iOS 11.4 software update was released to Apple users two weeks ago
Users are reporting battery issues after updating to the latest version
Apple has not yet revealed what is causing the problems or how to fix it
One user claims after the update, their battery began ‘draining faster by 25%’
If you haven’t updated your iPhone to iOS 11.4 yet, you may want to hold off a bit longer.
Frustrated Apple users are complaining that the software update is killing their batteries.
One angry user wrote on Reddit that it caused their battery to drain up to 25% faster, while others say they are constantly having to charge their phone.
Apple has not yet revealed what is causing the problem or how to fix it.
However, some users suggest that the issue may be with the background app refresh feature.
This lets your apps run periodically in the background so that they can update their contents, even when you’re not using your phone.
To turn off the feature, launch the Settings app from your Home screen and select General. Then switch Background Refresh to ‘off’.
If you haven’t updated your iPhone to iOS 11.4 yet, you may want to hold off a bit longer.
Thousands of frustrated Apple users are complaining that the software update is killing their batteries
The iOS 11.4 update, released globally on May 29, gives iPhones the ability to store messages in the iCloud.
It also includes improvements to the controls for Apple’s new HomePod smart speaker and multi-room audio.
However, battery drainage appears to also be a feature affecting devices across the Apple range.
With the 2018 FIFA World Cup matches illegally streamed on different Internet platforms in Vietnam, infringing the copyrights of Vietnam Television, a group of ‘knights’ have dedicated their time and efforts to help the state broadcaster tackle piracy.
VTV is the exclusive telecast right holder for all 64 matches of Russia 2018 in Vietnam. An undisclosed deal entitles the state broadcaster to the rights of airing the matches on all platforms, from TV and radio to the Internet.
VTV also allows some local partners such as HTV and Viettel TV to share its telecast rights on their own platforms.
But in just three days since the World Cup opening on June 14, the national television has detected more than 700 cases of telecast right violations of the football fiesta on the Internet, according to Lao Dong (Labor) newspaper.
VTV has asked a number of law firms specializing in copyright to take on the issue, whereas some local fans have volunteered to find and report illegal broadcasters of the World Cup matches to the genuine copyright holder.
Risk of losing telecast rights
According to Phan Vu Tuan, head of the Phan Law Vietnam law firm, there are currently three main forms of World Cup piracy in Vietnam.
The most common and also most complicated form involves users downloading software programs for mobiles and computers that allow them to stream international television programs for free.
A screen capture of one Facebook account illegally livestreaming a game from FIFA World Cup 2018.
The second type of copyright pirates is websites that illegally relay matches broadcast on VTV and Viettel TV. Some 28 websites employed this tactic to pirate the broadcast of the tournament’s Russia – Saudi Arabia opener, according to Phan Law Vietnam.
The last method is to illegally live-stream the World Cup matches from VTV via Facebook and YouTube, disguising as VTV affiliates.
Some 100 different accounts were found streaming the Russia – Saudi Arabia game, only minutes into the opening match where the hosts claimed a 5-0 win.
Many Facebook accounts even live-streamed the entire matches, including VTV comment sessions before and after the games.
VTV said it had managed to block some of the violations two to three minutes after detection, but many websites would only change into other IP addresses to continue their copyright infringement, according to Lao Dong.
For instance, the number of Facebook and Youtube accounts illegally live-streaming the Portugal – Spain clash was much bigger than those airing the opening game without permission.
Lao Dong said the widespread piracy could lead to the worst consequence, with FIFA suspending all telecast rights for Russia 2018 in Vietnam.
In 2017, Vietnam Cable Television, or VTVcab, was forced to terminate live broadcasts of the UEFA Champions League due to continued copyright infringement from local websites and TV stations.
“It is very unlikely we will be able to obtain and maintain the rights to broadcast such major international events as the World Cup if blatantly copyright infringement remains rampant,” Tuan asserted.
Voluntary ‘knights’
A group of local football lovers did not want to see FIFA bans the World Cup from being officially broadcast in the country, and have emerged themselves as ‘copyright knights,’ working voluntarily to help VTV combat violations.
The team originally consisted of only 11 members, who work for paid television companies or manage TV-themed social media pages and forums, according to tech news website ICTNews.
One YouTube channel with copyright infringement of World Cup 2018 is deleted.
As of Saturday, the group expanded into 23 members, who would ‘scour’ the Internet for illegal broadcast during every live matches.
When detecting violations, the group members will report to Google and Facebook or VTV and HTV for intervention.
Their efforts to prevent World Cup piracy have been proven effective, according to ICTNews.
According to a founding member, illegal live-stream sessions of Russia 2018 matches on YouTube and Facebook started to reduce significantly from Saturday.
“We only found a few violators, whereas the number of infringements was too many to count on the first days of the tournaments,” he said.
“But we will still have to work actively to protect the World Cup copyright [in Vietnam],” he added.
A lot of viewers have also sent links of websites or platforms that infringed the World Cup copyright to the VTV official Facebook page.
Over 200 fans have so far reported around 700 violations to VTV, with the state broadcaster already handling 300 of them.
