The best-known transfer pricing cases in Vietnam

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Nearly 38 percent of foreign invested enterprises (FIEs) reported losses in 2017, a significant decrease from the 50 percent seen in previous years. However, transfer pricing by FIEs remains a headache for management agencies.

Do Thien Anh Tuan of Fulbright University said that enterprises that most regularly report losses operate in manufacturing, garment & footwear, household-use production, and retail and beverage sectors.

Meanwhile, the HCM City Taxation Agency noted that the FIEs in retailing and beverage industries always top the list of reported unprofitable enterprises.

Another report showed that 90 percent of textile & garment FIEs in the city reported losses, while Vietnamese enterprises in the same field reported profit, though FIEs are believed to have bigger advantages.

Coca-Cola Vietnam, Pepsi Vietnam

Coca-Cola continuously reported losses from 1992, when it began operation in Vietnam, until 2012, though its output increased steadily by 25 percent per annum.

By December 2012, its accumulative loss had reached VND3.768 trillion, much higher than the initial investment capital of VND2.95 trillion.

However, instead of scaling down production, Coca-Cola in 2014 poured $210 million more into its company in Vietnam.

The move raised suspicion that Coca-Cola conducted transfer pricing, but the evidence was weak.

From 2013, Coca-Cola Vietnam began reporting profits and paying corporate income tax.

Pepsi Vietnam has a similar story. It has been reporting losses in the last 20 years.

Adidas

Adidas’ subsidiary in Vietnam was set up in 2009.

In late 2012, local newspapers published stories, alleging that the footwear company conducted transfer pricing to avoid tax.

Adidas registered its business in Vietnam as a wholesaler, but it was found having expense items like a retailer. Adidas Vietnam is not a manufacturer, but it has to pay royalties (6 percent) to Adidas AG and international marketing fee (4 percent of net revenue).

In addition, it also has to pay 8.25 percent of transaction value in commission to Adidas International Trading B.V.

The existence of many kinds of intermediary costs increases the import costs of Adidas products and helps it avoid corporate income tax.

Metro Vietnam

During its 12 years of operation, in 2002-2013, Metro Vietnam six times changed business license and raised its investment capital from $120 million to $301 million in May 2013.

However, at the same time, it reported losses with the accumulative loss of VND1.657 trillion and it only made a profit of VND173 billion in 2010.

GDT, after the inspection, decided that Metro’s loss must be lower than declared and that the distributor had to pay VND500 billion in tax arrears.

Keangnam

Tax officials discovered many unreasonable expense items and decided to collect tax arrears of VND95.2 billion after adjusting the profit in 2007-2011.

According to a report on Vietnamnet

Divorce of the decade brewing in Vietnam

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Trung Nguyen coffee company’s family owners are locked in a messy separation that has riveted the nation and clouded the firm’s caffeinated global ambitions

Vietnam’s divorce of the decade has captivated local media for more than a month with revealing tales of rivalry, backstabbing and slander between the husband and wife who control the nation’s top coffee businesses.

Dang Le Nguyen Vu, founder and chairman of Trung Nguyen, one of Vietnam’s largest coffee companies, dismissed his wife as the firm’s deputy director in 2015 on claims she had damaged the family business by publicly disclosing sensitive documents.

His businesswoman spouse, Le Hoang Diep Thao, has rejected the allegations and claimed her husband was wrongfully bringing his personal baggage into the company’s corporate affairs.

With all the hallmarks of a tabloid story, Thao has recently gone on the counteroffensive, claiming her estranged husband is mentally unstable and should be removed as chairman of Trung Nguyen Group, Trung Nguyen’s parent company.

Vu, often portrayed as a recluse, ended his five year refusal to do media interviews earlier this month and presented himself as competent and cerebral at several social gatherings with the press in attendance, observers of the case say.

The increasingly public divorce that began in 2015 has now spiraled into a high-stakes business rivalry with major implications for one of Vietnam’s top global exporters.

The Trung Nguyen Group’s complicated corporate structure and system of control means Vu and Thao control different and sometimes competing subsidiaries of the mother company.

