Bitcoin Vietnam Faces Losing its Domain

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According to regional reports Vietnam’s oldest Bitcoin Exchange, Bitcoin.vn, is about to lose its domain. The website that has been operating since 2014 has been accused of operating a blog without permission from the Minister of Information & Communications of Vietnam.

Vietnam’s Oldest Bitcoin Exchanges May Lose its Domain

Bitcoin.vn is a Vietnamese trading platform that’s been providing bitcoin exchange services for over four years. Just recently the local publication ICT News reports that Bitcoin.vn (Bitcoin Vietnam) is being stripped of its website domain for being found guilty of “operating a blog without a proper license.” The Vietnamese trading platform is accused of operating the blog without obtaining a publisher license by the Minister of Information & Communications of Vietnam. Bitcoin Vietnam’s management team declined to comment on these reports because of the ongoing legal proceedings. However, the Department of Radio, Television and Electronic Information has fined Bitcoin Vietnam Co., Ltd. for illegally creating an alleged blog and social network.

The charges against Bitcoin.vn are divided into a 15M VND fine ($660 USD) for operating a blog and 25M ($1,100) for allowing readers the ability to comment (unlicensed social network) below the published articles on Bitcoin.vn. News.Bitcoin.com spoke with an industry insider from the region about the litigation against the trading platform’s domain. According to the individual familiar with the matter, the blog barely saw any activity apart from irregular announcements about the exchange’s user interface upgrades and general service information.

“They had like maybe two articles per month on there — to seize their domain for such a minor offense is a very, very heavy-handed approach,” explains the anonymous source to news.Bitcoin.com.

Out of 100 Vietnamese startups, likely 99,9% don’t bother to register for a media/publisher license for their company blog — This is not a good sign for Vietnam’s startup scene.

Bitcoin Vietnam also operates two BTMs.

Sinister Activities at Play?

Our sources also say there may be some more sinister activities at play concerning the charges against Bitcoin Vietnam.

Bitcoin Vietnam might have been the pioneers in this market, but when the big guys finally start to come to play, they don’t play by the rules. They see something they want to have, and they take it. These guys can be lucky to just have received a minor fine – that their domain is gone is of course sad for them after they did all this pioneering work, but that’s just how Vietnam works.

Bitcoin Vietnam and the domain Bitcoin.vn is one of the oldest operating cryptocurrency exchanges and has been a reputable trading platform since the summer of 2014. At the moment there are no confirmed decisions made or any information on who might receive ownership of the website if the Ministry of Communications makes its decision to revoke the domain.

 

Source: News Bitcoin

Vinhomes Is Said Poised to Price $1.35 Billion Share Sale at Top

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Vinhomes JSC, the luxury residential arm of Vietnam’s biggest developer, is poised to price its $1.35 billion initial equity offering at the top end of a marketed range, people with knowledge of the matter said.

Bloomberg reported, existing Vinhomes investors plan to sell shares at 114,700 dong apiece in the offering, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. The shares were marketed at 110,500 dong to 114,700 dong each, according to terms obtained earlier by Bloomberg.

Vinhomes’s offering is set to become the largest-ever share sale in the Southeast Asian nation, surpassing the $922 million deal from Techcombank last month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The volume of first-time share sales in Vietnam this year is on track to hit an all-time record high, the data show.

A representative for Vinhomes’s parent company, Vingroup JSC, said she couldn’t immediately comment.

Citigroup Inc., Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank AG and Morgan Stanley are leading the deal. HSBC Holdings Plc, Maybank Kim Eng Holdings Ltd. and Saigon Securities Inc. are also helping arrange the sale.

By Joyce Koh , Crystal Tse , and Nguyen Kieu Giang

New port to transform Vietnam’s north into industrial gateway

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Lach Huyen doubles region’s shipping capacity ahead of anticipated trade boost.

Vietnam’s coastal city of Haiphong will open a deep-water port this month, taking a step toward becoming a key maritime link in the north and enhancing the country’s position in the global supply chain. Nikkei Asia Review reports

Haiphong is already known for its existing port. But the port is located on the River Cam, where the water runs seven meters deep at most, meaning the terminal cannot take large container ships.

The new Lach Huyen International Gateway Port, however, faces the sea, where the water is 14 meters deep. The wharf also doubles that of Haiphong Port at 750 meters long. The facility will house two container cranes as well.

Construction started on Lach Huyen port in 2013, with estimated costs topping $1 billion. When the first phase is completed on May 13, the port will handle around 300,000 20-foot equivalent units, or TEUs. That number will rise to between 2 million TEUs and 3 million TEUs in 2019 as capacity develops.