VTV has also called on cooperation from the Ministry of Information and Communications to help fight against the World Cup piracy on the Internet.
A new government decree – No 86/2018/NĐ-CP – stipulates that domestic and foreign teachers involved in integrated education programs need to provide sufficient evidence of their qualifications.
Under this decree, foreign teachers must hold a bachelor’s degree level in their chosen subjects and teacher training certificates or equivalent. Vietnamese teachers are also required to meet standard qualifications for the grade they teach. VNS, a state-owned news channel reported.
All teachers involved in integrated education programs must have foreign languages proficiency at level five out of six in accordance with Vietnamese law.
The decree allows private kindergartens and schools in Vietnam to link up with legal and accredited educational establishments abroad.
Incorporated foreign educational programs must be accredited by authorized agencies and organizations in their native countries.
The programs must ensure the objectives of Vietnam’s education program, while examinations must be in line with Vietnamese and foreign countries’ laws. Graduates of integrated curricula at senior high schools must be granted graduation certificates from Việt Nam and the foreign country involved.
The education program will be valid for five years and may be extended for a further five.
The document will enter into force on August 1 this year.
The issuance of the decree is seen as a move to tighten regulations on educational institutions that have foreign partners. In April, MOET’s International Educational Co-operation Department asked Newton Grammar School in Hanoi’s Bac Tu Liem District to end its relationship with George Washington International School (GWIS) in the US following the confirmation that GWIS was an unregistered school. After the incident, MOET reviewed all foreign-related educational institutions nationwide. Initial reports showed no similar cases.
The Vietnamese government has passed a new law that allows locals to bet on government-approved sports events, local media reports.
Named the Law on Sports and Physical Training, the new law is said to be based on the 2017 government decree that allows locals to bet on select international football games and horse and greyhound races, which came into effect March 31, 2017.
Under the new law, betting will be allowed for sports events when the government approves a decree proposed by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
However, while football betting has been legalized since March 2017, no actual betting has taken place yet.
There are currently no betting companies authorized to provide betting services in the country. A lack of agreement between relevant ministries on how to organize the bidding process has been a main factor.
However, the lack of betting options has also played a hand in this. Currently, Vietnam allows only betting on international football matches recognized by FIFA and approved by the sports ministry. This includes the World Cup, the Confederations Cup, Copa America, Champions League and Europa League, short tournaments that are few and far between.
One economist, Nguyen Tri Hieu said that bookmakers would suffer heavy losses if they were to only offer betting on FIFA recognized tournaments.
457 deputies voted to approve the Thursday bill, accounting for 94.5 percent of those present in the assembly hall. The law goes into effect on January 1, 2019.
Vietnamese people believe that there are so many kinds of parasites living inside human body which appear the most at the fifth day of the fifth lunar month. As such, people try to kill those inner parasites on that day,” Sharing experiment by Nguyen Thi Ty in Hanoi about Dragon Boat festival.
From 6 AM, many people in Hanoi have rushed to the market to buy traditional dishes such as violet glutinous rice, plum, glutinous cake to kill inner insects followed by oral story-telling. It means that for the better new day. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)Dishes such as violet glutinous rice, lychee, plum, rambutan, etc. are offered for sale at Hang Be street, Gia Ngu street, Hom Market. But if you don’t get it soon, it’s out of stock really fast. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)In some old streets in Hanoi, according to the sellers, the number of buyers of fruits and violet glutinous rice in these days increased sharply. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)In the Northern provinces in general and Ha Noi capital in particular, in Dragon Boat festival, people often eat fruit, violet glutinous rice to kill inner insects. Prices of these items are higher than normal days. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)Lotus Seed (Photo: Minh Son/ Vietnam +)Ms. Mai An (Ly Thai To Street, Hanoi) said that she got up very early to buy for incense and kill inner insects. She’s afraid of the stock is out, and can not buy fresh fruit. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)The Vietnamese Dragon Boat festival was started at the time of Ngo (as 12 PM) – midday of May 5th of lunar year. From ancient times, the meaning of this day is in the human body, especially the digestive tract often has parasitic worms hidden, if not eradicated it, the worms are growing and not good for health. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)Glutinous cakes are also being bought in this day. A seller said that the cake is sold for 50-80 thousand VND per ten. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)Lychee, plum and violet glutinous rice are indispensable dishes during the Dragon Boat festival. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)The most important dish on Dragon Boat festival is violet glutinous rice. The price is 50-70 thousand VND per kilogram, while other dishes such as lychee for 20-30,000 VND per kg, plum for 30-40,000 VND per kg, etc. (photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)Tran Thi Thuy Loan, a seller in Gia Ngu Street said: ‘She sells glutinous rice in here for more than 35 years, every year on the festival of Dragon Boat, she sells by 3-5 times as a normal week. (Photo: Minh Son / Vietnam +)
Convenience store chains battle to modernize a sector built on small business – Nikkei reported.
HANOI — Retailers from across Asia are flooding into Vietnam as the country loosens restrictions on foreign companies, racing to bring convenience stores and supermarkets to a market dominated by small business.
