’

The event also heard from victims of forced labor.

Nury Turkel, a Uyghur-American and chairman of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, told the event that he grew up alongside his parents in forced labor camps in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and that forced labor had been used by Chinese authorities “for as long as I remember.”

He emphasized that it was official government policy, and said he was dismayed by American companies that say it is hard to police supply chains.

“Papering over forced labor in your supply chains is no longer an option,” Turkel said. “Chinese companies’ use of Uyghur forced labor is not a matter of lax enforcement or government collusion with corrupt businesses. The fact is that the Xinjiang officials fill hundreds of camps with millions of people, and the orders come from the top.”

Such forced labor was enforced through the use of “torture, rape, forced sterilization, abortion and injection with unknown drugs,” he said, with authorities in Xinjiang openly promoting forced labor.

Their ads, he said, promised that “workers have been trained with a semi-military style,” were “disciplined” and, in case a business was still not convinced, “come with a police minder to prevent any trouble.”

“The ads offer a guarantee that the workers will not be job-hopping,” Turkel said. “They will not be allowed to leave the job.”

Technological help

A number of companies at the event promoted technology they said would help businesses better identify forced labor in their supply chains, including SourceMap, which helps businesses track production sources from “end-to-end,” and Verité, which screens suppliers for signs of forced labor by focusing on the recruiters they use.

CBP Executive Assistant Commissioner AnnMarie Highsmith said forced labor in merchandise flowing into the United States impacts 28 million people worldwide, and that while technology might help identify it, companies still had to be proactive about trying to eliminate it.

“It is incumbent upon us as leaders in our international trade space and in our global supply chains to take affirmative actions,” Highsmith said, in order “to better trace merchandise through the supply chains.”

She said she was encouraged that blockages of shipments under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act since 2021 had caused some U.S. companies to move “operations out of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and into other areas of China, and other areas of other countries, such as Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand.”

“We can safely say that we’ve done a lot of good. But we can do better, and we can do more,” she said, explaining CBP’s ultimate aim was to stop such shipments arriving in the United States at all. “Our goal is to normalize due diligence with regard to forced labor in supply chains.”

“I’m really sorry to tell you,” Highsmith added, “there’s no magic wand that will tell us instantly there’s forced labor in the merchandise; there’s no technology that’s going to replace due diligence.”

Radio Free Asia Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300,