Combined with the existing port’s load, Haiphong will be capable of processing approximately 5 million TEUs. That would put it on a par with Ho Chi Minh City’s port in the south, which handled 5.94 million TEUs last year. Haiphong’s shipping capacity still pales in comparison with Singapore Port, the largest in Southeast Asia at 33.66 million TEUs. But the city will close in on the likes of Thailand’s Laem Chabang port, which manages 7.78 million TEUs.

Other infrastructure projects are complementing Haiphong’s port project. A new expressway connecting the port city with the capital Hanoi cuts travel time in half to roughly 90 minutes. Another highway to Quang Ninh province in northeastern Vietnam, home to factories owned by Japanese companies, will open this year.

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, who aims to industrialize the country by 2020, says the Lach Huyen port holds the key to Vietnam’s maritime strategy.

Northern Vietnam is steadily becoming a production hub for the electronics, automotive and precision machinery sectors. South Korea’s Samsung Electronics, for one, has established mobile phone plants in that region. The Deep C industrial zone near Lach Huyen has already attracted roughly 80 companies from both at home and abroad.

“Considering the aspects of importing material and exporting products, a large port affords a huge advantage,” said a source from IHI, the Japanese engineering group that has invested in the industrial zone.

Elsewhere in the north, Vietnam’s second oil refinery will begin operations on May 13, the same start date as Lach Huyen. Shareholders in the Nghi Son complex in Thanh Hoa Province include Idemitsu Kosan and Mitsui Chemicals of Japan, as well as Kuwait Petroleum International. With the daily output pegged at 200,000 barrels, the refinery will make Vietnam capable of supplying 70% of its fuel demands, up from 30%.

Many northern Vietnamese exports that end up in North America and Europe currently go through Singapore or Hong Kong. But Mitsui O.S.K. Lines plans to open a direct shipping lane from Lach Huyen to North America. The Japanese marine transporter expects the export business to grow under the Trans-Pacific Partnership and other free trade agreements.

Many companies are locating facilities around the Lach Huyen port. Vingroup, Vietnam’s biggest real estate conglomerate, is building an automotive plant in a nearby economic zone. The group plans to sell 100,000 to 200,000 vehicles next year, and exports to other Southeast Asian nations are also on the table.

The emergence of major port cities in both northern and southern Vietnam is likely to affect the logistics industry throughout mainland Southeast Asia. The East-West Economic Corridor, based on a 1,500km road connection across Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar, is now in operation save for some parts of Myanmar. Cross-border land travel in the area has never been easier.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations has done away with virtually all tariffs among members, and the economic community is looking to improve customs clearance. The East-West Economic Corridor could provide a path for Vietnam to export goods to Laos, eastern Thailand and other places.

But Vietnam faces some challenges to fully leveraging its port infrastructure. While Singapore and other ASEAN nations are streamlining paperwork, a large part of Vietnam’s bureaucratic regime remains notoriously inefficient. Certain policies implemented by the Vietnam’s one-party state, such as nontariff barriers on vehicle imports, are also cause for concern.

by ATSUSHI TOMIYAMA, Nikkei staff writer

New Asian Cup format gives hope to Vietnam

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FOX Sports Asia football editor Gabriel Tan looks at why the new format of the AFC Asian Cup is good news for Vietnam and Philippines.

With the draw for the 2019 AFC Asian Cup done and dusted, the 24 teams vying for the continent’s biggest prize know the fate that awaits them.

Southeast Asia (the continent and not the ASEAN Football Federation, which also boasts Australia as a member) will have three representatives in United Arab Emirates next January, with Thailand finding themselves in the strongest position of the lot.

Having entered Friday’s draw in Pot 2, the War Elephants will now meet hosts UAE, India and Bahrain in Group A and will be quietly confident of achieving a top-two finish and qualifying automatically for the knockout round.

However, with the Asian Cup featuring 24 teams for the first time in its history, the new format also provides increased optimism to the likes of Vietnam and Philippines than it might have done in previous editions.

Apart from the six group winners and runners-up (a total of 12 teams), the four best-performing third-placed sides will also qualify for the Round of 16.

Put simply, you only have to avoid being the worst and second-worst third-placed teams out of six groups in order to advance.

Evidently, the 12 teams from Pots 1 and 2 – featuring teams such as Japan, Iran, Korea Republic and even Thailand – play at a significantly higher level than the likes of Yemen or DPR Korea – a statement few would refute.