Among foreign companies, manufacturers such as South Korea’s Samsung Electronics have long seen the value in Vietnam, despite the country lagging behind its Southeast Asian peers in economic development. Now retailers are following suit.
One of the newcomers heralding a major foray into the Southeast Asian nation’s retail market is the convenience store GS25, which arrived in downtown Ho Chi Minh City in January.
GS Retail, the operator of South Korea’s top convenience store chain, plans to have 50 of the stores in Vietnam by the end of this year and expand its network here to 2,500 locations within a decade. In its home market, GS25 boasts 12,000 stores.
Out the outskirts of the city, South Korea’s top retailer, E-Mart, has packed three hectares with a vast selection of foods, clothing and household goods, enticing shoppers to pile their baskets high. Modern sanitary controls for the store’s fresh food section are welcomed by shoppers used to the city’s fly-choked marketplaces. Based on the success of its first location in Vietnam, E-Mart is expected to open 10 or more locations in the country.
Meanwhile, South Korean conglomerate Lotte plans to increase the number of Lotte Mart supermarkets in Vietnam to 87 from the current 13. An executive at the group calls the country “the most important market in Asia.”
Total retail sales in Vietnam reached a record of $129.6 billion in 2017.
Vietnam has allowed 100% foreign ownership of retail businesses under certain conditions since 2009, two years after acceding to the World Trade Organization. This puts it ahead of Indonesia and others in terms of market openness. Free trade and economic partnership pacts with countries, including Japan, have encouraged further liberalization.
In 2016, the country lowered barriers to opening stores under 500 sq. meters, and foreign convenience store chains flourished. Under the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, signed in March, these companies will eventually be able to expand without any further government screening.
Japan’s Seven & i Holdings plans to have 1,000 7-Eleven stores in Vietnam by 2027, and Thailand’s B’s Mart chain is aiming for 3,000 locations. One resident of Ho Chi Minh City said she hardly goes to the market anymore: “Convenience stores are becoming more numerous — they’re very convenient.”
Mom-and-pop retailers and small chains have long dominated Vietnam’s retail landscape, and continue to do so today. Modern grocery retailers — supermarkets, convenience stores and the like — make up only 5.4% of Vietnamese food sellers this year, the lowest figure in Southeast Asia.
But as incomes rise, more Vietnamese are willing to pay higher prices for higher-quality foods at modern stores. Vietnam’s economy is growing around 7% annually, and per capita gross domestic product reached $2,385 in 2017. In Ho Chi Minh City, the figure is over $5,000.
This spells a major opportunity for foreign chains, as Vietnam only has around 1,000 supermarkets and 2,000 convenience stores at present — one-20th and one-30th of the numbers in Japan.
The prospect of foreign capital flooding the retail market has alarmed some. “If overseas companies come to dominate, it will be domestic companies and the Vietnamese people who pay the price,” said a member of the country’s parliament.
But domestic players are not sitting by idly. VinMart+, the convenience store arm of real estate heavyweight Vingroup, plans to quadruple its network to 4,000 stores by 2020. MobileWorld, Vietnam’s top cellphone retailer, has built its supermarket business to 375 stores in three years, and targets 500 locations by the end of this year.
Vietnam is in need of several thousand modern retail stores, according to Nguyen Duc Tai, chairman and CEO of MobileWorld. “If we build the stores, we’re bound to capture a certain level of market share.”
In 2018, Vietnam and Australia marked the 45th anniversary of bilateral diplomatic relations by upgrading their ties to a strategic partnership.
On this occasion, however, it is hard not to reflect on the disparity between the Vietnamese diaspora and homeland. Almost 45 years after the Vietnam War, the Vietnamese as a people are still divided, and reconciliation is long overdue.
For me, memories of a recent mid-autumn festival linger in my mind. An event was held to celebrate the shared tradition of Vietnamese Australians and Vietnamese newcomers, and it attracted a very large gathering of Vietnamese expats.
Yet I was stunned when the host of the festival asked all present to salute the national flag of the Republic of Vietnam, and to retake the oath to free Vietnam of communism. At the very least, this seemed inconsiderate given the large number of children in the crowd eager to enjoy lion dances and musical performances.
The Vietnamese community in Australia comprises approximately 500,000 people, and is the fifth-largest immigrant population in the country, according to the 2016 census. The community largely derives from two sources: political refugees after 1975 and their descendants; and economic migrants who stayed on after completing their studies.
This has created a schism in attitudes. According to a 2016 study by Danny Ben-Moshe, Joanne Pyke, and Liudmila Kirpitchenko, the Vietnamese Australians after 1975 share a “victim” consciousness, while the second generation and newcomers do not want to get involved with politics.
Even within the same family, there exists a wide gap between the older generation and their offspring when it comes to ideologies and political stances. This ideological gap translates into a generational gap, where youngsters sometimes accuse the elderly of holding on to a grudge towards the current regime in homeland Vietnam.
