Controversial draft law on special zones postponed

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The vote to approve the controversial draft Law on Special Administrative and Economic Units will be postponed until the sixth National Assembly session, to commence in October, instead of the on-going fifth.

According to a special announcement released early on Saturday morning from the Government Office, the postponement aims to provide the Government with more time to study and complete debates on the draft law.

The Law on Special Administrative and Economic Units of Van Don, Bac Van Phong and Phu Quoc had been built carefully and elaborately to institutionalise Party resolutions and materialise the 2013 Constitution to create a legal basis for the construction of three special economic zones, said the announcement.

The draft law was submitted to the month-long fourth National Assembly last October and November for comments.

After receiving enthusiastic and considered opinions of NA deputies, scientists, economists, experts, voters and people throughout the country during the current fifth NA meetings, the Government agreed with the NA Standing Committee to re-consider and postpone the adoption of the draft law until the next meeting.

The move is hoped to meet the requirements and aspirations of NA deputies, voters and people to successfully build three special zones, firmly maintaining national security and sovereignty.

Regarding the duration of land leases, the Government will consider and submit to the National Assembly for adoption regulations as prescribed in the Land Law. There will be no regulations on a special land lease of up to 99 years in special economic zones.

Earlier on Thursday, on the sidelines of the NA’s fifth session, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc affirmed to media that all opinions on the land lease period detailed in the draft law would be considered, and reasonable adjustments will be made to meet people’s aspirations.

Recently, the regulation regarding land lease of 99 years in the draft Law on Special Administrative and Economic Units of Van Don, Bac Van Phong and Phu Quoc (in Quang Ninh, Nha Trang and Khanh Hoa provinces, respectively) has been a hot topic among the public.

Source: VNA

Sadness at Vietnam noodle shop where Bourdain dined with Obama

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The owner of a Hanoi noodle shop where Anthony Bourdain slurped down ‘bun cha‘ with former US president Barack Obama expressed her shock and sorrow Saturday over the death of the globetrotting American celebrity chef.

Bun Cha Huong Lien restaurant in the Vietnamese capital’s leafy Old Quarter soared to fame after the 2016 sit-down between Obama and Bourdain for his CNN show.

The pair shared a simple meal of pork noodles and fried spring rolls — each dish worth around $3 — and photos of the casual dinner quickly went viral.

Bourdain died by suicide while in France filming an episode of his Emmy-winning CNN food and travel programme “Parts Unknown”, the network said Friday. He was 61.

“I was surprised and sad when I heard about (Bourdain’s) death,” Nguyen Thi Nga, co-owner of Bun Cha Huong Lien restaurant told AFP.

“(Bourdain) was a nice, friendly and folksy person… He praised our bun cha dish and its fish-sauce broth. He loved Vietnamese food,” Nga said.

Obama posted a tribute on Twitter to Bourdain on Friday, sharing a picture of the pair drinking beer during the meal which took place during his state visit to Hanoi.

Bourdain came to Vietnam several times throughout his life, making several TV programmes about his fascination with the country’s food.

Inside the restaurant, as hungry customers poured in for lunch on Saturday, diners gave extra attention to the glass box in which the table and chairs used by Bourdain and Obama are preserved.

“I came here to share the grief of the loss of such a talented chef… he was a such a special person because he had such a great passion for Vietnamese food,” customer Nguyen Quan told AFP.

Source: AFP

 

Vietnam’s beer market has potential, but not for all

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Vietnam remains one of the few beer markets in the world which is still maintaining high growth. However, not all breweries have succeeded in the market.

Despite big difficulties because of new policies, a luxury tax and fierce competition, the brewing industry can obtain an annual 5 percent growth rate, according to Vietnam Association of Liquor, Beer and Beverage (VBA) chair Nguyen Van Viet.

“While consumption in other markets has levelled off, the Vietnamese market remains full of potential,” Viet said at a recent workshop on beverages.

Euromonitor also commented that Vietnam is a market with great potential thanks to street food culture and rapid urbanization, predicting that beer consumption in Vietnam would peak in 2016-2021.

The market is so attractive that Thaibev accepted to pay $5 billion to acquire Sabeco, which holds the largest market share.

Vietnam is a market with great potential thanks to street food culture and rapid urbanization, predicting that beer consumption in Vietnam would peak in 2016-2021.

In 2008, Vietnam ranked eighth in Asia in beer consumption. Eight years later, it ranked third, below Japan and China.

However, Vietnam has become a ‘battlefield’ for brewers.

Vietnam saw ‘beer clubs’ mushrooming in 2015-2016, and now many of them are shutting down. Of big brewers, only Heineken and Sabeco have been prospering, while others have made unsatisfactory profits. Sapporo has reported sales increases, but its expenses for marketing and ads are very high.