Nonetheless, when it comes to the lower half of the draw, there is actually little differentiating between the countries in Pots 3 and 4.

Could you safely predict the outcome of a clash between India and Bahrain? How about Lebanon and DPR Korea?

Thus, this is firstly good news for a team like Philippines because – while they may have entered the draw in Pot 4 – they can look at their meeting with Kyrgyz Republic as a genuine opportunity to pick up three points in Group C.

Maybe their only opportunity considering the other two opponents that lie in wait are Korea Republic and China.

Likewise in Group D, Vietnam must look to beat Yemen, especially with two former champions in Iran and Iraq to contend with.

Interestingly enough, assuming that the two “stronger” teams in each group will pick up maximum points against the “weaker” two (although that is never always the case and we’ll touch more on that shortly), that equates to three points being the haul a third-placed side should be looking to achieve.

So, should Philippines and Vietnam beat Kyrgyz Republic and Yemen respectively, it would – based on that logic – mean they would have done the first part of the job and it would then go down to goal difference.

Now, as mentioned earlier, there is also the likelihood of a third-placed team causing an upset against either of the two “stronger” teams and picking up at least an additional point. It has happened before and it will happen again in UAE next January.

Four points for a third-placed team would certainly guarantee a last-16 berth.

What does this all mean for Vietnam and Philippines?

Put simply, they must beat the other “weaker two” team. The bigger the winning margin, the better.

Then, they have to keep things really tight against the more-illustrious duo, limiting the damage with one eye on goal difference but also entertaining the prospect of perhaps snatching a draw along the way.

Could Vietnam and Philippines hold Iraq and China respectively? It’s improbable but not impossible.

But even if that scenario does not happen, the new format of the 24-team Asian Cup means that three points does not necessarily mean bidding goodbye to a place in the knockout round.

For that, Southeast Asia’s contenders have plenty to be hopeful about come January 2019.

 

Source: Fox Sport Asia

Vietnam sentences Russian woman to life in jail for smuggling cocaine

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She was busted with five pounds of the drug when transiting for a flight from Brazil to Laos.

A court in Ho Chi Minh City sentenced a Russian woman to life imprisonment on Friday for smuggling cocaine through Vietnam, sparing her capital punishment as her lawyer defended that she was just a victim. VNExpress International reports.

Maria Aleksandr Dapirka, 32, narrowly escaped death as proposed by prosecutors after her lawyer successfully argued that she was duped into being a drug mule for an international ring.

According to the indictment, Dapirka was working as a furniture designer in Thailand when she met a Nigerian man named Mathew Chili, or Nick, around March 2014 and agreed to go traveling with him.

In late July 2014, Nick gave Dapirka $1,000 and a flight ticket to Sao Paulo, Brazil, but did not accompany her on the trip. Half a month later, he then asked her to bring him a bag from his friend in Brazil and booked her a flight to Laos.

Tan Son Nhat International Airport Customs detained Dapirka on August 23, 2014 while she was transiting in Ho Chi Minh City with the bag she had received from Nick’s friend.

Upon searching her luggage, customs officials discovered more than 2.2 kilograms (4.9 pounds) of cocaine hidden inside a laptop bag and the covers of two magazines.

At the trial, the Russian woman claimed she was unaware of the cocaine.

Vietnam has some of the world’s toughest drug laws. Those convicted of possessing or smuggling more than 600 grams of heroin or cocaine or more than 2.5 kilograms of methamphetamine could face the death penalty.

The production or sale of 100 grams of heroin or 300 grams of other illegal narcotics is also punishable by death.

By Hai Duyen

Inside Vietnam’s incredible underground wonderland

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Vietnam is home to some of the world’s most extraordinary subterranean landscapes. Here we highlight some striking new images of the caves of Quảng Bình province on the north-central coast, taken for Oxalis Adventure Tours.

Son Doong

Two large rivers – the Khe Ry and Rao Thuong – join to form the Son Doong cave, the world’s largest cave passage.

Large enough to fit an entire New York City block with 40-storey skyscrapers, the 9km cave system is up to 200 metres high and 160 metres wide, which is big enough for a Boeing 747 to fly through.

The massive cave system is so huge that it has its own climate, with mist and clouds forming and rising up from inside.

The cave features two skylights, formed after its ceiling collapsed hundreds of thousands of years ago. The giant openings allow plenty of sunlight into the cave, giving life to a lush tropical jungle (complete with large trees, palms and ferns) within.

