Saturday, April 22, 2017

Việt Nam, US partnership set to strengthen, officials say

Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Phạm Bình Minh meets with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on his two-day official visit to the country.—VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Tuấn

Việt Nam and the US should sustain and strengthen their economic and trade links, as they are key to bilateral relations as a whole, Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Phạm Bình Minh said on Thursday.
Minh, who is on an official two-day (April 20-21) visit to the US, was speaking during a meeting with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Advisor of the US National Security Council Herbert Raymond McMaster in Washington DC. 
In his talks, the Deputy PM reaffirmed Việt Nam’s consistent foreign policy of independence, self-reliance, diversification and multilateralisation of relations, and international integration. 
Việt Nam and the US have great potential to strengthen co-operation, he said, suggesting the two sides expand links in education, training, science-technology, security-defence, and humanity, and in dealing with the consequences of war. 
Minh said Việt Nam was willing to work with the new US administration to reinforce and deepen the Comprehensive Partnership between two countries, based on respect for independence, sovereignty and political institutions of both nations.
This would contribute to peace, stability, co-operation and development in the Asia Pacific region and the world, he said. 
US State Secretary Tillerson and Advisor McMaster highlighted the flourishing growth of Việt Nam-US ties in recent times, and expressed their belief that the relationship will become even stronger. 
The new US administration attaches importance to the Comprehensive Partnership with Việt Nam, they stressed, agreeing on the need to enhance exchange visits at all levels to foster bilateral co-operation. 
Tillerson affirmed that the US would work with Việt Nam to ensure that the APEC 2017 brings about practical results. 
While comparing notes on regional and international issues, Tillerson and McMaster underlined the importance of maintaining peace, stability, security, safety and freedom of navigation in the East Sea. 
The US supports the settlement of disputes in the sea by peaceful measures based on diplomatic and legal processes, in line with international law, especially the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the East Sea (DOC), they stressed. 
At the meeting, Minh conveyed President Trần Đại Quang’s invitation to US President Donald Trump to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC) forum in 2017 and pay an official visit to Việt Nam. 
Tillerson and McMaster affirmed that President Trump will attend the event in Việt Nam. 
Advisor McMaster also conveyed President Donald Trump’s invitation to Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuân Phúc to visit the US. 
Minh also met with US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Thursday.
Mnuchin said the US supports Việt Nam continuing to receive international development assistance from the World Bank in accordance with the nation’s needs in the near future as well as under the auspices of co-operative activities within APEC.

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/politics-laws/375127/viet-nam-us-partnership-set-to-strengthen-officials-say.html#2wMaGTrKS2BFazwp.99

Farmers told to go organic, shun chemicals

People visit a greenhouse filled with safe vegetables in northern Bắc Giang Province. — VNA/VNS Photo Đồng Thúy

Farmers should increase the application of bio-organic-based integrated pest management to sustain the health of the soil, preserve bio-diversity and improve agricultural product quality and safeguard people’s health, a seminar heard in HCM City yesterday (Friday).
Nguyễn Thơ, deputy chairman of the Việt Nam Plant Protection Association, said Việt Nam’s agriculture has over the last few decades relied mainly on intensive farming using chemical fertilisers, pesticides and other products to increase yields.
The method has succeeded in increasing the country’s production of food crops, and fruit and industrial trees, but caused severe ecological imbalances, making the land less fertile and increasing soil-borne pathogens, he said.
Land and water have been badly polluted in rural areas due to abuse of crop protection chemicals, and pesticide residues in farm produce are high, he said.
Furthermore, with climate change, crop pests are becoming harder to combat, he said.
To effectively combat soil-borne pests, farmers need to adopt bio-organic farming methods, he, as well as many other attendees, said.
Using bio-organic products would help sustain agriculture since it would help protect the environment, preserve bio-diversity, reduce costs, produce safer farm produce, and reduce the threats to people’s health, they said.
Dương Hoa Xô, deputy chairman of the city Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, said it is imperative that agriculture protects the environment, ensuring hygiene and food safety and protecting the health of both producers and consumers, to meet the increasing global demand for safe food.
Prof Dr Phạm Văn Biên said many countries have begun to adopt organic agricultural practices, with the area under organic farming increasing.
In Việt Nam too the area has increased significantly in recent years, though it is still very modest compared to the total farming area.
According to the Việt Nam Organic Agriculture Association, the country exports small quantities of some organic products like tea, shrimp, rice, cinnamon, anise, and attar.
There are some successful organic models in involving tea and vegetables by Ecolink and Ecomart, vegetables by Organik Đà Lạt, a unique thick-skinned orange in Hàm Yên, Tuyên Quang Province, rice by Cà Mau-based Viễn Phú Green Farm and others.
But Việt Nam still lacks national standards and a comprehensive legal framework for production, certification and quality control of organic agricultural products, Biên said, adding that the Government should soon have in place policies, mechanisms and a national standard system to make it easy for businesses and farmers.
More than 250 scientists, provincial officials, agricultural scientists and farmers from many southern provinces and cities attended the seminar, which was organised by the Việt Nam Plant Protection Association and Tropical Agricultural Research and Consultancy Centre.