Four years after squeezing into the beer market, Masan, a big consumer goods manufacturer, marketed Su Tu Trang (White Lion) product. However, the product is rarely seen at sales agents or on supermarket shelves.

Prior to that, a series of big players failed. These include Laser brand of Tan Hiep Phat Group.

The product advertised as ‘the bottled fresh beer present in Vietnam for the first time’ had a selling price higher than Tiger beer and nearly the same as Heineken. Only one year after launching the product and spending $3 million on advertisements, Tan Hiep Phat had to stop production.

Foster’s, after 10 years of trying to seek a foothold in the market (1997-2007), was transferred to APB. The value of the deal was $105 million, according to some sources.

Sabmiller once joined forces with Vinamilk to build a 100 million liter per annum brewery in Binh Duong province. However, its product remains unfamiliar to Vietnamese. Meanwhile, Vinamilk left the joint venture after two years of operation.

According to VBA, 4 billion liters of beer were consumed in 2017, with 45 liters of beer per capita a year.

Under the beverage industry’s development strategy, Vietnam would produce 4.1 billion liters of beer by 2020 and 5.5 billion liters by 2035.

Source: Vietnamnet

Mr. Muoi Do – Honorary Consul of Estonia to Vietnam becomes CEEC Advisory Committee Member

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CEEC is honor to receive Mr. Muoi Van Do – Honorary Consul of Estonia to Vietnam as one of our Advisory Committee Member since June 2018.

Mr. Muoi Do is member of the Board, CFO of TRA-SAS, a joint stock corporation is one the leading companies in the field of maritime agency, shipping broker, forwarding, logistic providing, Distribution for consumption products and exclusive importer for brand name of Remy Martin, Macallan Whisky, William Grand and Sons, Lobkovicz beer of Czech, Nokia care, Intel Vietnam products, Starbuck Vietnam and McDonald…. He became Honorary Consul of Estonia to Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam since 2014.

He has 20 years in working with foreign with partner and consulting to foreign investment, familiar with import process for consumption products being imported to Vietnam as well as finding local partners.

We strongly believe that, with the presence of Mr. Muoi Do in the Advisory Committee, we will have more support and advise for our further activities and operations.

By Ceecvn

 

Asia must counter protectionist tide, Vietnam deputy PM says

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The rising tide of protectionism threatens to disrupt economic growth in Asia, Vietnam’s deputy prime minister warned on Monday, calling for a renewed global commitment to the tried-and-true principle of free trade.

Economic cooperation, Truong Hoa Binh told the Future of Asia conference in Tokyo, has been instrumental in helping Asia overcome crises and become the world’s growth engine. In contrast, he said, “The return of protectionism leads to tension in trade relations between the world’s leading economies.”

Binh’s speech emphasized how Vietnam is moving on after U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew from the Trans-Pacific Partnership. He said Vietnam is committed to frameworks including the revived TPP 11 — a Japan-backed agreement formally known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP.

“We also highly value the Japanese government’s effort in accelerating the conclusion of the negotiation and the signing of the CPTPP,” he said. “We hope that Japan, as a leading economic partner of many Asian economies, will serve as a locomotive for enhancing regional economic integration and connectivity.”

Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc had said in March that he hoped to expand a revived TPP to include the U.S. and other countries, to drive growth and curb protectionism. But for the time being, Vietnam is focused not only on the CPTPP but also the proposed Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, a China-led framework.

Binh stressed that Asia should adhere to international law-based frameworks like the World Trade Organization.

“Even without the U.S., the Trans-Pacific Partnership is very important as it covers a population of 500 million across the 11 member nations, with total GDP of over $10 trillion,” Binh said in a separate interview. “Coupled with the economic growth in Asia, the participating countries will reap a lot of benefits.”

Along with Vietnam and Japan, the CPTPP spans Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru and Singapore. Together, they account for around 13.5% of global economic output — a significant figure, though far smaller than the 40% the TPP would have covered with the U.S.

“Asia’s GDP growth accounts for 45% of global GDP and is expected to reach 50% by 2025,” Binh said. Asian countries have also become bigger players in global trade and investment, accounting for around one-third of international foreign direct investment, import and export values.

Aside from free trade, Binh said in the interview that agreeing on international standards through pacts like the CPTPP will help Vietnam accelerate domestic reform.

“It will be easier for foreign companies to enter Vietnam, which will connect the country with the global supply chain,” he said. “We will work more closely together with Japan, which has worked so hard toward signing the treaty, and push forward with the ratification process.”

Binh emphasized that Vietnam has been pushing hard to “eradicate” corruption. “Vietnam’s corruption index has improved a lot, and the world is taking note of [the country’s] progress.”

