New Saigon coffeehouse, Ca phe Co Ba gets vintage chic just right

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Saigon’s confusing July weather—rainy yet viciously sunny—led us on a search for a spot in town to enjoy a cold refreshment or a two. Incidentally, I was reminded of a new cafe at the end of Dong Khoi street called Ca Phe Co Ba, a stone’s throw away from Saigon river and its new waterbus station. We decided to give a shot.

Vintage Chic

We parked our motorbikes in an alley, which probably used to function as a residential entrance to the old yet gorgeous building. A quick chat with the parking attendants informed us that the French built the structure in the 1940s.

Interestingly, the unassuming parking alley used a touch-card system which most locals and expats would normally associate with newer condominiums and malls… a sign of change in a fast developing city?

Pre-war Saigonese vibes were apparent, somewhat adding to the excitement, as we ascended an antiquated flight of stairs before reaching Ca Phe Co Ba, located at L1. The cafe’s tiny, vintage hardwood door showed aesthetically pleasing signs of ‘wear’, and even resisted and creaked a little as I pushed it.

The interior of the cafe is predominantly hardwood and filled with numerous cushioned coaches and vintage round tables. Every turn and corner is lined with cabinets, which are in turn filled with aged articles from a nearly forgotten past, including vintage books, typewriters and oil lamps.

Modernity itself is a feature too, and is incorporated seamlessly into the vintage-style Vietnamese word art posters. A vinyl turntable complete with a pristine golden horn distracted me almost immediately too. These quickly became my favourite visual feature at Ca Phe Co Ba.

You could probably spend a good ten minutes admiring the innards of this small but comfortable cafe, including an adorable 80s Honda Cub scooter displayed in front of a hand-painted wall mural of Ben Thanh Market.

Instagram Opportunities

By the time we finished admiring images of pre-war Saigon, fashionable teens and office personnel glued to their iPhone screens, I had pretty much ascertained that the cafe scores very high in terms of ‘intagrammability’!

It was time to make my order. The menu at Ca Phe Co Ba is extensive, featuring standards such as pho, chicken and rice and sandwiches alongside drinks such as Vietnamese coffee, ice blends and teas. Most drinks at Ca Phe Co Ba range between VND45,000 – VND55,000, very reasonable considering the cafe’s ultra-central vicinity. Food ranges between VND35,000 – VND60,000.

A Banh Mi with a Bite

I opted for the lemongrass lime drink and the cafe’s popular banh mi with barbequed meat. The banh mi sandwich was interestingly served with a small accompaniment of savoury red sauce, excellent for people who prefer a moister sandwich!

Apart from the well-marinated and tender chunks of pork, the loaf itself had a nice bite and was denser than the usual airy banh mi commonly served on the sidewalks of Saigon. And kudos to the refreshing combination of lemongrass and lime for saving my soul on a hot afternoon. Ca Phe Co Ba’s paper cups are also a highly ‘instagrammable’ feature, which were likely designed for selfies!

Ca Phe Co Ba combines respectable food and drink with a beautiful and casual vintage interior. We’re pretty sure most visitors will spend at least an hour or two here considering the comfy seats and affordable menu.

For foreigners and locals who ride a motorbike, do note that the first two hours of parking is VND5,000 followed by VND3,000 each consecutive hour. That said, the parking means you have the liberty to leave your bikes for another hour or so to take a stroll in the surrounding vicinity after lunch at Ca Phe Co Ba!

According to a report on Citypassguide

Where to buy property in Vietnam?

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Vietnam is a country of 93 million people. While the Kinh (the major ethnic Vietnamese group) make up most of the country’s population, there still exist some 54 groups that live in isolated corners of the country. Each has its own cultural identity and language, but all have been united over the course of years by their constant battle against foreign invaders.

Vietnamese overall is most commonly spoken language. Many of the older generations still speak French, though the foreign tongue has lost its popularity over the years. What has been rising in popularity is English, now almost obligatorily studied in most schools. This has helped boost tourism tremendously. Most Vietnamese in the tourism sector speak English well.

Vietnam is also a melting pot of many different religions. Buddhism remains the most widely practiced religion with temples and pagodas present in almost every village and district. Some of the more famous pagodas are Chua Hương or the Perfume Pagoda in Ha Tay and the Chùa Một Cột, or the One Pillar Pagoda in Hanoi. These large architectural masterpieces receive millions of visitors each year, whether for religious or simply sightseeing purposes.

Roman Catholicism was first introduced to Vietnam in the 16th century, and churches are not an uncommon sight in Vietnam.