Its surreal interior also houses a 90m-high calcite wall known as The Great Wall of Vietnam, which visitors can climb, using ropes and supported by safety harnesses.

Son Doong lies beneath Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng National Park and is nearly three million years old, but was only explored properly in 2009, with the help of the British Caving Association.

Oxalis, a Vietnamese adventure travel company, is the only tour operator to offer trips into the caves.

Hang Va

This lesser known cave discovered by a team of British cavers in 2012 sits close to the village of Phong Nha and is not too far from the Ho Chi Minh Highway.

Spanning a length of 1.6 kilometres, the cave features calcite towers rising up to two metres high from waters held back by calcite dams.

Just how the unusual rock formations of the Raft Cone Chamber are created remains a mystery.

Hang Va is a habitat for blind white fish and blind white freshwater prawns, both of which have adapted to living in a dark environment.

Many small bats have also made a home in the small stream passage.

A trek through rocky jungle terrain brings visitors to the small valley where Hang Va is located and visitors can camp there by night.

Tu Lan

Stretching for 20 kilometres, this incredible place is made of 20 caves, 10 of which can be visited at the moment.

Its longest cave is the 3.7km Hang Ken, which has both a wet passage and a dry passage, while Hang Song Oxalis is notable for its fantastic display of cave coral patches.

Visitors can swim through underground river caves with remarkable calcite formations, especially in the dry caves.

You might also recognise the area around these caves from last year’s Kong: Skull Island, the Hollywood film starring Tom Hiddleston and Samuel L Jackson which was shot there.

Hang Tien

At 100 metres high and 50 metres wide, Hang Tien is the biggest cave of the Tu Lan system and features a beautiful blue natural pool.

Thrillseekers can ‘fly’ across it using its newly installed ‘flying fox’ crossing system, equipped with harnesses and steel cables.

Also known as the Fairy Cave, it houses various rock formations, large passages and is made of multi-layered limestone, which gives its walls a stripy appearance.

During the summer, Hang Tien is a dry cave while in the wet season a huge river flows through it.

A bat colony resides in the highest part of the cave.

For more information on tours of these caves, see oxalis.com.vn.

By RYAN DEBOODT (The Telegraph)

 

Vietnam TPBank issues ATM card through LiveBank

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Vietnam’s Tien Phong JSC Bank (TPBank, TPB.HSX)has updated a new function of issuing ATM cards to customers through LiveBank – the first auto banking system in Viet Nam.

Nguyen Hung, TPBank’s CEO told the reporter of VNS that, customers just click on the machine to connect with bank staff and provide their ID card or passport to scan on the machine as well as complete information registration. LiveBank will then automatically issue an ATM card to the customer after a review from the bank’s staff. The entire process is estimated to take a maximum of six minutes instead of several days or even a week when applying for an ATM card through a bank’s branch.

Hung said customers can also register for debit card at LiveBank and receive the same at its branches.

“The update is a roadmap to develop LiveBank and show TPBank’s commitment in increasing digital content in its products and services,” he said, adding that the function could help LiveBank become the most comprehensive auto bank in Viet Nam.

Pham Ngoc Cuong, an engineer of TPBank’s digital bank project, said LiveBank could implement all of the most complicated transactions, such as opening a bank account, issuing ATM cards as well as opening and closing an online savings account any time.

The bank now has 60 LiveBank machines, which are mostly located at large centres and streets in major cities throughout the country.

The bank plans to increase LiveBank machines to 100 in 2018

Shares rebound on blue-chips

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Shares rebounded yesterday as large-cap stocks returned to positive territory following the index’s two-day decline.

The benchmark VN Index rose nearly 0.03 per cent to close at 1,026.80 points. It had fallen 0.25 per cent in the previous session. Vietnam News reported on Friday

On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX Index increased by 0.05 per cent to end Friday at 122.57 points after having gained 1.27 per cent in the previous session.

More than 241.7 million shares were traded on the southern bourse, worth VNĐ5.9 trillion (US$262 million).

The market trading condition was balanced with 243 advancing stocks, 213 losing ones and 286 stocks closing flat.

Large-cap stocks performed well as the VN30 Index, which tracks the performance of the 30 largest stocks by market capitalisation and trading liquidity, rose 0.05 per cent to 1,010.89 points.

Among the leading sectors, shares of construction, real estate and mining industry were the best gainers with those industry indices rising 1.03 per cent, 0.99 per cent and 0.82 per cent, respectively.