Asked about public debt, which is close to 65% of GDP, Binh said the government would “review infrastructure programs and suppress unnecessary investments.” He added that public-private partnerships would be used to tap private-sector funds for developing infrastructure.

By Nikkei Asia

Vietnam’s top legislature agrees to delay approval of special economic zone law

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Vietnam’s National Assembly, the country’s top legislature, agreed on Monday not to adopt the draft Law on Special Administrative and Economic Units of Van Don, Bac Van Phong, and Phu Quoc at its ongoing fifth session.

The Government Office on Saturday released an announcement, saying it had asked the National Assembly to delay the approval of the draft law to have more time for research and completion until the next session, Vietnam News Agency reported.

Special cases, that could lease land up to 99 years for production and business in the three special economic zones of Van Don in northern Quang Ninh province, of Bac Van Phong in central Khanh Hoa province, and of Phu Quoc in southern Kien Giang province, will not be regulated in the bill.

The decision was made after the National Assembly and the government took into account many aspects of the issue which caught interests and gathered a lot of ideas from local legislators, people of all walks of life and voters nationwide.

At the ongoing fifth session, legislators, scientists, economists, experts and constituents actively contributed their opinions to the draft law.

HCM City offers more incentives to lure more experts, scientists

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HO CHI MINH CITY, June 11 (Xinhua) — Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City has adopted a policy on attracting experts and scientists, particularly those in the fields of information technology, biotech, logistics, nanotech and the support industry, in the 2018-2020 period.

Under the policy, the city will provide initial subsidy of 80-100 million Vietnamese dong (3,500-4,400 U.S. dollars) to each scientist or expert after they sign a contract, local daily newspaper Vietnam News reported Monday.

They will receive a monthly salary based on the coefficient used to calculate the pay of senior experts under a governmental decree. Experts and scientists who are professors will be paid at a coefficient of 9.4, while the others will be paid at a coefficient of 8.8.

In addition, experts and scientists will receive an allowance of 50 million Vietnamese dong (2,200 U.S. dollars) to 1 billion Vietnamese dong (44,000 U.S. dollars) per person per research project.

The city authorities will also provide housing or support 50 percent of the rent (up to 7 million Vietnamese dong, or 308 U.S. dollars, per month) for the experts and scientists.

The city’s current policies on attracting highly skilled professionals have resulted in the hiring of only 15 experts between 2015 and 2017, five of whom are foreigners.

How to see another side of Vietnam’s magical

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Already one of Vietnam’s most visited destinations, a spate of recent events has brought renewed attention to mystical Halong Bay in northern Vietnam, including a blockbuster Hollywood movie and the imminent opening of a new expressway and international airport.

Inscribed as a Unesco World Heritage Site in 1994, travellers have long been drawn to Halong Bay’s nearly 2000 untouched, jungle-draped limestone islands which rise from deep emerald waters. The scenic bay ranks 3rd among Vietnam’s most visited destinations, behind Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi, and hosted nearly 10 million visitors in 2017.

The destination got a boost last year when its mesmerizing seascapes were featured in many of the dreamy, otherworldly scenes in “Kong: Skull Mountain.” Additionally, Halong Bay, along with the broader northern coastal province of Quang Ninh, is the focus of Vietnam’s National Tourism Year 2018, under the banner “Ha Long – Heritage, Wonder, and Friendly Destination”. More than 50 events have been planned between April 2018 and January 2019, including photo exhibitions, a massive carnival, culinary festivals, travel expo and sporting events.

To gear up for the expected increase in visitors, a new highway is expected to open later this month, cutting the travel time between Hanoi and Halong Bay from four hours down to just two. In addition, an international airport is set to open later this year in Van Don, 50 kilometres from the bay.

However, despite there being hundreds of boats to choose from, many visitors find the actual touring of Halong Bay to be quite restrictive, especially since the Vietnamese government revamped the ticketing system in 2017. There are now only 5 routes through Halong and nearby Bai Tu Long Bay, meaning cruise ships all tend to follow the same itinerary in order to hit the main attractions, leading to a somewhat “cookie cutter” experience.

Visitors with a little cash looking for a different way to experience Halong have quietly found L’Azalée Premium Cruises, the bay’s only single-cabin ship. Launched this past February, the company offers an ultra-exclusive experience aboard a luxury junk that sleeps just two passengers who are cared for by five crew members including a butler and a private chef. Guests can choose where they want to stop and the captain will devise a custom itinerary, taking care to visit spots when fewer tourists are around.

Another unique way to see the entirety of Halong Bay is from a 12-seater seaplane. From above, the individual islands come together to form rows upon rows of mountain ranges, looking very much like the undulating body of a “descending dragon”, the meaning of “Halong”. In addition to scenic flights, Hai Au Aviation is set to launch new routes in Quang Ninh within the next few months to Cat Ba Island and up-and-coming Co To Island, with its blissfully quiet beaches and clear, blue water.