Unique to Vietnam, Cao Dai is a mix of dogmas borrowed from Catholicism, Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism. Followers worship God and Buddha and follow saints that count Sun Yat Sen, Victor Hugo and Shakespeare among their number. Their temples can be found in many cities, particularly in Ho Chi Minh City.

Vietnam’s cuisine centres on the ubiquitous noodle soup, or pho. Many of its recipes use the country’s abundant seafood and sweet and exotic tropical fruits.

A sizeable percentage of Vietnam’s agricultural land is used for permanent crops. It is the largest producer of cashew nuts and second largest rice exporter in the world after Thailand. And although new to the game, Vietnam is one of the largest oil producers in Southeast Asia.

Vietnam has varied climate zones. Northern Vietnam has very specific seasons: cold winters and hot and humid summers. The Central Region, on the other hand, has a very dry atmosphere, with the driest months running from June to October. The coastal lowlands are tropical while towns like Da Lat down south and Sapa up north offer cooler climates. Towns like these in particular are popular due to the sweet-smelling pine forests, brilliant flowers, and waterfalls that surround the wooden cottages that sit on foggy mountaintops.

Vietnam has a 3,260-kilometre coastline with stretches of pristine white sand beaches. It has a diverse landscape made up mostly of rolling hills swathed in lush greenery and jagged mountains enveloped in dense forests. The majority of northern Vietnam is highlands while the south is a mix of mountains, forests and coastal lowlands.

As tourism is not as developed in Vietnam as it is in neighbours like Thailand, expensive water sports facilities are harder to come by. Nonetheless, beaches in Nha Trang and Da Nang are popular for their white sand and warm waters. Resorts such as Cat Ba Island and Pu Quoc Island are also popular vacation spots.

Vietnam is working hard to boost its tourism industry. Serious crimes against foreigners are uncommon, as the punishment for them is severe. Nonetheless, big cities like Ho Chi Minh are infamous for thieves who speed past on motorbikes and snatch purses, cameras and mobile phones from the hands of less-than-watchful sightseers.

One of Vietnam’s prize gems is Ha Long Bay. This UNESCO World Heritage site is a collection of islands scattred throughout the bay with hundreds of limestone caves, grottoes and rock formations of all sizes and shapes.

Vietnam’s two great cities retain much of their Old World charm even after suffering damages and trauma during the war. Hanoi is the capital, and Ho Chi Minh City, is Vietnam’s largest city. Both also have a modern, urban appeal that appeals to young backpackers from all over the world.

With its exciting past, vivid culture and natural beauty, its ancient temples, fog-topped mountains and sunny beaches, it is no surprise that Vietnam continues to attract the adventurer and the romantic.

So, whenever you think about buying property in Vietnam and need legal help, contact:

Global Business Service (GBS) Co., Ltd
Level 8, 135A Pasteur Street, District 3, HCMC, Vietnam
Email: info@gbs.com.vn | https://gbs.com.vn
Call/ SMS/ WhatsApp/ Viber/ Zalo at: +84903189033

National sales of FMCG up in urban Vietnam sightly

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National sales of FMCG on traditional and modern trade channels in urban areas reached $14 billion in Q2, growing 0.7 percent, Nielsen reported.

The fast-moving consumer goods growth year-on-year was driven by sales increases seen across six out of seven super categories: beverages (including beer), milk and dairy products, household care products, personal care products, baby care products, and cigarettes.

Baby care witnessed the biggest jump to 12 percent while food showed a decline of 1.9 percent, according to the market research firm’s newly-released Market Pulse Quarter 2 report.

“FMCG has yet to reflect an upturn in economic conditions while Vietnam’s GDP growth hit 7.1 percent in the first half of 2018,” Nguyen Anh Dung, executive director of Nielsen Vietnam’s retail measurement services division, said.

But there were many growth pockets, with modern trade channels seeing double-digit growth, he noted.

Semi-retail channels comprising stores with both wholesale and retail sales also saw strong growth.

Overall, the modern distribution channel enjoyed growth of 11.9 percent while the traditional channel was sluggish. Sales through traditional channels in urban areas rose 1.2 percent while in rural areas there was a drop of 2.4 percent.

Dung said seasonality could provide an opportunity for certain categories such as snacks, dairy, beverages, and confectionary to innovate and connect with consumers in novel ways.

“FMCG products have become basic while other products provide more excitement with innovation and new customer experiences. Consumers are willing to loosen their purse strings as reflected in strong growth in entertainment, tourism, cellphone, and automotive sales.”

It is time for manufacturers to bring excitement back to the FMCG industry, and the most important thing is to listen to consumers and put them at the center of all decisions they make, he said.