In June, Trung Nguyen Corporation, a Vu-controlled subsidiary of Trung Nguyen Group, asked Vietnam’s General Department of Customs to halt the export and domestic sales of its G7-branded instant coffee.

That request was allegedly made because the brand was produced by another of the Group’s subsidiaries, Trung Nguyen Instant Coffee, which is controlled by Thao.

Thao currently serves as chairwoman and chief executive officer of TNI Corporation, formerly known as Trung Nguyen International, which began as a subsidiary of Trung Nguyen Group until it separated from the parent firm in 2015 – at the same time the couple’s divorce proceedings commenced.

In July this year, Thao’s TNI Corporation opened the first of its King Coffee outlets, which it hopes to expand to 100 by the end of the year. It also has plans to break into the American and Chinese coffee markets by opening cafes.

Its King Coffee-branded instant coffee is already a top seller in China, South Korea and Australia. It started selling in the US in late 2016.

Late last year, China’s LaoJiao Group signed a memorandum of understanding with TNI Corporation to distribute King Coffee-branded products domestically.

A few months later, however, Trung Nguyen Legend, a subsidiary of Trung Nguyen Group controlled by Vu, signed an agreement with Shanghai Qinzhou Trade Company to distribute its G7 instant coffee across eastern China.

Upping the competition with Thao and her firm’s high-quality King Coffee brand, Vu this year launched his own higher-end brand, known as Legend.

“Both Vu and Thao focus on extending business in China and are shaping up to be direct rivals in the 1.4-billion people market…Thao will compete with her husband not only in China, but also in the domestic market,” the Vietnam Investment Review reported.

The situation could become even more convoluted – and contentious – for Trung Nguyen Group when judges finally decide on the long-standing divorce proceedings, with a verdict possible as early as next month.

Vu and Thao each individually hold 20% and 10% stakes respectively in Trung Nguyen Group. The remaining 70% is held by Trung Nguyen Investment Corporation, a holding company that controls all intellectual property of the Trung Nguyen coffee brands.

Shares of the holding company, meanwhile, are split between Vu and Thao 62-31% respectively, according to local media.

While Vu currently controls most shares in the Group, that could change if the couple’s children get involved. Vu reportedly wants to give their four children dividends from Trung Nguyen Group, while Thao wants him to give each of them 5% of his shares.

If he agrees to hand over the 20% stake, then Vu could claim she is the major stakeholder of the firm by taking control of her children’s shares and then potentially boot out Vu, analysts say.

A court this month failed to grant the pair a divorce until their business disputes are settled. Another divorce hearing is expected next month.

The case has highlighted the social importance of prominent businesspeople in modern day Vietnam, where the dominant Communist Party only belatedly adopted free market policies in the late 1980s.

Vu was dubbed Vietnam’s “coffee king” and “an unofficial ambassador of Vietnam’s economic evolution” in a 2012 Forbes article. The report quoted a Vietnamese economist who said Vu’s success was a classic “zero to hero story.”

The rags-to-riches tale started in 1996 when Vu, a medical student at the time, and three friends opened a small coffee processing plant in Dak Lak province, the hub of Vietnam’s world-renowned coffee production.

Vietnam is the world’s second-largest producer of coffee after Brazil and the largest producer of robusta beans. As a cash-strapped student, Vu cycled as a around the area on his bicycle selling produce door-to-door to raise capital for the business.

Originally conceived as a processing and export firm, Trung Nguyen opened its first cafe in order to promote its brand in 1998.

Within a few years, a close triangle of cafes proved so successful in Ho Chi Minh City that the company went national, opening 422 cafes across Vietnam by 2002. By 2013, Trung Nguyen was the largest coffee firm in Vietnam.

In this rags-to-riches telling of the story, Thao’s role is often overlooked, though she says she managed the company’s day-to-day operations from its early days.

Although the 2012 Forbes article brought him international recognition, Vu’s ascendency as a corporate success story in Vietnam was cemented by his appearance on Nguoi Duong Thoi (Contemporaries), a popular state TV talk show broadcast that celebrates successful individuals.