By James Pham

Police hold 102 protestors for vandalizing government office in central Vietnam

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Officers dispatched by the Ministry of Public Security helped disperse a rowdy protest in Binh Thuan Province.
Police in Binh Thuan Province announced that they have detained 102 people pending investigation into Sunday’s vandalism at the local government office.

“There were no casualties. But dozens of police officers were injured,” police spokesman Nguyen Van Nhieu said.

According to a report by VNExpress, hundreds of protestors had stormed the office of the People’s Committee in Binh Thuan on Sunday, burnt vehicles, destroyed other property and clashed with the police, authorities said.

The situation was resolved near midnight with help from forces from the Ministry of Public Security, Nhieu said.

The vandalizing of the office took place at around 8 p.m., and authorities could only watch helplessly.

Protesters in front of Binh Thuan People’s Committee. Photo by VnExpress

Earlier that night, authorities used smoke bombs and firefighting hoses to diffuse the protest after local officials could not convince the crowd to disperse, but such tactics also proved ineffective.

Nguyen Trung Truc, vice chairman of the People’s Committee of Tuy Phong District, said that traffic patrols had to direct vehicles to take detours because Highway 1A had been immobilized from the afternoon. Some of the protestors threw rocks at public vehicles.

Secretary of the Binh Thuan Party Committee, Nguyen Manh Hung, said that the State does not ban people from expressing their opinions, but the process should be within an allowed framework and should not violate any law.

“It is unacceptable that people engage in aggressive behavior. We must strictly handle these actions under the law,” Hung said.

Last weekend saw huge crowds of protesters gather across the nation, in Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang, Hanoi and other places. The police in HCMC and the neighboring Binh Duong Province arrested several people for leading the “illegal” protests, media reports said.

There has been general disagreement over a proposed provision in the draft law on Special Economic Zones (SEZs) that would allow foreign investors to lease land for 99 years.

The proposal has since been deferred, as voted by the National Assembly on Monday.

On June 6, Minister of Planning and Investment Nguyen Chi Dung had dismissed concerns about other countries, especially China, being able to undermine national sovereignty. He said: “there is no word that mentions China.”

“Foreigners will not be able to migrate easily into the country. Vietnam’s land ownership law is tight enough to prevent them from doing so,” he’d said.

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc had also told the press on June 7 that the duration of land lease permit was not “the bottom line” of the draft law. The most important thing is to create a favorable mechanism and business environment for investors at the SEZs, he said.

“The government will respect the National Assembly’s decision on this matter, whatever that is,” the PM added.

The SEZ bill, which was initially planned to be passed next week, is scheduled to be discussed again at the National Assembly’s next session in October.

By Phuoc Tuan

Trump arrives in Singapore for historic summit with Kim Jong Un

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President of the United States, Donal Trump touched down in Singapore late Sunday hours after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un arrived, setting the stage for the two leaders’ high-stakes summit to bring a long-sought end to nuclear tensions on the Korean peninsula.

Trump waved as he walked down the stairs of Air Force One and declared he felt “very good” about the talks before his motorcade with flashers blinking coursed through the streets of Singapore on its way to the Shangri-la hotel. New York Post reported

On-lookers wearing flip-flops snapped shots of the president’s arrival.

Trump traveled to Singapore from Canada where he ​left members of the G-7 countries stunned by refusing to sign a joint-statement and blasted Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as “very dishonest and weak.”

Kim landed in the Southeast Asian nation several hours before Trump and was greeted on the tarmac by the Singapore foreign minister.

He traveled in a black Mercedes-Benz limousine with North Korean flags on the hood to the St. Regis Hotel.

Later Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong welcomed Kim at his official residence Istana Palace. Kim shook hands with Lee and smiled for photos.

“The entire world is watching the historic summit between (North Korea) and the United States of America, and thanks to your sincere efforts … we were able to complete the preparations for the historic summit,” Kim told Lee through an interpreter.

Trump is expected to meet with Lee on Monday.

Trump and Kim will gather for their landmark summit on Tuesday, marking the ​first-ever meeting between a sitting US president and a North Korean leader.

​Kim and Trump will meet at 9 a.m. Tuesday – or 9 p.m. Monday New York time – at the luxurious Capella Resort on Sentosa Island.

Trump said he will know in the “first minute” if Kim is serious about giving up his nuclear arsenal.

“I think within the first minute, I’ll know,” Trump said Saturday as he was leaving the G-7 talks in Quebec for Singapore. “Just my touch, my feel. That’s what I do.”