The four stocks Coteccons Construction Joint Stock Company (CTD), Vietjet Aviation Joint Stock Company (VJC), PetroVietnam Gas Joint Stock Corporation (GAS) and Military Bank (MBB) advanced from 1.5 to 3.5 per cent. They were also among the four best-performing stocks in the VN30 Index.

According to BIDV Securities JSC (BSC), compared to negative sentiment in previous sessions, investors’ sentiment has been more stable but still skeptical.

“The market opened in green but did not hold long, both indexes fluctuated up and down. Stocks such as banks, securities and real estate stocks saw mixed tickers, no longer being sold out in groups as in the previous sessions,” BSC said

“In the current context, investors should limit the disbursement of large proportions, and in recovery sessions should sell to keep the margin proportion safe for the account,” it added.

Bảo Việt Securities Co wrote in its daily report that US-China trade talks enter their second day in a positive light. However, officials declined to give details of the discussions.

The Hanoi-based securities firm wrote in its daily report that the discussions could dent humming global economic growth, thereby affecting world stocks.

“However, from our view, the two nations can hardly reach an open agreement that could ease the conflict between the two economies. China is likely to make moderate concessions and whether China would fulfill the commitment or not is left uncertain.”

The market witnessed more positive movement Friday with higher bottom-fishing demand, raising the number of gainers and opening up the possibility of a recovery early next week. However, liquidity remained low, BVSC said

Uber, Lyft and Grab: Ride-Hailing App Liability

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In many cities across the United States, ride-hailing apps like Uber and Lyft or Grab, Vato in Vietnam have become wildly popular. These apps provide an alternative to taxi services and offer convenience when booking a ride. With just a simple tap on your smartphone, you can get a ride to whatever destination you have in mind. Another ease that these apps provide is the cashless transaction option. The payment and billing are handled within in the app, and you have the choice to use your credit card to pay instead of cash.

So, what can you do in case you get into an accident while riding an Uber, Lyft or Grab? Will you be able to sue the company for injury and damages that you sustained during the accident? The short answer is no. Uber, Lyft or Grab drivers are considered to be independent contractors meaning that they function as independent third parties and are not employed by the ride-hailing companies.

While companies may be held liable for the actions of their employees, they are not responsible for injury or damage caused by the negligence of independent contractors; this is because of the legal doctrine of respondent superior or “let the superior answer.” In the case of Uber and Lyft drivers, they have autonomy on their work schedules, work conditions, and use their private vehicles to do their job, meaning that they can work independently without much input from the company. Uber, Lyft and Grab only provide their drivers the app that connects them to passengers. Because of this, Uber, Lyft and Grab have a very limited legal liability when it comes to their driver’s actions making it tough to pursue legal action against them.

What these companies do as an additional safety measure is to provide additional coverage for their drivers. Uber, Lyft and Grab require all their drivers to have their own car insurance before they could become accredited drivers. The companies will then give their drivers two additional coverage. The first one covers accidents that occur when a driver is available to accept passengers via the app but is not transporting passengers yet, meaning that when an accredited driver gets into an accident while looking for passengers, the company’s coverage will be the primary source of compensation for injury and damages. The second additional coverage applies when an accredited driver is transporting a passenger when they get into an accident. In situations like this, the companies provide $1 million liability coverage for their drivers.

The process of filing a claim when you get into an accident while riding an Uber or Lyft car is the same as when you get into an accident with a private vehicle. If the at-fault party is the Uber or Lyft driver, you may file a claim with their insurance company and the insurance company that carries Uber, Lyft or Grab’s additional insurance. You should get in touch with a lawyer immediately and ask them to send preservation of evidence letters to Uber, Lyft or Grab and the driver to make sure that the data related to your ride will be preserved. On the other hand, if the at-fault party is not the Uber or Lyft driver, then you should file a claim against the other driver’s insurance. If the other driver’s insurance isn’t able to cover the damages caused by the accident, Uber and Lyft have a $1 million underinsured motorist policies that could apply.

In case you have involved in a car accident while riding an Uber or Lyft car in the US, you may contact Hogan Injury for expert legal advice. They will provide you with personalized attention and guidance.

This article originally appeared on HoganInjury.com and has been re-published with their consent.

F1 car run on racetrack delivers message about safe driving

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The “Perfect Formula 1 Experience” event featuring a real F1 car from the Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Team, brought and sponsored by Heineken, kicked off yesterday in HCM City’s Sala Residential Area in District 2.

Former driver and Heineken F1 Ambassador David Coulthard, and the world’s No 1 DJ, Martin Garrix, joined the event. Reporting by VNS

For the first time ever, Heineken turned the Sala Residential Area into an extravagant 2-km long racetrack to pave the way for an epic performance from the real F1 car.