In her 2016 essay, “Personal Wealth, National Pride,” academic Giang Nguyen-Thu wrote that the television show presented Vu as “a nationalist businessman of the post-Reform era.”

Indeed, he came to personify the “commercial nationalism” that gained prominence in Vietnam after doi moi, the free market reforms introduced in 1986, she added.

Thao now also has status as a prominent businesswoman in her own right after the recent success of TNI Corporation. She was likewise profiled by Forbes as a corporate success story last October.

Trung Nguyen’s local dominance has been hit in recent years, chiefly by the arrival of international brands like Nescafe, which out-sells it by a large margin in the instant coffee market.

Media interest in the pair’s divorce proceedings has lately seen some Vietnamese newspapers question just how successful the firm actually is and whether it can hold its ground when faced with foreign competition.

All of this comes amid the ruling Communist Party’s goal of fostering “national champion” firms across different business sectors. With the global ambitions of Vu’s Trung Nguyen and Thao’s TNI Corporation, their success so far has given the government’s drive a certain boost.

While the divorce has played out in the public eye, it took on a new dimension when Thao claimed earlier this month that her husband had tapped two new deputy directors for Trung Nguyen Group to gain a political advantage.

It’s not clear Vu has gained an edge by the move. One appointee was reportedly Lu Ngoc Cu, the former People’s Committee Chairman of Dak Lak province, though he reportedly turned down the position.

He was disciplined by the Party in 2012 over financial violations and mismanagement, including somewhat ironically for not disclosing that his wife was engaged in real estate trading while he served in an official post.

According to a report on  atimes

 

Vietnam Stocks Attempt a Comeback

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Volatility in Vietnamese shares falls to lowest since November
Ho Chi Minh Stock Index has risen 10 percent from its July low

According to a report by Nguyen Kieu Giang on Bloomberg, Vietnam’s volatile stock market, which has gone from being the best performer in Asia Pacific this year to barely breaking even, seems to be entering a calmer period.

After surging to a near seven-year high in June on a combination of trade war contagion fears and a higher U.S. dollar, 30-day volatility on the benchmark VN Index has fallen to the lowest level since November.

The macroeconomic turbulence of the past few months “is over” with the prospect of an escalating trade war encompassing Vietnam more “remote,” said Michel Tosto, head of institutional sales and brokerage at Viet Capital Securities. Inflation is expected to be contained and the currency has become more stable, he added.

“All this has brought a sense of calm to the market, and investor focus is again on earnings, which look solid for most companies,” he said. “Valuations are much more reasonable now, compared to the mid-March high.”

While the benchmark index remains about 17 percent below its April peak, it has rebounded over 10 percent from its July low, leaving it with a modest one percent gain year-to-date. The gauge currently trades at 15 times forward earnings, down from over 20 in April, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The Vietnamese economy grew 7.1 percent in the six months through June compared with a year earlier and the World Bank revised its forecast on Vietnam’s 2018 economic growth to 6.8 percent from 6.5 percent.

Report: Vietnamese men drink the most in Asia

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Vietnamese men drink five standard alcoholic drinks on average a day, the highest volume in Asia, according to the Lancet, one of the world’s prestigious medical journals, local media reported on Tuesday, August 28, 2018.

One standard alcoholic drink, 10 grams of alcohol, is equivalent to a small glass of beer or wine, or a shot of spirit.

According to the Lancet’s study, Vietnamese women drink less than one standard alcoholic drink a day, standing in the group of lightest drinkers in the world, online newspaper Zing reported.

According to incomplete statistics of relevant Vietnamese agencies, 10 percent of Vietnam’s population abuse alcoholic drinks.

People in Vietnam drank over 4 billion liters in 2017, up 6 percent against 2016, said the Vietnam Beer, Alcohol and Beverage Association.

The country annually spends some 3.4 billion U.S. dollars on beer consumption, with nearly 90 percent of the money going to foreign brewers.