“You know the way they say that you know if you’re going to like somebody in the first five seconds? Well, I think that very quickly I’ll know whether or not something good will happen​,​”​ he said. ​

The sit-down between Trump and Kim is the culmination of a year-and-a-half of often bitter and ferocious rhetoric that at times seemed to leave the countries on the brink of nuclear war.

Trump vowed to unleash “fire and fury” on North Korea if the regime continued to threaten South Korea and Japan as it test-fired missiles in the pursuit of finding a delivery system for its nuclear weapons.

​He also imposed crippling economic and trade sanctions as part of a “maximum pressure” campaign to isolate North Korea in the world and force it to the negotiating tables.

Since Trump entered the White House, Pyongyang has stepped up its work to develop a nuclear arsenal and said it wouldn’t disarm unless given assurances of protection by the US.

Kim’s regime said its weapons were a guarantee against invasion by the American military.

While the main topic of discussion is denuclearizing the Korean peninsula, the two leaders may also reach a deal to end the Korean War, which technically continues today because only an armistice was signed in July 1953 to stop the fighting.

By Mark Moore

Vietnam company brings industry 4.0 to change lives in Myanmar

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Myanmar, where 70 per cent of the people are farm workers, needs modern technologies to improve its agricultural production. The opportunity has come through a Vietnamese telecom company, which provides industry 4.0 apps and services through mobile broadband – Vietnam News reported.

HCM City — The Pyin Oo Lwin Highland in Mandalay Province is Myanmar’s major flower and vegetable production hub thanks to its cool weather and ideal georaphic location.

Its affluence reminds one of Myanmar’s richness in the past. The military coup in 1962 destroyed Myanmar’s economy, but the country has strongly recovered since 2016 when the US lifted its embargo after 19 years.

However, it is not easy to achieve rapid economic development with 70 per cent of the population working as farmers.

Ms. San San Yi is a farmer and would like to change her life but has had to struggle for many years with her eight-hectare flower farm. A lack of knowledge of technology hindered her efforts to learn new things like how to install and operate a water-efficient irrigation system or measure the fertility of the land.

Everything has changed since she accepted an invitation to trial a smart farming app called Nextfarm from Mytel, Viettel’s company in Myanmar, which officially begin to provide mobile phone services on June 9.

Nextfarm is an application to manage farming through sensors buried in the land. It provides owners with all the information needed for farming such as salinity, humidity and light intensity.

In the past Yi’s farming was based on the traditional knowledge and skills passed down by her ancestors, and much depended on the weather. Now she only needs to touch her mobile phone screen to know about the status of her farm and start watering it from wherever she is.

She hires 10 to 20 workers depending on her crop, but believes the expenditure on human resources will be cut by half thanks to Nextfarm.

Elsewhere, Kyaw Shwe, another of the millions of Myanmarese farmers to benefit from smart phone agricultural apps, now has access to modern farming information and improved his output, the Nikkei Asian Review reports .

A few years ago no one in Shwe’s village knew about mobile phones, but now the younger generations are helping seniors like him use technology.

This enables them to escape the pattern of good harvest but low prices, debts and distress sale, which has haunted farmers for centuries.

Telecom revolution

When the Myanmarese Government ended the monopoly in telephony in 2013, the mobile phone usage rate in the country jumped several fold from the earlier 5 per cent in just a few months.

Officials and the media had predicted that when 90 per cent of the population, of which 80 per cent were farmers, used smart phones, the economy would benefit, and this has come true now.

Mytel has ushered in a revolution with its nation-wide mobile broadband infrastructure (the only 4G network that covers the whole country with 30,000 km of fibre-optic cable).

It also has the largest number of apps, with Nextfarm being a good example.

Mytel in fact provides a diverse range of services to help build a smarter society, such as smart agriculture solutions, traffic signal management system, electronic wallet, route surveillance equipment.

Mytel belongs to Telecom International Myanmar, a joint venture between Viettel and two local companies, Star High Public Company and Myanmar National Telecom Holding Public.

The company has a mission of creating “super mobile broadband” in Myanmar for people to connect with each other and offer industry 4.0 apps to help usher in a smarter society.

The world is currently looking at the Southeast Asian country as a new star in the global information technology and telecom firmament.

After 20 years, Yahoo Messenger to shut down on July 17. End of an era!

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Oath, the Verizon subsidiary that operates Yahoo, announced Friday that it will shut down Yahoo Messenger next month. Users won’t be able to access the service after July 17 anymore, according to a message posted to the Yahoo help forums.

“We know we have many loyal fans who have used Yahoo Messenger since its beginning as one of the first chat apps of its kind,” the message reads. “As the communications landscape continues to change over, we’re focusing on building and introducing new, exciting communications tools that better fit consumer needs.”