They provide the key growth cues if manufacturers can satisfy their needs, he added.

Life under Long Bien Bridge revealed

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Long Bien Bridge is one of Hanoi’s most iconic landmarks. However, it is being seriously polluted by large amounts of rubbish.

Every day, people who live under the bridge at Phuc Xa Ward, Ba Dinh District, have to face the smell of rubbish along with the sewage.
The pollution has recently worsened as the water level of Red River is rising due to heavy rains.
Piles of rubbish under the bridge
The rubbish fully covers the sewer.
Decayed fruit
Workers often rest under Long Bien Bridge. Most of them are from other localities and they come to Hanoi to work.
This area is known for it’s run-down and very small six square metre rooms.
The Red River’s water level is rising, bringing more rubbish to the area.

Source: Dtinews

15 Memorable Photos Reveals Life in Saigon During Vietnam War

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Saigon in the 1960s was the capital of America’s global proxy war to counter the ‘domino effect’ of spreading communism, the focal point of the battle between ideologies. Most of the fighting, however, took place in rural villages throughout central Vietnam. In Saigon, life went on much the same as it had for years — except with more American soldiers around. A decade later, the scenes in these pictures published on Culture Trip belonged to a new name: Ho Chi Minh City.

Street life

The motorbikes are older, and nobody’s wearing helmets, but much of the street life in Saigon looked the same back in the 1960s as it does today: tall trees, ao dais, conical hats, and cyclos. You don’t get the sense of a cataclysmic war in these photos, because it hadn’t come to Saigon yet. These are scenes of business as usual, with people out hustling to get ahead, just like their children and grandchildren still do today.

Tran Hung Dao Street, in District 1 | © manhhai/Flickr

Some things haven’t changed | © manhhai/Flickr

Before motorbikes did all the work | © manhhai/Flickr

Cyclo baby stroller | © manhhai/Flickr

Below is famous Pasteur Street, in the heart of Saigon. The traffic is still hellish, even today, so that hasn’t changed much. It’s easy to see this city’s charm in a picture like this; the vitality is palpable. After the war, many street names were changed to shed the colonial history of this city, but Pasteur is one of the few names to remain.

Pasteur Street, almost as busy as it still is today | © manhhai/Flickr

Landmarks

The following pictures are real eye-openers for anyone who’s been to Ho Chi Minh City recently. The change is incredible, and yet you can still make out familiar sights. Nguyen Hue is now a walking street, where thousands of people get together every night for selfies and snacks. The Continental Hotel is still there, with its posh, high-end French restaurant. Bui Vien back in the 1960s is almost unrecognisable. Today, it’s jammed with neon beer clubs and drunk backpackers from around the world.

View along Nguyen Hue in District 1 | © manhhai/Flickr

The Presidential Palace | © manhhai/Flickr

The home of many famous journalists | © manhhai/Flickr

The north side of the Ben Thanh Market, on Le Thanh Ton | © manhhai/Flickr

The Opera House, looking down Le Loi | © manhhai/Flickr (original by Brian Wickham)

The infamous Bui Vien Street | © manhhai/Flickr

War comes to Saigon

The relative tranquility of Saigon came to an abrupt end during the Tet festival in 1968. Under cover of firecrackers, a lunar new year tradition, 35 battalions loyal to Hanoi launched a coordinated attack against six primary targets around the city, including the Ton Son Nhat International Airport, the Presidential Palace, and the US Embassy. The Americans and southern army eventually repelled the attacks, but the damage was done. The war in Vietnam was already unpopular in America, but even the most hawkish supports were calling for an end to the bloodshed after the Tet Offensive, which beamed horrible images to TVs and newspapers around the world. The streets of Saigon became part of the war, and for many, it was time to get out.

People fleeing during the Tet Offensive | © manhhai/Flickr

Saigon changed after the Tet Offensive in 1968 | © manhhai/Flickr

Military jeep along Tran Hung Dao | © manhhai/Flickr (Original by David Staszak)

Barricaded International Hotel on Tran Hung Dao | © manhhai/Flickr

Ministry to further investigate Con Cung

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The Ministry of Industry and Commerce’s Market Surveillance Agency (MSA) plans to further investigate Con Cung company’s compliance with regulations on clear origin, product quality, origin stamps, consumer protection, and commercial activities, according to MSA’s deputy head Tran Hung.

Con Cung is a nationwide baby product retailer whose several stores in HCM City were found to have violated product origin regulations last week, MSA said. More than 5,000 products were confiscated by MSA for further investigation into their true origin.