Multi-level Greenlife, Oriflame, and Unicity fined for a billion dong

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Greenlife Corporation, Stella Ivy Cosmetic Co., Ltd. (Oriflame), and Unicity Marketing Vietnam Co., Ltd. will be penalized for a total of VND920 million ($40,700).

The Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Vietnam Competition Agency (VCA) has just announced the decision to fine three multi-level companies, including Greenlife Corporation, Stella Ivy Cosmetic Co., Ltd. (Oriflame), and Unicity Marketing Vietnam Co., Ltd.

Specifically, Greenlife Corporation (Pho Yen town, Thai Nguyen province) will be fined VND510 million ($22,600) for conducting multi-level sales activities without the approval of the Thai Nguyen Department of Industry and Trade. Additionally, the company’s amended business registration certificate did not include some of the company’s activities among the fields of operation.

Greenlife also failed to properly and completely fulfil its training obligation for multi-level sales participants and did not grant multi-level sales network member cards to participants.

The company also failed to periodically report to competent state agencies and provided wrong or misleading information about the use of its goods to entice sales people to joint its multi-level sales network.

As a result, VCA has decided to revoke the business registration certificate of Greenlife Corporation. Previously, this company has been infamous because its members had led students to mortgage facilitates for usury loans, then poured the money into the multi-level company to become distributors.

VCA decided to issue a fine of VND170 million ($7,522) to Stella Ivy Cosmetic Co., Ltd. located at 100-102 Nguyen Van Troi Street, Phu Nhuan District, Ho Chi Minh City. This company did not follow or improperly implemented its obligations on revoking multi-level sale member card.

Stella Ivy Cosmetic conducted multi-level sales in centrally-run cities and provinces without approval from the provinces/cities’ departments of Industry and Trade. The company, which distributes Oriflame cosmetic products, did not carry out or improperly implemented its obligation of training sales staff for its multi-level network, and there were no signed labour contracts between Stella and its sales staff.

Unicity Marketing Vietnam Co., Ltd. based at 141 Cong Hoa Street, Tan Binh District, Ho Chi Minh City, which is known as a multi-level company selling functional foods,will be penalised for VND240 million ($10,620) for violating regulations on the announcement of its headquarters and information on its multi-level sales network.

This company spent over 40 per cent of its total revenue for benefits and to pay bonuses to distributors.

Nguyen Huong report on VIR


 

VN-Index struggles to maintain rally

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The exciting movement of the market on Monday morning was extinguished by selling pressure increasing in the afternoon, affecting many large-cap stocks.

The benchmark VN-Index on the HCM Stock Exchange rose 0.49 per cent to close at 991.92 points. It made a weekly gain of 1.9 per cent last week.

The HNX Index on the Ha Noi Stock Exchange remained unchanged at 111.62 points. It increased 3.33 per cent last week.

Liquidity stood above the moderate level with more than 243 million shares traded on the two local bourses, worth nearly VND5.2 trillion (US$225.6 million).

Financial-banking, securities and insurance were the main driving factors of the stock market on Monday.

Among those industries, the insurance sector index jumped 2.4 per cent and the figures for banking and brokerage sectors were between 2 per cent and 2.5 per cent, data on vietstock.vn showed.

Mixed performance was seen among the top 30 largest stocks by market capitalisation in the VN30 basket.

The basket’s VN30 Index inched up 0.64 per cent to 966.55 points at the end of the session.

Among gaining stocks in the VN30 group were insurer Bảo Việt Holdings (BVH), Vietinbank (CTG), Vietcombank (VCB), brewery Sabeco (SAB) and Việt Nam National Petroleum Group (PLX).

On the other side, dairy giant Vinamilk (VNM), consumer staple firms Kido (KDC), FPT Corporation (FPT) and Retailer Vincom Retail (VRE) weighed down the market sentiment.

After remaining net sellers for three consecutive sessions, foreign investors on Monday net bought VNĐ93 billion on the HOSE, focusing on Vietcombank VCB (VNĐ26.78 billion), steel maker Hòa Phát Group (HPG) (VNĐ14.01 billion) and Joint Stock Bank For Investment and Development (BID) (VNĐ12.6 billion).

However, they net sold VNĐ3.9 billion on the HNX.