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/society/375146/farmers-told-to-go-organic-shun-chemicals.html#3K3fkFrC01qFCrch.99

Bankrupt creditors may be aided to refund customers

Illustrative photo. A customer deposits money into a bank account. — VNA/VNS Photo

To-be-bankrupt financial and credit institutions may have to refund their individual customers using support loans from the State Bank of Việt Nam (SBV) and other financial firms.
The idea was proposed by SBV in the draft law on the restructuring of credit institutions and bad debt settlement to protect the benefits and rights of customers at credit institutions that are going bankrupt due to its inability of improvimg their performance or recovering from bad conditions.
Part of the refund will be provided by SBV and other financial institutions, such as the State-owned financial institution Deposit Insurance of Việt Nam (DIV).
The current maximum level of deposit insurance that DIV can provide for a bankrupt creditor is VNĐ50 million (US$2,200) for each individual customer. The Government and other authorities are discussing the possibility of raising the maximum level of insurance for each account to VNĐ75 million.
With the current level of deposit insurance, individual customers that have deposited less than VNĐ50 million in bankrupt banks and financial creditors do not have to worry about their assets.
For deposit accounts worth more than VNĐ50 million, bankrupt creditors must take loans at preferential rates from SBV and other financial institutions to refund their customers.
The lending rate will be determined by the Government on the request of the central bank. Individual customers that may not be refunded are managers, directors, major shareholders, founding shareholders and investors of the credit institutions and those that are related to these subjects.
Bankruptcy of banks and creditors has attracted a lot of attention from analysts in Việt Nam’s financial market.
Bankruptcy should be the last solution when dealing with weak-performing financial institutions and it would be a long and complicated process but in line with international practices, according to the economist Nguyễn Trí Hiếu.
Lawyer Trương Thanh Đức said Việt Nam is a market economy, therefore, weak-performing banks and financial firms should go bankrupt to make the country’s banking sector secure and effective.
During the past four years of the banking system’s restructuring, SBV acquired three weak-performing banks -- Vietnam Construction Bank, Ocean Bank and GP Bank -- compulsorily at zero đồng.

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/economy/375080/bankrupt-creditors-may-be-aided-to-refund-customers.html#Xu10PWAZ2x2ZsP5C.99

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

VN wants its own social networks

Students attend a computer programming class in Hà Nội’s FPT University. — VNA/VNS Photo Minh Quyết