Because ties to the homeland cannot be severed, old pains grow anew and are refreshed. Each year on 30 April, when Vietnam celebrates the so-called “Liberation and Reunification Day”, the Vietnamese diaspora take to the streets to commemorate their “National Resentment Day” (Quoc Han), or words to the same effect. Year after year, there have been mass demonstrations against Vietnam’s Communist Party in front of the Vietnamese embassy in Canberra. Most of the protesters are at least in their 60s.
This prolonged divisiveness prompts a valid question about Vietnam’s engagement with its diaspora communities. Diasporas are often considered messengers and bridge-builders that can facilitate relations between their home and host countries.
Yet a prerequisite is that the home country must effectively engage with its diaspora, which may not be the case for Vietnam. In fact, according to historian Peter Edwards, the negative attitudes of the Vietnamese community in Australia used to present a major obstacle to closer bilateral ties.
While there have been multiple engagement activities under the purview of Vietnam’s State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs, it seems like the focus is on financial links. On other fronts, including in political, legal, and emotional arenas, there has been little comfort.
As of May 2017, only 15 overseas Vietnamese people had successfully gained residential ownership in Vietnam, despite the fact that an amended and supposedly more flexible housing law was introduced in 2015.
For all intents and purposes, the Vietnamese diasporas are a force to be reckoned with. By the end of 2015, Vietnam received more than US$12 billion in remittances, 90% of which were from the US, Australia, Canada, Germany, and France. The remittances are not only for family, but also contribute to investments.
In 2017, according to Vietnam’s Foreign Minister, more than 2100 businesses partly or wholly owned by overseas Vietnamese have invested in 52 provinces, totalling $2.92 billion. Vietnam sends the sixth largest group of international students to Australia – approximately 25,000 – the majority of which are self-sponsored.
No matter how and why the Vietnamese people have become disintegrated, they still share a relatively homogenous culture and a common national identity. To tap the full potential of Vietnamese overseas, the cause of reconciliation should be stepped up.
There have been people-to-people diplomatic initiatives at the grass-roots level. An example is the newly founded Vietnam Centre in Sydney that aims to act as a link between Vietnamese at home and abroad to promote the ancient culture of Vietnam. Another example is the Australia Vietnam Young Leadership Dialogue whose vision is to facilitate collaboration among young leaders.
However, it is unlikely such initiatives will win popular support or wield much influence without an official endorsement by the Vietnam’s government.
The Government of Vietnam should be one that holds out an olive branch to the diaspora community, for the greater good. And a focus on the cultural roots of the Vietnamese people may present the best chance to find common ground.
Every year on 30 April, many Vietnamese people’s feelings still resonate with this statement by former prime minister Vo Van Kiet:
[On this day] millions of people are happy, and millions of people are sad. We need to heal the common wound of our people instead of causing more bleeding.
Vietnam has succeeded with its “close the past, look forward to the future” policy towards the US, but the same cannot be said about healing the rift among millions of Vietnamese people.
U.S. Air Force Col. Peter J. Stewart was flying a F-4C over North Vietnam on March 15, 1966 when he was shot down. Until recently, he was missing in action.
A couple of months ago – the U.S. government identified his remains, which were found at the crash site. Fox News Channel 13 reportes.
After 52 years, he has now arrived home to his family for a dignified burial.
They met the plane on the tarmac at Tampa International Airport Saturday afternoon, and a motorcade escorted them back to their home in Polk County.
“This experience was huge, it was huge for my family, and after 52 years, my grandmother and her six kids have their dad home for Father’s Day, so we’re very excited to welcome him back,” said Margaret Stewart, Col. Stewart’s granddaughter. She added that the family is grateful for the outpouring of support from the community.
There will be a service at Oak Ridge Funeral Home in Col. Stewart’s honor on Sunday, and on Monday there will be a mass at St. Matthew’s Catholic Church.
The Vietnam Technological and Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Techcombank) will increase its charter capital to nearly 34.97 trillion VND (1.53 billion USD).
According to VNA’s report, the plan was approved by the bank’s shareholders at an extra meeting on June 14.
Techcombank’s charter capital currently stands at nearly 11.66 trillion VND, and the increase of over 23.31 trillion VND corresponds to over 2.33 billion shares expected to be issued with a par value of 10,000 VND per share.
The total number of Techcombank shares after raising capital will be about 3.5 billion shares.
As a result of the increase, shareholders will receive more shares at a ratio of 1:2 for each share, with each shareholder receiving two new shares. The charter capital increase procedure will be completed in July in accordance with the law.
The issuance of shares will be implemented in the third quarter of this year. The plan is expected to help increase liquidity, facilitate trading on the floor by shareholders and investors, and provide the bank with more capital sources for growing reinvestment in the coming years.
Nguyen Le Quoc Anh, general director of Techcombank, said this was a good time to increase charter capital as Techcombank had completed the sale of treasury shares to international investors and officially listed on the HCM Stock Exchange (HoSE). The bank has also used retained earnings for many years to implement its 2016-20 strategy, focusing on building a solid foundation to generate revenue and profits and reduce risks.
Techcombank will continue to focus on banking development strategy in the near future to achieve business results consistent with sustainable growth goals approved by the Board of Directors and shareholders, Anh said.