Bank stocks still took the lead Monday. Notably, the biggest gainers, including CTG, BID, and VCB, respectively grew by 4.2 per cent, 1.8 per cent, and 1.8 per cent and contributed 1.47 per cent to the rise of bank stocks.

Securities stocks also jumped as Ho Chi Minh City Securities Corporation (HCM), Sai Gon Securities Incorporation (SSI) and Viet Capital Securities Joint Stock Company (VCI) respectively increased by 4.4 per cent, 2.2 per cent, and 1.2 per cent.

According to Bảo Việt Securities Company, the market saw a wide divergence among groups of stocks. Cash inflows mostly ran into large-cap stocks, typically bank stocks. In the next sessions, when these stocks retreat, cash inflows may alternatively run into mid-cap and penny stocks.

It added that the market will continue rising in the next sessions, approach and test the point range at 995-1,000. While growing, the market may experience some short-term volatility amid the lead of bank stocks.

According to Sai Gon-Ha Noi Securities JSC (SHS), on Tuesday, the VN-Index could continue rising to reach the psychological threshold of 1,000 points.

Source: VNS

Hundreds battle to get gifts for the dead in HCM City

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Hundreds of people gathered on Sunday around the Cho Lon area in Ho Chi Minh City’s District 5 to collect money thrown out by local families during the Amnesty of Unquiet Spirits Festival.

Amnesty of Unquiet Spirits Festival is widely-celebrated in Vietnam but more popular in the southern region on the 15th day of the seventh lunar month, which fell on August 26 this year.

On this day, souls are believed to return to their former homes while those homeless often wander around, so local people usually prepare offerings to their ancestors at home and then throw out money, rice, and salt to offer the wandering souls.

On the afternoon of August 26, several families on Nguyen Bieu Street in District 5 held the festival and threw money out, which caused chaos when hundreds of people gathered to collect the money.
Many people waited for hours around the houses while local family were carrying out the ritual

As anticipated of the offerings, many people prepared nets and boxes attached to long canes to collect the small notes thrown down from the balconies.
Some people fell down and got small injuries while trying to catch the small notes
A man climbed a wall to catch a note
Security officers came to deal with disputes
This is a familiar scene during this festival here so many families stopped throwing out money this year to avoid chaos around their homes. In this photo a man got only VND20,000 (USD0.8) after 15 minutes.

Source: Dan Viet/Dtinews

Website on safe farming products launched

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Information on safe agricultural products will be updated on a special page for the first time, providing Hanoian consumers with the experience of identifying clean and safe agricultural products at the address: https://nongsanantoanhanoi.gov.vn.

According to the Hanoi Centre of Investment, Trade and Tourism Promotion (HPA), the launch of this website aims to enhance communication and raise awareness on clean and safe agricultural products.

It also aims to promote the consumption of clean and safe agricultural products and help consumers to identify safe agricultural products by using a QR Code.

In addition, the website is expected to help introduce and provide organisations, businesses, cooperatives and consumers with reliable addresses providing safe products, as well as helping enterprises to connect and seek business opportunities, and build a database on enterprises producing, distributing and supplying safe products in Hanoi.

Together with the launch of the website, the HPA also organised a conference to raise awareness on clean and safe agricultural products in Hanoi on the afternoon of August 27.

Source: En.nhandan

Asian Games 2018: Vietnam beats Syria 1 – 0 in the quarter final

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Vietnam are through to the semi-finals of Asian Games 2018 and will meet defending champions Korea Republic next after a 1-0 extra-time win over Syria in the quarter-finals on Monday – Fox Sport Asia reported.

In a keenly-contested encounter at the Patriot Stadium, both sides created their fair share of chances but were unable to find the breakthrough in the 90 minutes.

But, in the 108th minute, Vietnam finally found the breakthrough when Nguyen Anh Duc caught the opposition defence napping as he got in behind to race onto a long ball from the back.

Although his deft flick over the onrushing Ahmad Madyna came back off the bar, fellow substitute Nguyen Van Toan was perfectly placed to finish into the unguarded net.