The Government is encouraging made-in-Việt Nam internet platforms to replace international giants like Google and Facebook as part of its long-term efforts to strengthen cyber security, the communications minister said yesterday. As part of its efforts to ensure accurate information, the ministry has also convinced YouTube to remove 1,500 clips with "illegal content", he added.
Minister of Information and Communications Trương Minh Tuấn took the stage during a Q&A session broadcast live from the National Assembly (NA)’s Standing Committee in which lawmakers fired questions at him about the spread of fake news on the internet and cyber security risks in Việt Nam.
This is the first time a Q&A session has been held during a meeting of the NASC.
The number of Facebook accounts in Việt Nam currenly stands at about 45 million, out of a population of 95 million, meaning that one in two Vietnamese has an account. Việtnamese are also among the top 10 nationalities in terms of time spent watching Youtube clips. Google is consistently the country’s number one search engine.
Vietnamese authorites, however, do not control those international sites and cannot prevent the spread of inaccurate information,slander of Vietnamese leaders or fake news that provoke enmity and hatred among people, the minister said.
Such content, though deemed illegal by the Vietnamese Government, is lawfully allowed by the countries where those kind websites are headquartered, Tuấn said, adding that it was difficult to ask those websites to remove such illigal content.
A new circular of the Ministry of Information and Communications that went into effect in February allows the ministry to take “technical measures” against any crossborder information providers should they fail to co-operate with the authorities to remove the illegal content in question.
“By April 2017 we had worked with Youtube to delete 1,500 clips containing illegal content. We will also work with a Facebook leader regarding the issue later this month,” Tuấn said. “However, these are all short-term solutions. In the long term, we need Vietnamese companies to develop our own plaforms that are capable of replacing those international websites.”
Deputy Prime Minister Vũ Đức Đam said that Việt Nam should seek more co-operation with information providers to work out a win-win solution regarding such illegal content. “But we also need to provide true information to fight against the spins. It should be sufficient, timely and posted on the very websites that spread the false content,” he said.
Revolutionary contributors


On another issue discussed by lawmakers, the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs reported that it had been reviewing policies designed for people who made significant contributions to the cause of national revolution, said minister Đào Ngọc Dung in the morning Q&A session.


The country has recognised over nine million revolutionary contributors, making up nearly 10 per cent of the total population. More than 1.4 million revolutionary contributors and their families are receiving monthly allowances, he noted.


The ministry reviewed the list in 2014 and 2015, and found around 28,500 cases of self-claimed contributors who had not received benefits. However, Minister Dung said the verification of those cases faces difficulties due to lack of documents as evidence, which is also the biggest problem in this field.


According to the minister, inspections so far also revealed the misapplication of preferential policies in 1,872 cases.


Regarding preparations for the 70th anniversary of the War Invalids and Martyrs Day (July 27), Dung said various activities will be held to mark the event, including a meeting in Hà Nội, a national conference to honour people who rendered services to the revolution, and commemorative and incense-offering ceremonies at cemeteries of fallen soldiers nationwide.
Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/politics-laws/374930/vn-wants-its-own-social-networks.html#6oGTEHUI5IyWVmgL.99

President checks APEC preps

President Trần Đại Quang visits the Ariyana Đà Nẵng Exhibition & Convention Centre – a major location of the APEC CEO Summit in Đà Nẵng. — VNS Photo Trương Ngọc Thành

President Trần Đại Quang pressed a button yesterday to start a countdown to the 2017 Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC) Summit in Đà Nẵng. The city will host a heads of state summit and CEOs from 21 member nations during the week of November 5 to 11.
On a visit to the city yesterday, President Quang toured the Ariyana Đà Nẵng Exhibition & Convention Centre – a major location for the APEC CEO Summit scheduled from November 8 to 10, expected to be attended by more than 1,000 CEOs from across the world.
The three-storey building, constructed on an area of 4,500sq.m, will provide meeting halls and space for 2,100 participants.
The President also joined a working session with the central city on the preparation of logistics, accommodation, traffic infrastructure and the decoration of the city for the APEC Summit.
He asked for more efforts to speed up construction of infrastructure projects, especially at Đà Nẵng’s airport. 
He requested the ministries of Defence and Public Security to coordinate and map out specific plans to ensure security and order for events during the High-level Week. 
Last year, the government allocated VNĐ400 billion (US$17.9 million) from the central budget for APEC preparations.
Established in November 1989, APEC comprises 21 economies, representing about 39 per cent of the world population, 57 per cent of total GDP and 47 per cent of world trade. Việt Nam joined the forum in 1998. The country has hosted APEC 2006 and the sixth APEC Human Resources Development Ministerial Meeting in September 2014.
More than 15,000 delegates and 6,000 journalists are expected to take part in the event this year.
The city also selected the red-shanked douc langur (Pygathryx nemaeus) – a langur declared endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature in 2013 – as Đà Nẵng’s official mascot for the summit. The 2,500ha Sơn Trà Nature Reserve, 10km from the city’s centre, is home to nearly 300 red-shanked douc langurs.