Yahoo released the first version of Messenger under the name Yahoo Pager in March of 1998. Since then, the service had been used by hundreds of millions of internet users. In its heyday, Yahoo Messenger was directly competing with other popular messaging apps like ICQ, AOL’s AIM and Microsoft Messenger.

But while these services were extremely popular on desktop PCs, they were quickly surpassed by other services on mobile devices, including WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger and Snapchat. Faced with declining usage, Oath also decided to shut down AIM in December.

Yahoo Messenger users have six months to download their chat history. The company said that it doesn’t currently have a replacement for the service, but told users that they can sign up for an invite of its new group messaging app Squirrel.

Tourism keeps Vietnam’s ancient water puppets afloat

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In a darkened theatre in central Hanoi, a wooden dragon emerges from a pool to the sound of cymbals crashing in a traditional water puppet show that lures hundreds of tourists daily but is largely shunned by locals.

Backstage behind a thin bamboo screen, around 20 puppeteers slosh around waist-deep in rubber overalls wielding the marionettes with long rods. ABS-CBN reported

“The puppets are pretty heavy… and the water also creates resistance,” said puppeteer Nguyen Thu Hoai, who swapped her galoshes for flip-flops between sold-out shows.

“But our years of training and experience helps us control them,” added Hoai, who like many of her colleagues graduated from Hanoi’s College of Theatre and Cinema.

Some of the puppets weigh as much as 10 kilograms and the largest ones, like the one-meter-tall fairy, require four people to manipulate.

The shows at Hanoi’s Thang Long theatre have become a staple on the well-trodden tourist circuit and draw thousands every week, including many first-time viewers.

“I’ve never seen a puppet show that way with the water,” American tourist Caroline Thomoff told AFP after a show. “I could really see people fishing, dancing and all the different performances that happened.”

Vietnam is the birthplace of the centuries-old art form that emerged in the northern rice paddies as entertainment for farmers.

The earliest record of the performances is on a 12th century stele that still stands at a pagoda in northern Ha Nam province, but historians say water puppetry likely originated even earlier.

The shows traditionally featured age-old fables and mythical lore, like the famous Hanoi parable about a Vietnamese king’s treasured sword that was used to fight off Chinese invaders.

Overseas appeal

The tropes haven’t changed much, and neither have the hand-carved wooden figures of animals, boats, farmers or fish painted in brilliant golds, reds and greens, according to Chu Luong, the director of Thang Long theatre.

“When our children and later generations see performances they will be just like the original versions,” he told AFP.

Despite its ancient roots — or perhaps because of them — the shows draw little attention from local Vietnamese viewers, especially millennials.

More than half of Vietnam’s 93 million people are under 30 and often prefer their entertainment in digital form.

“There are new types of entertainment now, electronic devices and the internet, so apart from festivals we can’t perform all the time because (local) people don’t watch a lot,” said Pham Dinh Viem, a third-generation puppet carver from a craft village in Thai Binh province.

Like other puppet craftsmen in the village, Viem doesn’t earn enough to support his family making the marionettes so he picks up work on the side as a manual laborer.

But he perseveres, hopeful the next generation might pick up a passion he says runs in his blood.

Yet as interest wanes at home, there are signs water puppetry may be gaining traction abroad.

Canadian Director Robert Lepage returned to Toronto this year with an adaptation of Stravinsky’s opera “The Nightingale”, in which the orchestra pit was transformed into a pool of water for singers-come-puppeteers commanding marionettes.

For puppetmaker Viem, such innovative approaches may be the secret to reviving the centuries-old tradition among locals.

“If the script and the performance don’t change, it’s impossible to serve the audience in the long-term,” he said.

By Delphine Thouvenot with Quy Le Bui, Agence France-Presse

Merkel’s G7 photo says everything about Trump’s diplomacy – or does it?

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A picture released by the chancellor showed the president at bay at the G7 – and it’s an image the US too seems happy to promote

Donald Trump’s trade adviser, Peter Navarro, insisted on Sunday that the president was “willing to talk to any world leader”. The Guardian reported.

But a day after Trump left a trail of diplomatic chaos from Canada to Singapore, the site of his summit with Kim Jong-un of North Korea, a picture of world leaders apparently confronting Trump dominated reactions to the G7 summit.

The picture was taken by Jesco Denzel, a German government photographer, and released by Steffen Seibert, spokesman for the chancellor, Angela Merkel.

It shows Trump, arms folded and eyes glaring, sitting while around him stand a group of world leaders and their advisers.

Merkel is centre stage, arms planted on a table, with the Japanese prime minister, Shinzo Abe, standing to her left, arms folded and a look of resignation on his face.

The French president, Emmanuel Macron, stands next to Merkel, partially obscured, with the British prime minister, Theresa May, more obscured still at his right.