Although Syria then gave it their all in a bid to equalise and take the game to penalties, the Vietnamese were able to hold out and advance to the semis.

Another tough test awaits Park Hang-seo’s charges in the last four as they take on Korea Republic, who have already 14 goals in four games thus far and boast a formidable attack including Tottenham star Son Heung-min, Red Bull Salzburg’s Hwang Hee-chan and tournament leading scorer Hwang Ui-jo, who has eight goals to his name at present.

SYRIA: Ahmad Madyna, Youssef Al-Hamwi, Jihad Busmar, Hussein Al-Shuayb, Khaled Kurdaghli, Ahmad Ashkar, Mouhamad Anez, Mahmood Al-Baher (Kame Koaeh 74’), Mohammad Al-Marmour, Ahmad Al-Ahmad (Zakria Hannan 112’), Abd Al Rahman Barakat (Abdulhadi Shalha 81’).

VIETNAM: Bui Tien Dung, Vu Van Thanh, Do Duy Manh (Pham Xuan Manh 117’), Tran Dinh Trong, Bui Tien Dung, Doan Van Hau, Nguyen Quang Hai, Pham Duc Huy, Nguyen Cong Phuong (Nguyen Van Toan 82’), Nguyen Van Quyet (Phan Van Duc 60’), Ha Duc Chinh (Nguyen Anh Duc 50’).

By Gabriel Tan

Continue reading “Asian Games 2018: Vietnam beats Syria 1 – 0 in the quarter final”

Vietnam’s tourism needs more high-quality workforce

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The tourism and hotel industry is experiencing golden days with a boom in the number of foreign and domestic travelers, while the demand for workers meeting international standards is increasing rapidly, Vietnamnet reported

According to the chair of the Vietnam Tourism Association Nguyen Huu Tho, there were 1 million direct workers in the tourism industry in 2016. With the current growth rate, the figure is expected to reach 2.5 million by 2020.

Travel firms and hotels all complain that they need qualified workers and that recruited workers all need to be retrained.

Sim Tran from Imperial Group said the newly opened hotels in Phu Quoc, Ba Ria – Vung Tau, Long Hai and Phuoc Hai have ordered 500-700 workers for different divisions, but The Imperial International Hotel School cannot find enough workers to provide.

Hundreds of hotels in Phu Quoc are seeking workers in large quantities, but they cannot recruit workers on the spot. Therefore, they have to seek human resources in Kien Giang, An Giang, Can Tho and Rach Gia and bring to Phu Quoc for training.

Hundreds of hotels in Phu Quoc are seeking workers in large quantities, but they cannot recruit workers on the spot. Therefore, they have to seek human resources in Kien Giang, An Giang, Can Tho and Rach Gia and bring to Phu Quoc for training.

The supply of tour guides, according to Nguyen Van My, chair of Lua Viet Tour, is ‘seriously lacking’. In 2017, Vietnam received 13 million inbound and 7 million outbound tourists, while there were only 13,000 tour guides.

The same thing is occurring with domestic travel. It is estimated that there are 70 million domestic travelers each year, while there are less than 10,000 tour guides.

Tho, commenting about Vietnam tourism said there is great potential, said there are four big problems – the lack of professionalism, cooperation, and weak capability of using IT to attract travelers and the short supply of high-quality workers.

With the predicted growth rate of 25-35 percent per annum, Vietnam would need 2 million high-quality workers for tourism.

Vingroup, FLC, Sun Group and other big real estate developers are building a series of 4-5-star hotels in Phu Quoc, Thanh Hoa and Phu Yen, which predicts a high demand for hotel workers in the near future.

Tourism schools admit they cannot satisfy the demand at this time and in upcoming years.

A report of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) showed that the number of trained workers in the industry is 43 percent of total workers and more than half of them cannot speak a foreign language.

The productivity of Vietnam’s tourism and hotel sector is just equal to one-fifth of Singapore’s, one-tenth of Japan’s and one-fifth of Malaysia’s.

Analysts have noted a new wave of workers flocking to Vietnam from regional countries, including Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia. Most 4-5-star hotels in Vietnam have foreign staff.