“We definitely made as much noise during the day at the F1 experience as Martin Garrix and leading Vietnamese artists did later at the spectacular music event,” said David Coulthard, who has won 13 Grand Prix races, and has finished in the top 3 of the FIA F1 world championship five times, with a remarkable 62 podium finishes over 15 seasons.

The event is also used as a platform to raise awareness about “When You Drive, Never Drink” in the ongoing campaign that was launched in September 2017 to bring about behavioural changes toward driving after drinking.

A day before, the F1 car of Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Team, which has won four successive F1 World Constructors’ Championships – was displayed for the public at The World of Heineken at the Bitexco Financial Tower in downtown HCM City.

This was an opportunity for Vietnamese fans to have a hands-on experience of a real F1 racing car for the first time ever in Việt Nam.

VNS

National Radio Festival to open in Vietnam

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Voice of Vietnam’s 13th National Radio Festival is taking place this week in the northern province of Vinh.

This year’s festival opened with a bang as drums were beaten and fireworks went off during the opening ceremony. asiaradiotoday.com reports.

The festival focuses on radio’s role in promoting industrialization, modernization, and international integration. A conference and awards ceremony will explore new technology and provide “an opportunity to honor reporters whose work have a positive impact on society, as well as a chance for journalists to meet and exchange experience.”

International speakers at the conference include Steve Ahern from Australia, Joanne Ha from KBS Korea, and Masakazu Iwaki from NHK Japan. Conference sessions will include discussions on transmission, new platforms, podcasting, and social media usage.

This year’s National Radio Festival will award 17 gold, 47 silver, 84 bronze and 60 consolation prizes. It also has 5 awards for the best program production work.

At an opening ceremony yesterday, broadcast live on television, The Deputy Prime Mimister of Vietnam told the hundreds of delegates attending: “Radio plays an important part in modernisation of the country.” He spoke about the history of Vietnam’s national radio broadcaster VoV, since the war and about the future of the national broadcaster.

“Voice of Vietnam was first launched at the time of Ho Chi Minh. During war time radio was very important and now it is still important.

“As well as its work here in Vietnam, VoV now reaches many people around the world, via internet.

“Vov programs create an opportunity for people to share their opinions… Radio plays an important part in modernisation of the country.

“Radio is changing and embracing new technology and interacting with audiences in new ways and on nnew media platforms… We are embracing technology for the country and making many positive changes.

“This festival is important to celebrate the birthday of Ho Chi Minh this month at his birthplace here in Vinh

Listening to women’s voices in Vietnam’s energy debate

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Vietnamese activist Khanh Nguy Thi knew early on that depending on coal to meet the country’s growing demand for energy would be a disaster for its people and the environment.

She also knew that listening to women in the villages, and involving government officials in the conversation, were key to a greener future for the Southeast Asian country.

It was Khanh’s combination of collaboration and pragmatism that helped convince Vietnam to rewrite its energy plan to reduce its dependency on coal, even as other activists in the region have struggled to make an impact.

“Energy is important for economic development, and it also has a huge impact on the environment and the people. But there was very little involvement of the civil society in the government’s energy plans,” said Khanh.

“Particularly women, who are also affected, but were not being heard, as decisions are made by men – it is important to listen to them,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Khanh last week was named as one of the recipients of the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize, known as the “Green Nobel”, which honors grassroots activism.

She was one of two Asians to win the prize, which this year was dominated by women.

Khanh’s work is critical as Vietnam develops a wave of new power plants to support economic growth that is among the fastest in Asia.

Khanh set up Green Innovation and Development Centre (GreenID) in 2011 to educate communities on renewable energy, and convince officials on the merits of clean energy.

She was instrumental in pushing the government to revise its long-term energy projections to reduce its planned coal expansion and cut emissions by up to 25 percent by 2030, in part by increasing power generated from wind, solar and biomass.

She also halted the construction of two hydro-power plants in a national park, and helped design a gender impact assessment manual for hydro developers.

Vietnam’s commitments are an exception in the region, where activists from Thailand to Cambodia are protesting coal-fired power plants and mega dams they say are harming the environment and forcing people off their lands.

“Renewable energy, if done well with the participation of stakeholders including farmers, can help achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and climate goals,” she said, referring to the U.N.’s set of global development goals to be met by 2030.

The objectives include key energy targets of ensuring universal access to modern energy and increasing the share of renewables used.