The alleged violations included lack of receipts for some imported goods, inadequate origin stamps, and origin stamp alterations. Some products had stamps covering information printed on products, while an item of clothing showed signs that its origin stamp had been replaced, according to MSA.

An inspection team, led by Hung consisting of ministry officials and staff from the MSA HCM City Branch, visited Con Cung’s headquarters in District 7, where Nguyen Quoc Minh, chairman of the board, explained that the violations were a result of technical errors, such as stamps falling off due to insufficient glue, as opposed to malicious intent.

Hung said the investigation into Con Cung was originally scheduled last week under a decision from the ministry on July 24, but the company asked for more time to prepare proper documents and receipts to aid the investigation.

Con Cung’s commercial activities since January of last year are also being investigated.

On July 28, Con Cung announced on its website that all its products have proper receipts to prove their origin, and that it would reward VND1 billion (about US$43,500) to the first customer who can prove that a product recently bought from its stores was fraudulent or had unclear origin.

Nguyen Van Bach, deputy head of the MSA HCM City Branch, said the branch had inspected 88 Con Cung stores in HCM City so far. Further inspections are being conducted, with results expected soon, he said.

As for the problem of products with unclear origin, the MSA HCM City Branch told Tuoi Tre newspaper that it had seized over 13,000 stamps and labels of famous fashion brands such as Louis Vuitton and Gucci, with unclear origin from four shops in District 5’s Dai Quang Minh Trading Centre. MSA officials are working with these brandname companies to check the validity of the stamps and labels.

Mark Gillin, board member of the American Chamber of Commerce in HCM City, said that fraud was highly detrimental to real brands, and that consumers and businesses should have better awareness about the importance of intellectual property rights.

Source: VNS

HCM City street car parking charges sharply increased

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HCM City’s Department of Transport has increased car parking fees on local roads from today, August 1. The rise in parking fees is aimed to reduce the number of cars parked on pavements and roads.

From today, the car parking charges on 23 roadways in HCM City are VND20-40,000 (USD0.9-1.8) per hour, depending on different kinds of cars and different areas.

The fees are based on hourly rates, not single use of the space and are applied to cars of less than nine seats; cars of between 10 and 16 seats and trucks of between 1.5 and 2.5 tonnes.

On 13 inner-city streets in District 1, including Le Lai, Phan Boi Chau, Phan Chu Trinh, Nguyen Du and Huyen Tran Cong Chua, the fee for cars with less than nine seats is VND50,000 for the first two hours. The charge is VND30,000 each for the third and the fourth hour, which increases to VND35,000 for the fifth hour. It is up to VND250,000 for eight hours per day.

The same fees are also used for six streets in District 10, including Le Hong Phong, Cao Thang and Nguyen Gian Thanh.

Meanwhile, for four streets in District 5 namely An Duong Vuong, Tan Da, Tran Binh Trong and Pham Huu Chi, the parking fee for cars of below nine seats is VND50,000 for the first two hours; VND25,000 for the third and the fourth hour and VND30,000 from the fifth hour.

The fees are paid through mobile phone apps.

The new rates are 10-20% higher than fees at parking lots at shopping malls, office buildings and apartment buildings in the city.

Parking fees are currently around just VND5,000, irrespective of the length of time.

Source: Dtinews

Stocks correct after 4-day rallies

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Stocks encountered a slight correction after a four-day rising streak today, August 1, though trade remained active.

With 126 stocks rising and 169 others sliding, the VN-Index of the Hochiminh Stock Exchange fell 3.62 points, or 0.38%, at 952.77. There were 202 million shares worth VND4.4 trillion changing hands on the southern bourse, down 16.6% and 4.8% against the previous day, respectively.

Most large caps stayed almost flat. Having jumped sharply on Tuesday, lender TCB dropped 0.9% at VND27,550 per share with matching volume of two million shares.

CTG was the volume leader in the banking sector with 4.1 million shares traded but it dipped nearly 1.7% at VND23,200 per share. VHM, a housing developer, made the most negative contribution to the main index as it lost 1.5% at VND108,600 a share.

Among small stocks, property firm HQC and industrial zone operator ITA went up to their daily limits with matching volume of 10.7 million shares and three million shares, respectively. Realty firm FLC, meanwhile, declined 2.9% at VND6,350 per share and led the market by liquidity with 22.2 million shares traded.

HAG, another real estate enterprise, tumbled to near its lower limit, closing at VND7,100 a share. It was the second most heavily traded stock on the exchange with 12.6 million shares transacted.

The HNX-Index of the Hanoi Stock Exchange slid for the second straight session, edging down 0.56% at 105.56 points. Trading on the market sharply improved as volume and value climbed 17.6% and 33.5% at nearly 47.2 million shares worth VND613 billion.