Many cashew nut processing plants have halted operations due to a lack of materials, the Vietnam Cashew Nut Association (Vinacas) told a meeting in Ho Chi Minh City on June 15 to review the sector’s performance in the first half of 2018.
Vietnam News Agency reportes. In the Mekong Delta province of Long An, only 12 out of 33 cashew nut processing factories are operating while in Binh Phuoc, up to 80 percent of small and medium-sized enterprises temporarily shut down.
Vinacas Vice President and Secretary General Dang Hoang Giang said imported cashew nut materials hit 25,000 tonnes in May, much lower than 150,000 tonnes in the same period last year, adding that the sector will strive to raise total exports to over 3.7 billion USD in 2018.
Meanwhile, Vinacas Vice President Ta Quang Huyen said the global consumption of cashew nuts rose by 3.5 – 5 percent due to falling prices. In the first five months of this year, the total cashew nut imports reached 283,000 tonnes, domestic and cross-border purchase hit 370,000 tonnes, bringing the total volume of cashew nut materials to 653,000 tonnes.
Five-month cashew nut exports increased in both volume and value, reaching 141,000 tonnes worth 1.39 billion USD, up 21.4 percent and 25.3 percent, respectively.
Major importers include the US, accounting for 29 percent; the Netherlands, 17 percent; and China, 15 percent. This year, Vietnam plans to maintain a market share of around 65 percent of the global cashew nut export worth 5.7 billion USD.
It is the 13th consecutive year the Vietnamese cashew nut sector has retained its top world place in terms of cashew nut export and processing.
Vinacas forecast that the Vietnamese cashew nut sector will enter a new development phase in 2019. It pledged to continue partnering with farmers and firms to facilitate production and trade by chain value, enhance inspection over origin of products from farm to table, towards raising the sector’s total trade to roughly 4 billion USD next year.
In the afternoon the same day, Vinacas announced the schedule of the 10th Vietnam International Cashew Conference slated for October 5-7 in Ha Long city, the northern province of Quang Ninh. It is expected to attract about 500 domestic and foreign firms from 50 countries and territories worldwide.
The Vietnamese government has issued a decree on regulating foreign cooperation and investment in education, including education linkage with foreign partners, Vietnam News Agency reported on Saturday.
Specifically, private kindergartens and schools in Vietnam could link up with legal and accredited educational establishments abroad. Their integrated curricula must be approved by the authorized agency, and the Vietnamese minister of education and training will issue specific regulations on the integration of domestic and foreign curricula.
Graduates of integrated curricula at senior high schools must be granted with graduation certificates of both Vietnam and the foreign country.
Under the decree slated for taking effect on Aug. 1, the education linkage program will be valid for five years and may be extended with each extension not more than five years.
Thu Dao, a lawyer of GBS told us that, last few years, many foreign investors contact GBS to be advised about registration of foreign invested should in Vietnam, but the percentage of the license approved still be lower than the market potentials.
In the rural mountains of Vietnam, young girls are disappearing from their homes with increasing regularity. Many turn up across the border, sold as wives for the price of a buffalo.
It was 8pm on a scorching summer night when Tien, a quiet, timid teenager, left her home in a coastal province of central Vietnam, supposedly to spend the night at her cousin’s. Or at least, that is what the 16-year-old had told her family. In fact, she planned to leave the village to escape the pressure on her to get married. Hoping her cousin would help her find a job, she slipped out the door. SCMP reported.
It was nearly two years before she would return, by then having endured horrors beyond the imagination of most teenagers. The cousin she had trusted, rather than finding her a job, had sold her to a human trafficking broker in China who resold her as a bride. Tien became part of a depressing new statistic: the growing number of impoverished Vietnamese children being sold into forced marriages in China.
Tien had realised early on that something was amiss. “I gave her all of my money and my ID card,” Tien recalls. “She told me, ‘we’re going to find work. You said you wanted to leave that village so I’m taking you’.”
Her cousin had promised to take her to the big cities in the south, but instead they headed north, to the capital Hanoi. They switched vehicles in the capital and Tien fell asleep. When she woke, she was in China, where her cousin abandoned her after selling her to a trafficking broker.
Tien soon learned the broker had already matched her with a husband. She put up a fight, refusing to leave the broker’s house for four months, but eventually gave in, having met a fellow Vietnamese who told her the only way to escape the country would be to learn Chinese – and that the best way to do so would be to marry. So she let her broker find her a new match.
A Hmong woman in Sa Pa, where child brides are common. Domestic violence drives many women to quit their home for a better life elsewhere. Photo: Yen Duong
A familiar tale
Tien’s ordeal is far from unique. Disappearances like hers have become so frequent in some rural areas of Vietnam many villagers assume that if a girl has been missing for more than a couple of days she must already be on the other side of the border.
Official statistics from Vietnam’s Department of General Police show that between 2011 and 2017, there were 2,700 reported cases of human trafficking, involving nearly 6,000 victims mainly from poor families in rural areas, with little access to education or economic opportunities. The official figures are widely thought to be dwarfed by the number of unreported cases. Police say selling children as brides is rife in provinces near the border with China and is on the rise.