Thrillist: Lan Ha Bay among Top 10 Southeast Asian destinations

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New York-based travel site Thrillist has named Lan Ha Bay on Cat Ba Island in Vietnam’s north as one of the most beautiful places to visit in Southeast Asia.

Backpacking in Southeast Asia can be a little overwhelming because there’s just so much to look at, all the time, the site wrote. The natural beauty of the region is hyped by every person who’s ever been there, and rightfully so. It’s also the human element, like the sizzling of fresh fish on the sidewalk and the miraculously functional chaos of the traffic, in which you’ll see scooters loaded down with entire families and livestock, that makes Southeast Asia so beautiful, VET reported.

Thrillist therefore revealed the best sights around Southeast Asia to help travelers decide where to visit.

Located in the southern reaches of UNESCO World Heritage Site of Ha Long Bay, Lan Ha Bay boasts Cai Beo floating village, which contains around 200 homes and dates back thousands of years, according to the site. Ha Long Bay itself is also home to numerous islands, of which Cat Ba is the largest and where you can rent a boat to explore or spend the day swimming.

There are well over 100 hotels in the immediate vicinity, so visitors can take their time if they understandably want to stay in the area a while.

Others on the list included Indonesia’s Kelimutu volcano, Brunei’s Kampong Ayer, Laos’ Kuang Si Falls, Malaysia’s Tun Sakaran Marine Park, the Philippines’ Banaue rice terraces Timor-Leste’s Atauro Island, Singapore’s Gardens by the Bay, Cambodia’s Angkor Wat, and Myanmar’s Bagan.

Just 30 minutes by boat from Cat Ba Island, you will be charmed by breath-taking views of the bay. Unlike its famous neighbor, Lan Ha Bay reserves a more pristine scenery with an intense concentration of limestone mountains which the sea surface has partitioned into smaller bays and gulfs. Due to it being a fair way from Ha Long city, not so many tourist boats venture there, meaning Lan Ha Bay has a more isolated appeal. Among three bays in the Ha Long Bay area, Lan Ha is considered to have the best water quality for diving and good conditions for rock-climbing (both on Cat Ba Island and on the bay).

Vincom Dong Khoi, Saigon is on fire, just 2 weeks after Vincom Landmark 81, Vietnam’s tallest building

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Black smoke belches out of Vincom Dong Khoi. This happened just 2 weeks, after the Landmark 81, Vietnam’s tallest building on fire.

Black smoke belches out
Outside of Vincom Centre after building fire alarms activated
Fire Department Of District 1, HCMC responded to the alarm

According to a report on local media, a caller reported that smoke was coming from Elite Fitness Center at level  3 or 4 of the building and they quickly extinguished the fire. No one was injured.

Top Fire Safety Tips

What to do in case of a building fire

  • Immediately pull the nearest fire alarm pull station as you exit the building.
  • When evacuating the building, be sure to feel doors for heat before opening them to be sure there is no fire danger on the other side.
  • If there is smoke in the air, stay low to the ground, especially your head, to reduce inhalation exposure. Keep on hand on the wall to prevent disorientation and crawl to the nearest exit.
  • Once away and clear from danger, call your report contact and inform them of the fire.
  • Go to your refuge area and await further instructions from emergency personnel.

Who to Contact in Case of a Fire

In order to ensure that the proper authorities are notified of a fire, when the opportunity arises once you are safe from imminent danger, call any of the following:

  • Vietnam Fire and Rescue Police Department: 114
  • Vietnam Emergency & Ambulance Services: 115

Fire Safety Precautions and Fire Systems Equipment

  • Keep doorways, corridors and egress paths clear and unobstructed. Make sure that all electrical appliances and cords are in good condition. Do not overload electrical outlets. Use surge protected multi-outlet power strips and extension cords when necessary.
    Never store flammable materials in your room or apartment.
  • Do not tamper with any fire system equipment such as smoke detectors, pull stations or fire extinguishers. Doing so is a criminal offense.
  • Raising a false alarm is a criminal offense. It endangers the lives of the occupants and emergency personnel.