PVS, an oil and gas firm, stole the limelight, adding 3.5% at VND17,800 per share. The firm was the most liquid stock on the northern bourse with matching volume of 10.6 million shares.

Lender SHB ranked second for liquidity with 7.5 million shares but it dropped 1.2% at VND8,000 per share. Its fellow bank ACB fell 0.8% at VND35,500 a share with volume of 3.3 million shares.

Among small stocks, KLF, which is active in the trading and food service sector, was the third most actively traded stock with 5.9 million shares exchanged. It closed the day unchanged at VND2,500 per share.

Foreigners stayed on the selling side for the third consecutive session, net selling VND237.6 billion worth of shares on the HCMC market. The investors, meanwhile, net sold VND3.2 billion on the Hanoi exchange.

[Phuong Thao] report on Saigontimes

Couple caught in cinema sex romp

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CGV Cinemas Vietnam has vowed to follow local law in dealing with the recent spreading of private images and asked the audience to behave in the cinemas after the romping of a couple were recorded by the security camera.

The couple in the Sweetbox seat was caught having sex in the back of the theatre. The images of the romp were then spread around the internet by an employee at CGV. The case sparks a heated debate about behaviour at cinemas and customer privacy.

Many people criticised the couple for gross indecency in public while others expressed concerns over violations of privacy.

On July 31, CGV admitted that one of its employees had spread the images. He found out about the couple while going through the videos to find a missing bag of another cinema-goer. CGV said such an incident had never happened before at their chain of cinemas and that the employee had been reprimanded and suspended.

According to CGV, it has strict policies to ensure privacy. The cameras are used for security. Rules about cinema manners are always shown on the big screen before a films start. CGV announced that it will follow the regulations and need the public’s co-operation to maintain a healthy entertainment environment.

The staffs often patrol the cinema during certain hours so that the viewing experience will not be disrupted.

“We believe that most cinema-goers are well-behaved in public. CGV has always tried to provide the best experience to audiences,” CGV representative said.

Source: Dtinews

Gen Z: the future of global economy

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Spending VND13 trillion on food and drinks alone each month, the members of Z generation (Z Gen) in Vietnam are believed to be major consumers in the future.

Nguyen Minh Tri, born in 1997, recently met reporters at Royal, a bubble tea shop in district 3, HCMC.

Tri just graduated from RMIT University one year ago, but earns a lot from his 3D app designing.

“I just need to post my products on some websites of the designers’ community. If foreign firms like my products, they will contact me,” he explained.

“Sometimes they buy my products. In other cases, they hired me to develop projects together with them,” he said.

“As a freelancer, I don’t have to go to office. I don’t have to observe any rules set by businesses and I control my time. I like this lifestyle,” he said.

Minh Tri is a member of Z Gen, born in the digital technology era. These people, born in the mid1990s to mid 2000s, are entering the labor and consumer markets.

According to Epinion, Z Gen members don’t receive official salaries, but their average income is $112 a month.

Google started in 1996. Facebook made its debut in 2004, YouTube in 2005 and internet penetrated Vietnam in 1997. As such, the Vietnamese Z Gen witnessed the strong development of internet.

“Therefore, Z Gen can be called iGen, a new generation of users whose behaviors and lives are digitalized in all ways,” commented Nguyen Hai Trieu, CEO of YouNet Media.

Regarding Z Gen’s consumption behaviors, a report of Decision Lab, a market analysis firm, about HCMC market, showed that despite modest income and reliance on parents, Z Gen is still considered the group of customers who are setting new trends in the large cities of Vietnam.

More than 56 percent of individuals surveyed by Decision Lab don’t have an income or have modest income of less than VND3 million a month. Only 35.1 percent of individuals have the income of VND3-7.5 million. Their average expenditure on non-home food and drinks is VND892,443 a month.

Unlike millennials who like to have major meals at home, many Z Gen members prefer eating out at restaurants. They adapt to fast food quickly. As for drinks, they don’t especially like coffee or alcoholic drinks like the previous generations, but prefer bubble tea.

Belonging to the ‘generation of connections’, Z Gen individuals don’t think they need to go to shops. They prefer online purchases.

US$1=VND22,000

According to a report on Vietnamnet

Elinkgate – Vietnam’s startup invents solution for computer users

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ELINKGATE new technology is a comprehensive solution that serves as a platform for IT support services for both personal and institutional computer users.

Nguyen Van Hung, Vice Rector of College of Radio and Television II, praised ELINKGATE’s technology solution, which allows control of computers from a distance.