In China, where men outnumber women by 34 million – more than the entire population of Malaysia – websites offer foreign brides to fill the gap. The service comes at a price, usually somewhere around the 10,000 yuan (US$1,500) mark.
The stories of the women who end up becoming these brides are nuanced. Some are lured into China with false promises of jobs and better lives, but end up forced into marriage or even brothels to become sex slaves. Some are tricked by someone they trust – a relative, a friend, even sometimes a boyfriend who promises to marry them, but instead sells them. Some girls are drugged, then taken across the border.
Other girls are given up voluntarily by families who are made to believe they will receive a dowry (often “less than the price of a buffalo”, villagers would say, usually between US$600-US$2,200), but instead find their daughters have been kidnapped and sold on.
Once the women have been married off, various forces conspire to keep them in China. Some are effectively imprisoned by their new husbands, others are too afraid to return as the stigma they bear means they will be unable to marry again in Vietnam.
Mai was in her 20s when she was sold by her boyfriend. She was sold at least five times while in China, where she suffered major mental and physical abuse. Her trafficker and tormentors still walk free. Photo: Yen Duong
Ma Thi Mai, a Hmong woman in her 30s from Sa Pa, an impoverished rural town in northern Vietnam, was sold by her boyfriend. “After my first husband died, a man got my number from an acquaintance and tried to reach out to me,” she recalls.
They soon became infatuated with each other – or so she thought. Within just two weeks he had asked her to leave her home in the terraced hills of Lao Chai village to visit his family in Lao Cai, a border city separated from China by a confluence of two rivers. It is notorious as a crossing point for human traffickers.
As they crossed the river in the dead of night on a raft, Mai was unaware they were entering another country. She had never travelled that far from her hometown.
“I did not know it was China until I saw the signboards in different letters and the people were speaking in a different language,” Mai says. “He sold me to a Chinese woman, who then sold me to other men.”
Mai became a modern-day slave. She was sold and auctioned at least five times, and was kept constantly on the road. Angry men would threaten and beat her if she protested or even wept. “They sold me like an animal,” she says.
Trauma
Dang Thi Thanh Thuy, a case manager at Hagar International in Vietnam, an NGO that provides help for women and children who have escaped sexual slavery and human trafficking, says victims suffer psychological traumas that can scar them for life.
“The initial responses of women who have been rescued can be either panic or disassociation, depending on their ways of coping with trauma,” she says. “If they are frightened or agitated, they might even try to commit suicide, break down or scream. But if they experience emotional numbness, they feel depressed and have no motivation to do anything.
Sa Pa is one of the poorest towns in northern Vietnam, though it is popular with tourists and backpackers. Photo: Yen Duong
“All of these reactions are rooted in their insecurity. They no longer feel safe and protected.”
Lao Cai is infamous for trafficking. Ethnic minorities and children in Lao Cai are often the traffickers’ main targets, according to a report by Unicef in 2016.
Domestic violence is common in Lao Cai, even though in many cases the women there are the main providers for their family. The area is popular with backpackers and many Hmong women make a living as trekking guides or by selling souvenirs. Those who can’t speak English and have nothing to sell often survive by working on farms. Others look north to escape the poor living conditions.
Mai married her first husband when she was 14. By the time she was sold into her second marriage – sometime in her mid-20s, she is not sure of exactly when – she had already had two children.
Since she returned home – she escaped China by flagging down a police car – she has received neither psychological nor physical support, despite having reached out to local authorities.
She now spends most of her time toiling in the fields to support her sons.
Meanwhile, the “boyfriend” who kidnapped her walks around freely, despite having been reported for the crime. She saw him recently at the local church, wearing her Hmong xauv necklace.
“His father works for the local government,” she says. “I’m sure if he could sell me, he must have sold other women too. He was very experienced and knew what to do.”
“I wish he was in prison, because what he did was like killing me. He sold me, he stole my stuff. It still hurts so much when you think about it.”
Left behind
At a nearby village in Ta Van, clay houses with thatched roofs are clustered together in the mountains, overlooking beautiful vast swathes of green terraced fields in the sunny May weather.
There, in their nearly empty, unequipped houses, two mothers, Sung Thi Ku, 54, and Giang Thi Su, 40, count their days waiting for news of their missing daughters.
Sung Thi Ku, 54, a farmer. Both of Ku’s daughters were taken to China. She is wearing her second daughter’s handmade gown, the only memento she has of her girl. Photo: Yen Duong
Both of Ku’s daughters are in China – though neither has ever told Ku what they are doing there. Ku believes they were both sold to traffickers after leaving for China voluntarily, and blames their husbands’ families. “My first daughter’s husband told her he did not want her any more. His family mistreated her, and she wanted to leave for China, so she did with her friend,” Ku says.
In the five years since her eldest daughter left, Ku has heard nothing from her. Ku’s younger daughter left home at 21, about two and a half years ago. Soon after the 2018 Vietnamese Lunar New Year, Ku received a call from a Chinese number. It was her younger daughter.