 

DON’T assume that a fire alarm is a test or burned microwave popcorn. Any alarm could be the result of a dangerous fire. DON’T waste time collecting personnel items. Take your keys and yourself to safety as soon as possible. DON’T use the elevators during a fire emergency; always use the stairs.

HCMC considering downtown curb on motorbikes

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Motorbikes may no longer be the most popular means of transport in HCMC if it approves a proposal from the transport ministry to limit their numbers.

The ministry’s Transport Development and Strategy Institute, asked by Ho Chi Minh City’s transport department to draft a plan to deal with the chronic traffic gridlock, has suggested limiting the number of motorbikes in three phases over a decade from 2020.

By 2020 the plan seeks to make Truong Son Street outside Tan Son Nhat Airport in Tan Binh District and Nguyen Thi Minh Khai Street in the central District 1 off-limits to motorbikes during rush hours, and do the same for part of the nearby Pasteur and Nam Ky Khoi Nghia streets between 7a.m. and 7p.m.

Between 2021 and 2025, the ban will be extended to full time on Vo Van Kiet, Dinh Tien Hoang, Dien Bien Phu, Hai Ba Trung, Nguyen Thi Minh Khai and Nguyen Van Cu streets, all major roads of District 1.

In 2026-30 the number of motorbikes will be capped at a certain level before they are completely banned in Districts 1, 3, 5, and 10.

The plan also proposes hourly parking fees and restricting parking lots in the downtown area, hiking the registration fee for automobiles, and imposing a fee in traffic jam hotpots for cars during rush hour.

Buses will play the major people-carrying role until other means like the metro and monorail go into service, possibly by 2030.

The city has to add 55-120 bus routes to increase the total number to 192-255 and operate 4,200-4,800 buses.

The motorbike plan was first put forward last year but many transportation experts said what the city needs to do first is develop its public transport.

Bui Xuan Cuong, director of the transport department, said then that the city would appraise the plan and make a decision.

“Only when public transport meets the needs of the public will the city ban motorbikes.”

By August last year HCMC had nearly eight million vehicles, including 7.3 million motorbikes.

In July last year Hanoi lawmakers approved a proposal to ban motorbikes from the city center by 2030 to reduce traffic congestion despite strong opposition from experts and the public.

The motorbike ban has been mooted and rehashed several times in the past few years, and always met with strong opposition from experts and the public as it targets the country’s most popular means of transport.

In recent weeks legal and transportation experts have railed against the ban, calling it “hasty” and even “impossible” given the state of public transport.

Some said the ban has no legal grounds and would put Vietnam at odds with the rest of the world since people are free to drive motorbikes in most countries.

According to a report on bizlive

 

The European Challenge Tour, Hainan Open to take place in Nov 22-24

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Golf Pro Corporation has been selected to be the official partner of European Challenge Tour to promote the golf tournament in Vietnam.

To warm-up the campaign, a golf tournament was organized by both Golf Pro and  Hainan Open at Tan Son Nhat Golf club, in Ho Chi Minh city of Vietnam on 24 August, 2018.

More than 100 local and international golfers, businessmen participated in the tournament. There were 3 groups, A for golfer with HDC  from 00-13; Group B for HDC 14-24 and Group C for HDC 25-36.

After play was over, the golfers enjoyed a delicious gala dinner and awards ceremony. The final results as below:

  • Best Gross: Le Hong Son, Gross score: 77
  • Runner-up: Hoang Ngoc Quy, Gross score: 79
  • First prize Group A: Tran Van Hoang, Net score: 71
  • First prize Group B: Pham Van Tai, Net score: 68
  • First prize Group C: Dao Van Dien, Net score: 70.

In particular, 02 tickets to participate the Hainan Open 2018 in Hainan Island, China have been awarded to the winners with best gross score and fist runner-up.

Trinh Van Thanh, CEO of Golf Pro at the Tournament on 24 August 2018.

 

The European Challenge Tour Hainan Open will take place in Hainan, China from 22-24 Nov, 2018
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