Hung said one of the biggest problem for IT supporters lies in communication with terminal users. Most individual users don’t have deep knowledge about IT, therefore, IT supporters find it difficult to help them fix computer problems from a distance.

Despite the explanations which last hours, IT supporters and terminal users cannot understand each other.

The solution introduced by ELINKGATE brings convenience to both IT supporters and clients.

There are many remote computer access software products available in the market, including Team Viewer and LogMeIn. However, as the software all run on operating systems, they cannot fix the errors of the operating systems or other systems.

Nguyen Van Hoang and his co-worker at ELINKGATE have developed a remote-control technology which allows access to computers and hi-tech devices, and makes interventions to fix problems in the devices.

The outstanding feature of the solution introduced by Hoang is that it can be applied in all cases, even if there is no operating system.

With the technology, terminal users can easily communicate with IT supporters who can fix errors from a distance. As such, users can receive support 24/7.

When computers meet troubles, users just need to connect USB ELINK device with their computers to receive support. Even farmers and housewives who don’t have deep understanding about technology can also use this method.

IT supporters will make operations to fix errors from a distance while there is no need to install connection software. ELINK solution also works if computers don’t have operating systems and run under BIOS mode.

Users can choose specific files and folders to remain inaccessible during the support process.

The solution allows supporters to install operating systems and fix commonly seen errors with just one mouse click. They don’t have to keep watch over computers for and do step by step make operations.

ELINK not only helps provide IT supporting services, but also can serve as a platform for ecosystems in other fields. A person in a remote area can connect leading experts to receive advice on healthcare.

Adults can make friends, and communicate and update information without their children’s support.

According a report on Vietnamnet

Saigon: Not yet a tourism hub

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Ho Chi Minh City, or Saigon as it’s affectionately known by locals and expats alike, is Vietnam’s commercial hub, a home to 13 million people and 7.3 million motorbikes as of March 2017. This statistic is the reason why the sounds of bike engines and honks make up the ubiquitous soundscape of the city.

Compared to other cities in Southeast Asia, tourism isn’t its strongest selling point. Bangkok has its shopping, nightlife and the reason why it’s known as the sex capital of the world. Singapore is known for its stunning high-rise structures and cheap electronic products.

Saigon is usually the city most travellers stop by for a day or two before heading to other nearby tourist spots in the south of Vietnam such as Da Lat and Mui Ne.

The Event Draw

However, efforts have been made to change this mindset. Over the years, the city has invested in organising cultural and pop events attracting masses from all over the world. Locally-produced electronic music festivals like Ravolution for example, held their 2018 edition at the walking boulevard along Nguyen Hue with renowned international artists like Nervo and Ferry Corsten playing to a crowd that did not even have to pay a ticket fee.

International franchise events such as the Color Me Run also had an edition in Saigon, attracting participants from all over the world.

Domestically, there has been a surge in promoters and organisers independently working towards a very diverse nightlife scene in Saigon. From underground techno events like Heart Beat to regular bass music shows with Bass Republic and even new specialised entertainment venues popping up across the city like Arcan, Saigon is starting to attract a younger demographic to a country that already has one of the youngest populations in the world.

However, beyond the flashy lights and the relatively low cost of living, Saigon has its fair share of problems that affect tourism, especially returning tourists.

From Rain to Robbery

From May to November each year, residents in Saigon are well aware of the importance of umbrellas and ponchos. However, not all tourists come into the city wearing or packing waterproof boots, and the perennial flooding situation during these months is something that has yet to be addressed.

Image source: znews-photo-td.zadn.vn

Due to the city’s drainage and sewage system’s inability to keep up with the intensity of the monsoon rains, certain parts of the city turn into a mess of brown water that could even reach levels so high, you’d mistake your own backyard for a wading pool.

Other issues that are often brought up are the overcharging of services to foreigners, aggressive vendors demanding to provide a service such as shoe shining and often intimidating tourists enough for them to end up forking out close to a million dong just to get their shoes shined, fake taxi operators that prey on unsuspecting customers and charge them over 10 times the correct amount, snatch theft and even robbery. Typically, issues that will stick in the memories of those who have been here and have decided not to come back, thus hurting the tourism industry in Vietnam.

From Sidewalks to Sidesteps

Steps have been taken recently by the authorities, such as clearing up the sidewalks of food stalls, motorbikes and other assorted items that should not even be there in the first place. This still remains one of Saigon’s most enthralling drama series to date.