To many observers the photograph, a rare glimpse of diplomatic activity not wreathed in smiles and handshakes, seemed both a summation of the effect of Trump’s “America first” foreign policy and the perfect pictorial accompaniment to a tense couple of days in Canada.

Departing Washington on Friday, Trump called for Russia to be readmitted to the G7, four years after it was thrown out over the annexation of Crimea. At a Saturday afternoon press conference in La Malbaie, he blamed Barack Obama for the Russian invasion of Ukraine and complained about the US being a “piggy bank” which he said other countries were “robbing”.

In the picture released by Merkel, John Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser, stands at the president’s right. Showing that images of conflict can be deployed by both sides, the hawkish former United Nations ambassador used the same picture in a tweet issued after Trump’s early departure from the summit.

Bolton wrote: “Just another #G7 where other countries expect America will always be their bank. The president made it clear today. No more.”

That prepared the ground for Trump’s attack on the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau, and the US withdrawal from a communique on trade negotiated in an attempt to defuse tensions over Trump’s protectionist policy.

The release of the picture caused animated commentary around the world about body language and what it might say about relations between the US and its allies in the Trump era. It was followed on Sunday by a furious attack on Trudeau by Trump’s leading economic advisers.

Fabian Reinbold (@fabreinbold)
One scene – four different perspectives #G7

1) by Merkel‘s team ??
2) by Macron’s team ??
3) by Conte’s team ??
4) by Trump’s team ??

But every picture tells a story. Other images of the same gathering suggested a more relaxed interaction, Merkel smiling and Trump making eye contact while Trudeau, also smiling, stood by. The White House issued its own photo, showing a sitting Trump speaking as Merkel, Abe and Trudeau listened.

Helpfully, a German journalist tweeted composites of six contrasting pictures of the same moment – and who released them to the press.

Still, there appears to be more than a little truth to suggestions that Merkel and Trump do not get on. Saturday was not the first awkward moment between them and the chancellor has made no secret of her disagreement with the president on trade, his rejection of the Iran nuclear deal and his withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement.

In March 2017, Merkel’s first visit to the White House saw Trump either fail to hear or ignore the chancellor’s offer to shake hands. A visit in April this year warranted only a working lunch, several days after a state visit by Macron.

By Martin Pengelly and agencies

Trump’s improvisation faces decades of North Korean preparation

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Donald Trump’s gut-check negotiating style and fragile patience face a supreme test in his summit with Kim Jong Un of North Korea, a nation that long ago mastered the diplomacy of delay, obfuscation and illusory promises of disarmament.

The President would be wise not to take the North Koreans lightly, even though he is convinced he has superior dealmaking skills well beyond those of his predecessors that will help him size up Kim in an instant. CNN reported

Former US diplomats who have spent long days locked in negotiations with the North Koreans — habitually skilled and well-prepared interlocutors — say the discussions can be deeply frustrating and fraught with attempts by the isolated state to manipulate the process.

Even now, many experts doubt assurances by South Korea and the US that Kim really intends to talk about eliminating his nuclear weapons program and believe he may be bent instead on easing pressure on his impoverished state and retaining as much of his arsenal as possible.

The Trump and Kim meeting — the first between US and North Korean heads of state — is a leap into the unknown, since like Trump, Kim is believed to be unpredictable and impulsive — meaning the risks that the talks won’t go as well as everyone hopes are considerable.

One of the concerns North Korea experts have about Trump is that his faith in his instincts masks a shallow understanding of the intricacies of nuclear diplomacy. Kim, who is showing increasing strategic sophistication on the other hand, is likely to be sharply focused on the details since his nuclear arsenal is seen in Pyongyang as the guarantor of his dynastic rule.

Trump said on Saturday he would know within seconds of the start of their talks in Singapore on Tuesday if the whole thing is going to work out.

“The first minute I’ll know — just my touch, my feel, that’s what I do,” Trump told reporters at the G7 summit in Canada.

Earlier in the week, Trump said he didn’t have to prepare very much for the meeting because it was all about “attitude.” Then on Friday, the former real estate tycoon insisted he had actually been preparing for his encounter with Kim “all my life.”

Whether Trump is truly winging it or he just wants everyone to think so after days of quiet preparations is unclear.

Trump picks ‘attitude’ over prep work ahead of Singapore summit
But the danger of going into the summit undercooked is that Trump could make inadvertent concessions on complicated or historically fraught issues, or adopt positions that are detrimental to allies like South Korea or Japan, or stumble into North Korean negotiating traps.

If the summit goes well, it is likely to lead to the kind of long-term diplomatic engagement with the North Koreans that is familiar from past presidencies that the current administration said it would not permit. It will require intense US focus, endurance and attention to detail to achieve an accounting of Pyongyang’s nuclear arsenal and its verifiable and irreversible termination.