Vietnam is well placed to achieve those aims, “as we have abundant non-hydro renewable energy resources,” Khanh said.

“There is a great opportunity for our nation to move beyond coal. As the mother of three kids, I want to make sure there is clean water, clean air and a clean environment for our kids.”

Reporting by Rina Chandran @rinachandran. Editing by Jared Ferrie. This was first posted on the Thomson Reuters, supported by Thomson Reuters Foundation, which covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience.

Penalties imposed on defendants involved in Trust Bank case

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The Ho Chi Minh City People’s Court on May 4 gave punishments from three-year suspended prison sentences to seven-year imprisonment to the defendants charged with “violating regulations on lending in activities of credit institutions” at Dai Tin Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Trust Bank), the predecessor of the Vietnam Construction Bank (VNCB).

According to the verdict, the Trust Bank’s credit council, comprising Hoang Van Toan (former Chairman of the Board of Directors), Tran Son Nam (former Director General), Lam Hong Trinh (former Deputy General Director), Ho Trong Thang (former head of the credit management division), Ngo Duc Tri (former Deputy General Director), Tran Thi Hong Phuong (former director of the accounting division), and Pham Thi Quynh Ngan (former head of the legal division), verified and approved the lending of VND370 billion (equivalent to US$16.2 million at present) to Thinh Quoc company and VND280 billion (US$12.3 million) to Dai Hoang Phuong company with an interest rate of 15 percent in 12 months to purchase over 5,000 sq.m of land at Chi Lang Stadium in Da Nang city.

When they considered the credit provision, the members of the credit council were found to have not complied with regulations by accepting loan applications without financial reports and imprecisely assessing the clients’ financial strength.

In fact, these businesses were established by Pham Cong Danh, former Chairman of the VNCB and Chairman of the members’ council and Director General of the Thien Thanh Group, but did not operate and their loan applications were fake.

The defendants based on the verification certificate of the future asset whose value was augmented by many times to approve the credit provision. In fact, the clearance in the land lot at the Chi Lang Stadium hadn’t been finished while there hadn’t been any certificates or investment activities in this land.

Their acts caused a loss of more than VND470 billion (US$20.6 million) to the bank.

The court decided to give the prison terms of seven years to Hoang Van Toan and six years to Tran Son Nam. Three of the five other defendants were sentenced to three years in prison while the remaining two received three-year suspended prison sentences.

Pham Cong Danh has to bear responsibility for compensating for the loss in the case. This compensation responsibility was ruled in the verdicts of the first-instance trial of the HCM City People’s Court on September 9, 2016 and the appeal trial of the HCM City High-level People’s Court on January 24, 2017. Therefore, the defendants in this case were not forced to compensate for the loss.

Source: VNA

Vietnam welcomes Chinese investment capital, but remains wary about risks

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Chinese FDI (foreign direct investment) flow to Vietnam has been increasing rapidly recently as Vietnam is one of the destinations included in China’s ‘One belt, one road’ strategy’.

According to the Foreign Investment Agency (FIA), China registered 76 investment projects in Vietnam worth $205.7 million, ranked third among foreign investors in number of projects and fourth in investment value. Reporting by Vietnamnet.

Analysts note that FDI from China has been increasing over the last 10 years from $572.5 million in 2007 to $2.17 billion in 2017. But the average investment capital per project has increased from $1.5 million to $5 million.

More large-scale projects have been registered, including the Vinh Tan 1 thermal ower plant, capitalized at $2 billion, the Lam Son industrial zone (IZ) and a plastics plant worth $150 million.

Chinese have also diversified their investments. In the past, they made investment through joint ventures, while now they tend to set up 100 percent foreign-owned businesses. In 2017 alone, 284 new projects were registered totalling $1.41 billion.

Chinese FDI is now going to manufacturing and processing industries as well as service businesses. Textile & garment and metal processing industries alone amount to 50 percent of total investment capital.

Chinese FDI is now going to manufacturing and processing industries as well as service businesses. Textile & garment and metal processing industries alone amount to 50 percent of total investment capital.

Analysts describe Chinese capital as a river which brings fertile alluvium, but puts Vietnam at a risk of heavy floods.

Chinese investors have a poor reputation when it comes to environmental pollution. A survey by the Institute of Natural Resources and the Environment found that the lives of residents in the area of the Chinese-invested Vinh Tan coal-fired power plant in Binh Thuan province were seriously affected by pollution.

The water used by 3/4 of households around the plant has chloride content exceeding the permitted level by 1.2-1.8 times, while irrigation water of 4/5 of households has fly ash content 1.05-1.8 times higher than permitted.