The operation headed by Mr. Doan Ngoc Hai, vice-chairman of District 1 People’s Committee started off brightly, earning polarised reactions from residents and amused tourists alike that eventually resulted in him earning the nickname, Captain Sidewalk. However, the operation didn’t last as long as one would expect, and then the food stalls and motorbikes reappeared and pedestrians were once again relegated back to the roads, sidestepping other pedestrians and motorbikes going against the flow of traffic.

Image source: vietnammoi.vn

Although not as dramatic, other steps taken include enforcing a higher degree of food safety regulations on street food vendors. With the establishment of Saigon Street Food Market located near Ben Thanh Market, vendors are now congregated under one roof, much like the hawker center model in Singapore, making it easier for authorities to monitor them. Another move that’s currently ongoing is the conversion of selected zones of the city with heavy tourist traffic to walking streets over the weekends. The ever-popular Bui Vien Street is one example of this scheme. As things stand, there is still a lot more work to do to turn Saigon into a tourism capital of the region.

E-Visas Increase Numbers But Will They Stay Up?

In the first five months of this year, an estimated 3.2 million people have visited the city with a notable 10 percent increase by Canadian citizens.

Vietnam’s new e-visa policy targeted to North American citizens has also started to gain traction and the city is expected to welcome an increasing number of tourists from the continent.

This new policy has also been extended to European citizens with a three year extension of visa exemptions, leading to an increase in arrivals from European nations like France and Belgium.

The upward trend here, of course, is also dependent on how soon these common problems get fixed, and whether the plans to expand the city’s international airport goes according to schedule.

According to a report on Citypassguide

Go-Jek kicks off Southeast Asia expansion with Vietnam launch

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Go-Jek, the Indonesia-based ride-sharing company valued at $5 billion, has begun its ambitious plan to increase its rivalry with Grab by expanding into three new markets after it opened shop in Vietnam.

According to a report on Techcrunch, the service — which is known as Go-Viet — covers an initial 12 districts in Ho Chi Minh City with a motorbike on-demand service. Rival Grab is in five cities in Vietnam and its services include motorbikes, taxis, private cars and food delivery.

The August 1 Vietnam launch as TechCrunch reported in June. The plan is to then expand into Thailand in September, and the Philippines before the end of this year. Singapore remains a market that Go-Jek would like to enter — it has held partnership talks with taxi operator ComfortDelGro — but it remains unclear whether, and when, that might happen.

Go-Jek expansion plan will put some heat on Grab, which has occupied a near-dominant position across Southeast Asia since it acquired Uber’s local business back in March.

Unlike Grab, though, Go-Jek is taking a very local approach to each market. Not only will it use a local name in each country — in Thailand it will be called “Get” — it has hired local ‘founder’ teams who will be responsible for service offerings and other local business aspects. It isn’t clear how closely they will work with the core Go-Jek team in Indonesia.

That may mean anyone traveling between countries will need to download local Go-Jek apps, which is in contrast to Grab, which offers a single app for eight countries in Southeast Asia.

Valued at $10 billion, Grab has raised over $5 billion from investors, including its most recent $1 billion investment from Toyota. Go-Jek has pulled in just over $2 billion. Tencent, Google, Meituan and others participated in its most recent (estimated) $1.4 billion raise which closed earlier this year.

In the hands of the gods: Vietnam’s Golden Bridge goes viral

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Nestled in the forested hills of central Vietnam two giant concrete hands emerge from the trees, holding up a glimmering golden bridge crowded with gleeful visitors taking selfies at the country’s latest eccentric tourist draw.

Designed to make visitors feel like they’re taking a stroll on a shimmering thread stretching across the hands of gods, the “Golden Bridge” has attracted hordes of guests since it opened in the Ba Na Hills near Danang in June – Dtinews reports.

Images of the bridge have gone viral on social media, much to the surprise of the architect who had no idea it would attract so much attention

“We’re proud that our product has been shared by people all over the world,” principal designer and founder of TA Landscape Architecture, Vu Viet Anh, told AFP.

At 150 metres long (490 feet), the bridge snakes through the forest high up in mountains first developed by French colonists as a hill station in 1919.

Today the area is a major tourist attraction, boasting a cable car, replica French medieval village — including faux castle and cathedral — manicured gardens and a wax museum featuring statues of Lady Gaga and Michael Jordan.

The only remnants of the original French occupants are the crumbling remains of their holiday homes that can still be spotted from the cable car.

But visitors are mostly interested in the newly built Cau Vang, which means “Golden Bridge” in Vietnamese.

“The bridge is beautiful with an amazing architectural style, from here we can see Danang City, it’s so nice,” Nguyen Trung Phuc told AFP.

Another visitor, Nguyen Hien Trang, said: “I have travelled quite a lot but I’ve never seen any bridges as beautiful as this one.”