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/politics-laws/374888/president-checks-apec-preps.html#Zmw13OJzgmwq0DEY.99

Monday, April 17, 2017

Historical defensive construction recognised as national relic

Hải Vân Quan has been recognised as a national relic. — VNA/VNS Photo Trần Lê Lâm


Hải Vân Gate, which sits atop its namesake mountain pass in central Việt Nam, separating Đà Nẵng City and Thừa Thiên-Huế Province, has been recognised as a national relic.
The decision was made officially by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, Phan Thanh Hải, director of the Huế Monuments Conservation Centre, confirmed.
Located 490m above sea level, Hải Vân Gate is a relic with profound historical, architectural and artistic value, connecting Đà Nẵng’s Liên Chiểu District with Thừa Thiên-Huế’s Phú Lộc District.
The Hải Vân Pass runs some 21km on the Bạch Mã Range, which juts into the East Sea in central Việt Nam.

Foreign tourists visit Hải Vân Quan. — VNA/VNS Photo Trần Lê Lâm

The relic complex was built in 1826 under the rule of the Nguyễn dynasty’s Emperor Minh Mạng (1791-1841), who ordered the construction of multiple defensive structures on Hải Vân Pass to protect the then-capital of imperial Việt Nam in Huế. The structures included fortifications, store houses and cannon forts.
According to historical records, after building the complex, Emperor Minh Mạng inscribed its name in Vietnamese -- “Hải Vân Quan” (Hải Vân Gate) -- on one side of the gate facing Huế Imperial Citadel, and the words “Thiên hạ đệ nhất hùng quan” (world’s most marvelous wonder) on the other side facing Đà Nẵng.
The gate had been left in serious disrepair as neither administrations of Đà Nẵng and Thừa Thiên-Huế took responsibility for its maintenance.
The Gate has grown to become a popular attraction among tourists as it offers stunning views of the surrounding water bodies and landscape

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/life-style/374809/historical-defensive-construction-recognised-as-national-relic.html#keiD1CSVxsr3toas.99

Workers’ rentals: unrealistic policies don’t help

A boarding house for construction workers in District 2, HCM City. — VNS Photo Việt Thanh