“She told me to work hard and stay healthy, she was staying in China and she had a family and a child already,” Ku said.
“She told me she cannot come back to Vietnam.”
The other mother, Su, is still in contact with the daughter she lost. One day, her daughter had come home with a group of Chinese people who asked Su for her daughter’s hand to marry. Su did not know they were human traffickers at the time, even though things did not feel right.
“They kept touching my daughter’s hair, body, hands,” she recalls.
“They told us to trust them, that we could come with them to China for one or two days if we wanted.”
Su warned her daughter not to go with the people, but her daughter left anyway, accompanying the group with a friend and the friend’s father. They stayed at an inn near the border, and when the friend’s father woke up the next day the Chinese group had vanished along with the girls and without paying the dowry. The girls were just 17 years old.
Giang Thi Su, a 40-year-old farmer. Su lost her 17-year-old daughter to a group of Chinese traffickers. She is wearing her daughter’s dress. She does not have any photos of her girl. Photo: Yen Duong
Su’s daughter, now 20, was married to a man whose first wife had died. He does not allow her to return to Vietnam because he fears she would run away. She is not even allowed to call.
“I was angry and I cried a lot,” Su says, breaking into tears. “I thought those people did some magic to my daughter, that is why she did not listen to me any more.”
Out of the six thousand victims identified by Vietnam’s Department of General Police, only around 600 have returned to Vietnam.
Among them is Cau, a Hmong student who was kidnapped by the aunt of one of her friends and taken to China when she was 17. The aunt then sold both Cau and her own niece to traffickers.
Su’s son. The family is one of the poorest in the area. Photo: Yen Duong
The traffickers took Cau across the country, to Zhejiang where Cau met many young Vietnamese women, from Son La, Lai Chau, and even her own hometown Mu Cang Chai, who were eager to meet her.
“I met a 14-year-old girl who had been kidnapped and was married to a 36-year-old man,” Cau recalls. “I asked her how she knew I was in town, she said her Chinese husband had told her there was a Vietnamese girl who had just arrived. She also came from Mu Cang Chai, and she told me she missed her hometown, so she wanted to see me and talk to me.”
After three months, Cau managed to escape the house where she was being kept and ran to the nearest police station. Her description helped the police to locate the house where she had been held.
The Chinese traffickers were arrested, but the Vietnamese ones had already escaped. Her friend is still missing.
Cau and her friend were kidnapped and taken to China by the friend’s aunt. Cau escaped after three months in China – her friend’s fate is unknown.
Scarred
Vietnam lacks a comprehensive repatriation mechanism to reintegrate human trafficking victims into ordinary life. Women who voluntarily went to China – even those lured under false pretences like the daughters of Ku and Su – are considered “off record” and do not qualify for any of the state initiatives offering financial or psychological support. The same is true of those women who, like Mai, escape their traffickers and return to Vietnam under their own steam.
Yet these women are in some ways the most vulnerable. Their wounds never completely heal because of the social stigma and discrimination they may experience. “In our society, there is still a common response towards human trafficking: victim-blaming,” says Thuy, the case manager at Hagar. “Many people still label the victims as ‘bad girls who deserve to be trafficked’, or ‘lazy, greedy people who want to earn money easily’.
“Such reactions exacerbate their past traumas, and can easily traumatise them again. They come to perceive themselves the way the society does, and start blaming themselves.”
Back in Hanoi, Tien, now 21, has gone back to school and is starting a new life. When she first returned to the country, neighbours made her feel unwelcome.
“When I got back, I felt like there was a wall in front of me, especially when I talked to other people,” Tien says. “I was very afraid. I didn’t want to talk. Many people would make jokes out of my pain and thought it was funny.”
Twenty people, including a teenager, were injured early Sunday in a shooting at a 24-hour art festival in Trenton, New Jersey, the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office said.
CNN reports.One suspect was killed, and another one was taken into custody, officials said.
“Multiple weapons have been recovered,” prosecutor Angelo Onofri said. “Twenty individuals were treated for a variety of gunshot wounds as well as other injuries.”
Among the injured is a 13-year-old, who is in extremely critical condition, the prosecutor said.
Witnesses told CNN affiliate WPVI the shooting happened around 2:45 a.m. at the Art All Night-Trenton festival at the Roebling Wire Works Building on the south side of the city.
“All of a sudden, my brother goes to me, ‘You hear that gunfire?’ I go, ‘It sounds like fireworks.’ He said, ‘No, that’s gunfire.’ Next thing you know, we turn around and everybody’s running down the street. All hell broke loose,” Angelo Nicolo of Trenton told the station.
Nicolo saw one person with a gunshot wound, he said.
“I saw two police officers escort a guy that got shot in the leg. They bandaged him up and whisked him away before the ambulance came here. It was pretty gnarly,” Nicolo said.
Police are questioning witnesses to determine if more suspects could be at large, WPVI reported. The dead suspect was a 33-year-old man, police told the station.