The Ba Na Hills project was built by Sun Group, which has divided opinion with audacious projects elsewhere in Vietnam.

In 2016 it opened a cable car on Vietnam’s tallest mountain Fansipan in the tourist hotpot Sapa, prompting complaints from locals who felt it spoiled the landscape and took business away from trekking guides.

Vietnam is no stranger to off-the-wall attractions.

A “crystal cloud” installation of 58,000 shimmering Swarovski beads in the rice-terraced hills of northern Vietnam opened earlier this year, while the surreal “Crazy House” hotel in central Da Lat, designed to look a trippy treehouse, has long attracted legions of curious visitors.

The communist country has long sought to boost visitor numbers and position itself as a must-see destination in Southeast Asia.

It clocked 13 million foreign visitors last year, mostly from China — a far cry from the 35 million international visitors to Thailand in 2017.

Golden Bridge designer Anh said he already has another project in the works: a silver bridge made to look like a god’s strand of hair that will connect to his existing structure in the Ba Na Hills.

HCM City: New cryptocurrency scam hits Vietnam as miner leaves for US

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More than 300 investors reported a suspected cryptocurrency scam to Vietnamese authorities on Tuesday after the head of a bitcoin mining startup disappeared along with $35 million in client money – Reported by Nikkei.

Le Minh Tam, director of Sky Mining, reportedly absconded to the U.S. a few days ago.

The case comes three months after Vietnam saw the biggest racket in cryptocurrency history, where investors said they were robbed of as much as $660 million in initial coin offerings, including Singapore’s iFan and Dubai’s Pincoin. No further developments in that case have been reported since April.

Mining and using cryptocurrencies remains illegal in Vietnam, according to the central bank, but investors here continue to be drawn by the promise of rich returns. Tens of thousands have reportedly lost money in scams or crashes in coin prices just this year.

In the new heist, Sky Mining investors said they were persuaded to invest in cryptocurrency mining machines — computers that perform the complex calculations needed to create new bitcoins — with a promised 300% annual return, plus extra interest for drawing in new buyers.

The operation was premised on the view that the price of bitcoin will reach $16,000 this year, up from about $7,700 now. Sky Mining promoted itself as the wholesale partner of Bitmain, China’s biggest bitcoin miner.

Around 5,000 individual investors across Vietnam, as well as foreigners including Nigerian and Japanese citizens, are reported to have joined the Sky Mining network, with the investments ranging from $500 to more than $20,000. Cryptocurrency mining remains illegal in Vietnam, according to the central bank.

Sky Mining registered in Ho Chi Minh City this January as an information technology dealer. Since March, the company has organized conferences and workshops to recruit investors in coin-mining farms, with the goal of spreading the network across Vietnam in 2019. The company website shows 18 active farms, as well as an office in Japan.

More than a week ago, Le Minh Tam posted a message on the site asking forgiveness from investors for an “unpredictable” drop in the bitcoin price that had undercut returns. He invited investors to come to the head office to collect their machines and a refund.

But one group of investors found the company’s mining facility and office empty when they went to pick up their mining machines last Friday. Le Minh Tam could not be reached. Sky Mining deputy director Le Minh Hieu said the chief had stolen all the money and fled to the U.S., a local newspaper reported.

The case was reported to the authorities after a 44-second video was posted Sunday on Facebook in which the vanished director said he had gone to the U.S. for medical treatment. He said that more than 100 agencies and individuals in Vietnam had collected the machines to keep them mining while he is away. “I am not hiding or running away, and will be back as soon as possible,” said the man in the video.

Investors, however, said Le Minh Tam was trying to buy time to escape from Vietnam with the money. Some lawyers described Sky Mining’s business model as a “Ponzi scheme.”

Cryptocurrencies arrived in Vietnam a few years ago when some services in Ho Chi Minh City began taking payment in bitcoin. Bitcoin ATMs have been installed in the country, allowing users to withdraw cash and buy the cryptocurrency.

FPT, Vietnam’s biggest IT company, also considered a pilot program to let students at its education arm pay their tuition in bitcoin. The central bank has told investors and cryptocurrency users to wait for the authorities to work out a legal framework for managing virtual currencies.

Meanwhile, similar coin-mining farms in Vietnam, including Eco mining and Asama mining, are still attracting investors with promises of high yields.

Vietnamese are among the most active users of cryptocurrencies, especially bitcoin, along with Japanese and South Koreans. Figures from SimilarWeb in 2017 showed that Vietnamese investors ranked at the top on cryptocurrency exchange Remitano, and second on CoinMarketCap.com and the Bittrex platform.

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