Chinese-invested projects are also known for using outdated technologies, which has raised concern that Vietnam would become the ‘dumping ground’ for such technologies.

The migration of Chinese workers to Vietnam could be a big threat to Vietnamese workers.

While some analysts called on the Vietnamese government to reject Chinese capital as other countries do, others believe that Vietnam still needs the capital.

However, they suggested that Vietnam needs to apply reasonable policies to take full advantage of the capital and minimize risks by encouraging Chinese investment in projects in high technologies, startup development, and key industries.

Any support you may need to get the investment certificate and enterprise registration certificate in Vietnam, please contact Global Business Service (GBS) company in Vietnam at:

Vietnam to mull ethanol mandate for higher octane 95 RON gasoline

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Vietnam plans to implement a 5% ethanol blending mandate for higher octane 95 RON gasoline to promote cleaner transportation fuels and boost demand for biofuels.

The move will help revive Vietnam’s shuttered ethanol plants and help curb dependence on refined product imports, even though it raises concerns about implementation as previous deadlines have been missed. S&P Global Platts reports.

The Ministry of Industry and Trade plans to submit a proposal on the ethanol mandate to the central government for consideration, vice industry and trade minister Do Thang Hai said in a news briefing Thursday, but did not provide a time frame for implementation.

The Southeast Asian country is a net importer of refined petroleum products with rapid growth in oil consumption that nearly doubled to 445,000 b/d between 2006 and 2016, according to the US energy department.

Vietnam’s two main gasoline grades are 92 RON and 95 RON.

On January 1, Vietnam phased out 92 RON, and replaced it with E5 92 RON gasoline, which is a blend of 5% ethanol and 95% 92 RON gasoline. Currently, retailers are allowed to sell both E5 92 RON and 95 RON gasoline at the pump.

In the first two months of this year, Vietnam consumed nearly 1.43 million cu m of E5 92 RON and 95 RON gasoline, out of which 95 RON was 836,293 cu m, or 58.5%, of the total, and E5 92 RON accounted for 593,609 cu m, the ministry said.

The new proposal will mandate that 95 RON gasoline be replaced with E5 95 RON, a mixture of 5% ethanol and 95% 95 RON gasoline.

CHALLENGES TO GASOHOL DEMAND

The proposal is backed by Saigon Petro, an oil importer and retailer in southern Vietnam, which received widespread support at a meeting between industry participants and the trade ministry on April 24.

The companies also raised concerns about poor sales of ethanol blended E5 92 RON.

One obstacle was the lack of an attractive price differential between E5 92 RON and 95 RON gasoline.

At current rates, E5 92 RON is Dong 1,570/liter (6.9 cents/liter), or 8.3%, lower than 95 RON grade III and Dong 1,770/liter or 9.4% lower than 95 RON grade IV. The companies wanted the government to widen the price difference to more than Dong 1,800/liter to boost sales.

Other challenges included consumer concerns that ethanol blends would damage their vehicles, the lack of sufficient E5 stations and, most importantly, ethanol supply constraints.

Currently, refiners and retailers like Binh Son Refining and Petrochemical, Petrolimex and PV Oil buy ethanol from the only local supplier, Tung Lam Ltd Co.

Vietnam had six ethanol plants with a combined design capacity of 535 million liters/year, but most have suspended operations due to low demand, feedstock supply problems and poor margins.

State-run Petrolimex, which accounts for about half the local market for fuels, said production of E5 92 RON had become costlier recently due to price rises of ethanol by Tung Lam.

The ethanol supplier, in turn, blamed price increases on rising input costs for raw materials like cassava, a biofuel crop.

Plans for opening suspended ethanol plants are under way. PV Oil said on April 12 it hoped to open its Binh Phuoc plant, or Orient Bio-Fuels, in the southern province of Binh Phuoc later this year.

In December, BSR said it would open its Quang Ngai plant, Central Bio-Fuels, near the Dung Quat refinery in 2018.

Binh Phuoc and Dung Quat have the capacity to produce 100,000 cu m/year of ethanol each. Tung lam can produce 200,000 cu m/year of ethanol, the industry and trade ministry said last July.

Traders estimated Vietnam’s total ethanol demand of around 300,000 cu m will be fully met when the new plants start operations.

Additionally, Vietnam has also allowed imports of ethanol for domestic use, according to vice minister Hai.

By Christina Siantar, Eric Yep, Edited by Daniel Lalor
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