Before it was canceled, the festival had been scheduled to run from 3 p.m. Saturday to 3 p.m. Sunday. It featured more than 1,500 works of art, live murals and graffiti, dozens of musical performances and a film festival. The event is in its 12th year, its website says.
“We’re still processing much of this and we don’t have many answers at this time, but please know that our staff, our volunteers, our artists and musicians all seem to be healthy and accounted for. Our sincere, heartfelt sympathies are with those who were injured,” festival organizers said on Facebook.
The Mercer County’s Prosecutors Office Homicide Takes Force will lead the investigation as there was an officer-involved shooting.
This country report and accompanying data annex provide a comprehensive overview of Vietnam’s telecoms market, including KPIs and data on subscribers, penetration, revenue and ARPU.
The report analyses the strategies of major players in the country’s fixed and mobile telecoms markets, and includes market share data and operators’ infrastructure status.
Data coverage
The country report data annexes provide a range of key metrics for each country’s telecoms market. Figures are supplied for each year since 2006. The data annex was last updated in May 2018. Metrics include the
following.
Fixed telecoms market
Connections
Total voice (narrowband and VoBB)
Narrowband
VoBB
Total broadband
Broadband split by access technology: DSL, cable modem, FTTH/B, BFWA
and other
IPTV
Dial-up Internet
Household penetration (for voice and broadband)
Unbundled local loops
Revenue and ASPU
Service revenue
Service revenue as percentage of GDP
Service revenue per head of population per month
Retail revenue (defined as service revenue minus wholesale revenue)
Retail revenue as percentage of GDP
Retail revenue per head of population per month
Retail revenue split by type of service: voice (including split by
narrowband and VoBB, and split by narrowband access and calls),
broadband (including split by technology), dial-up Internet, business
network services
Broadband retail revenue as a percentage of fixed retail revenue
Voice ARPU per month
Broadband ARPU per month
Traffic
Fixed-originated minutes
Outgoing MoU per active connection
Operator-level metrics/market share
Broadband subscribers by major broadband operator (and associated
market shares and year-on-year changes)
DSL connections (incumbent and total, incumbent’s share)
Incumbent’s market share of service revenue
Total telecoms market (fixed and mobile)
Voice connections
Broadband connections
Service revenue
Service revenue as percentage of GDP
Service revenue per head of population per month
Retail revenue (defined as service revenue minus wholesale revenue)
Retail revenue as percentage of GDP
Retail revenue per head of population per month
Retail revenue split by voice and data
Originated minutes
Mobile Telecoms Market
Connections
Total (handset plus mobile broadband, excluding M2M)
Split by prepaid and contract, and prepaid share
Population penetration for total, prepaid and contract
3G, and 3G percentage of total
Handset, and split by smartphone and basic
Handset population penetration
Broadband
Broadband population penetration
MVNO penetration
Revenue and ARPU
Service revenue
Service revenue as percentage of GDP
Service revenue per head of population per month
Service revenue split by prepaid and contract, and prepaid share
Service revenue split by voice and data, and data as percentage of
service revenue
Retail revenue (defined as service revenue minus wholesale revenue)
Retail revenue as percentage of GDP
Retail revenue per head of population per month
Split by voice and data
ARPU per month (total, prepaid and contract)
Traffic
Mobile-originated minutes
Outgoing MoU per active connection
Operator-level metrics/market share
Connections (and associated market share)
Prepaid and contract connections
Proportion of prepaid accounts
ARPU per month (total, prepaid and contract)
Service revenue
Service data revenue (as a percentage of service revenue)
Total telecoms market (fixed and mobile)
Voice connections
Broadband connections
Service revenue
Service revenue as percentage of GDP
Service revenue per head of population per month
Retail revenue (defined as service revenue minus wholesale revenue)
The HCM City housing market will continue to grow this year, especially the VNĐ1 billion (US$44,000) condo segment, the HCM City Real Estate Association (HoREA) has predicted.
Lê Hoàng Châu, its chairman, said the VNĐ1 billion segment would be the most liquid while the luxury segment will be restructured in line with actual demand. VNS reports.
Authorities would continue to cool down the land and condotel segments, it said.
In the second half of the year developers would continue to upgrade the city’s infrastructure, rebuilding old apartments, joining in resettlement programmes and developing smart urban areas, it said.
They would strengthen relations with foreign investors to raise more funds, it said.
In the first five months of this year the property market was slightly down compared to the same period last year, with only 29 projects launched, almost 10 per cent fewer.
Nearly 9,200 housing units were put in the market, 8,690 of them apartments and the rest houses, down by more than 44 per cent.
The slowdown had spread to the apartment market, with the luxury segment declining by 26 per cent, the mid-price segment by 32 per cent and the low-end segment by 70 per cent.
Land prices shot up, especially in District 9, though of late they have levelled off.
Fifteen M&A deals were done.
Property attracted the third highest amount of FDI.
According to HoREA, developers face challenges in getting loans since banks are tightening credit on instructions from the State Bank of Việt Nam.
The association wants the Government to control two main factors that affect the market: the imbalance between demand and supply in the luxury apartment and condotel segments and the disinformation spread by brokers to manipulate land prices.