Kim will do his homework

Despite their isolation and the image of North Korea as a backward state, North Korean negotiators are always well-briefed, and a new generation of younger diplomats is savvier about the outside world than their older counterparts.

“We shouldn’t be fooled by our notion that North Korea is a hermit kingdom,” said Wendy Sherman, a former senior State Department official who negotiated with North Korea on an ultimately unsuccessful missile deal at the end of the Clinton administration.

“We saw Kim Jong Un very ably manage the summit with (South Korean President) Moon Jae-In. He is prepared, he will do his homework.”

Trump may invite Kim Jong Un to the US 02:28

Still, Trump does have one major advantage over US officials who took part in failed previous negotiations with North Korea — he’s getting to meet the man who is in charge.

Evans Revere served as one of the State Department’s top Asia experts and was often frustrated that his counterparts were unable to make the most crucial decisions.

“So often we were dealing with people who were posturing, reading talking points, who were engaged in bluster, but at the end of the day, weren’t really the people who could resolve the issues we were trying to resolve. There was a lot of gamesmanship,” Revere said.

“One of the benefits of what we are doing right now is we are actually talking to the inner circle of the leadership who have the ability to resolve the issues and have the ability to take action.”

In recent days, Trump has admitted that the summit is only the start of an effort to denuclearize the Korean peninsula and end a state of war between Pyongyang and the US, rolling back more ambitious earlier administration predictions of a much faster process.

That means it could lead to a period of intense and exhausting negotiations with the North Koreans familiar from the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations.

Former senior US diplomat Christopher Hill, who led negotiations with Pyongyang during the Bush years, described just how frustrating the process could get in his autobiography “Outpost.”

“Whether it is in their manual of negotiation or not, the North Koreans would have an annoying habit of agreeing to something, then coming back and not agreeing to what they had just agreed,” Hill wrote.

Revere, now with the Albright Stonebridge Group, a global strategic advisory firm, said that despite the North’s isolation and the paranoia it sometimes causes, North Korean negotiating teams are sophisticated, even if there are questions about whether they fully grasp all the intricacies of nuclear strategy.

“They have done their homework, they are very skilled,” he said. “They are obviously all very loyal to the cause and loyal to the leadership, (but) they are extremely skilled at what they do.”

Intelligence on Kim

Trump and Kim Jong Un’s ups and downs 02:56

Trump has the advantage heading into the talks of the experience gleaned about Kim’s approach by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who has met the North Korean leader several times, as well as information passed on by Moon.

While Kim is often lampooned over his hairstyle, his style of dress and the rudimentary state of North Korea’s civilian air fleet, he has demonstrated an impressive ability to consolidate power and to conduct an aggressive and strategic foreign policy since becoming supreme leader in 2011.

His race to expand his nuclear arsenal and long-range missiles to deliver it may now have been replaced by a strategic choice to use that leverage to alleviate the severe economic situation in his country and its diplomatic isolation.

He has managed to win the ultimate prize of a summit with an American President — a step neither of his two dynastic predecessors managed without offering any major concessions.

Kim, who was educated in Switzerland, is likely to have a panoramic sense of his objectives, North Korea’s nuclear program and the strategic picture in Northeast Asia experts said.

Diplomats who met his late father, Kim Jong Il, remember his understanding of the key issues, a trait his son appears to share.

In a meeting with former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Kim was asked 14 critical questions about the North’s missile program, Sherman said.
“Kim Jong Il went down that entire list … and although he didn’t have every detailed answer to everything, he knew what the questions were, what the issues were, he was well-prepared,” she said.

Both Kim and Trump have a strong incentive to declare the summit a success whatever happens. Trump’s approach is to try and forge a personal connection with Kim, in line with his belief that relationships are the key to dealmaking in international relations.

Critics have faulted the President for an overly conciliatory approach to the North Korean leader, who presides over the world’s most oppressive state, where millions of people have died of hunger and which maintains a network of gulags and reeducation camps.

Trump has called Kim “honorable” after once branding him “Little Rocket Man” and on Saturday spelled out the stakes for the North Korean leader.
“It’s unknown territory, in the truest sense,” Trump told reporters.

“I feel that Kim Jong Un wants to do something great for his people, and he has that opportunity, and he won’t have that opportunity again,” Trump said. “So, I really believe that he’s going to do something very positive.”

In his speeches and actions, Kim has shown that he has a sense of his own position in history, though he has yet to publicly give any sign that he is willing to follow through on denuclearization.

But Trump’s gambit appears to be aimed at convincing Kim that more personal respect and recognition could follow if he commits to a serious negotiating process with Washington.

If it works, Trump could be in reach of an achievement that has eluded all his predecessors and could define his foreign policy legacy.

By Stephen Collinson
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