HCM CITY – When municipal authorities issued a Decision No.18 in 2011 on granting preferential loans to landlords for building and upgrading houses to rent to workers, it was widely welcomed.
However, six years later, the number of landlords accessing this facility has been very limited, despite the fact that they provide 85 per cent of workers in the city with a place to live.
Phù Nhật Phương, who owns a boarding house for workers on 46-48 Riverside Street, was among the first one to build such a facility in Tân Tạo A Ward, Bình Tân District.
She recalled the problems both she and her tenants faced when waters rose knee-high in her house during high tide. Workers returned home after exhausting eight or nine-hour shifts only to fight the flood waters that threatened to ruin their possessions.
“Even at 9-10pm, my worker tenants were still busy bailing out water. There was no way I could sleep with all the ruckus, so I got up and joined them,” Phương told the Lao Động (Labour) newspaper.
Like a family
“So I said to them, ‘Seriously, why do you have to suffer like this, find some new place.’ But no one moved. I had lived with them like family for a long time now, so I thought I’d do some renovation to ease their difficulties,” she said.
Upon hearing her decision to invest nearly a billion đồng on rebuilding her house, many people tried to discourage her, saying “rent money from workers is just too little, compared to what you’re pouring in.”
They also told her that if she had that kind of money, she should just put in the bank and live off the interest, it would be much easier than running a boarding house for workers.
Despite the city’s loan package, she borrowed from other sources – from the bank, from the tenants, relatives and friends – to fund the construction.
After all this effort, “I’ve only recently been able to repay the cost of materials alone. It’s stressing, really,” Phương said.
After the upgrade was completed, nearly all her former tenants returned.
“After all the time we’ve known each other, I couldn’t bring myself to raise the rent, even with newer, more spacious rooms, and the flooding being a thing of the past,” Phương said.
That she kept the rent unchanged was something she did not tell her husband, with whom she’d discussed how to repay the loans.
Of course, she couldn’t keep it under wraps forever, because other landlords in the area jokingly chastised her husband about her ‘price dumping practice.’
“Once the secret was out, I had to convince my husband that the tenants and our family have been living together on good terms for a long time now. Even if we keep the rent a little low and the payback period gets longer, we can still get by. But a few hundred thousand đồng more would be a burden on these poor workers,” she said.
Her struggle, however, didn’t end there. Repaying construction loans with high interest rates was one thing; after the building was finished, many taxes rushed in, driving her into another round of repayment.
Fear of debt
Another landlord in Bình Tân District, Đoàn Văn Quang, said he used only the money he had to upgrade the old and dilapidated eight-room boarding house he bought from the previous owner.
He did not borrow any money, because he did not want to get caught in debt.
However, Quang could only afford to do a proper upgrade of four rooms, outfitting them with sturdy staircases, new kitchens, new flooring and ceilings. Then he ran out of money, so the remaining four rooms could undergo very small renovations like repainting.
Quang said that even though the rent for the newly furnished rooms is double that of the old ones, most tenants would be willing to pay it.
“Seeing that workers’ demand for comfortable living is high, I have considered borrowing money to upgrade the other four rooms, building a garage, a public space, new approach roads, etc.
“But the whole thing has remained in my head for years now,” he said, citing high interest rates and the resultant need to raise rent as discouraging factors.
Asked about the preferential loan packages that the city authorities have offered, Quang said grimly, “Too hard. I asked around but hardly anyone has been able to get those loans.
“You can only get them after meeting a slew of requirements and criteria. So most other landlords I know just go straight to the bank, and present their house as collateral to borrow money.”
Quang said if he were to get preferential loans, he wouldn’t raise the rent. In fact, he would anyway be interested in keeping the rent low; “if I dared to demand high rents, State agencies will come knocking on my door.”
Unrealistic policies
In a recent meeting between workers and the city authorities, Nguyễn Thị Quyên, an employee of Đỉnh Cao Co. Ltd, told the HCM City People’s Council Chairwoman, Nguyễn Thị Quyết Tâm, that since even affordable housing is still out of her reach, renting is the only viable option.
“I make VNĐ 4.8 million (US$211) a month, minus spending, I save up about VNĐ 1 million ($44) a month, or VNĐ 120 million in 10 years, while the cheapest ‘social house’ costs between a few hundred million to a billion đồng, how am I supposed to afford this?”
Her struggle is shared by many others, and it’s more difficult for workers who have family to take care of, saving or working overtime is all but ruled out.
“Having our own house is the best, but with current wages, we are fine with the next best thing, renting. We just want to live in clean, airy rooms, and not worry about hiked up electricity and water fees,” Quyên said.
Deputy Party Secretary of Bình Tân District, said the reason that Decision 18 has not realised its potential was other “unrealistic” regulations on rented housing for workers.
For example, the mandated average space for one person is 3sq.m (not including toilets or public spaces), and a boarding house with more than 10 rooms should have a green space and a minimum area of 10sq.m for each room.
Given such rules, it is not surprising that the HCM City Housing Development Committee, tasked with managing workers’ housing loans, has said that the number of landlords receiving loans in the last six years was “too low to be made public.”
Nguyễn Tấn Định, deputy head of the management board of HCM City’s industrial zones (IZs) and industrial parks (IPs), cited a similar situation back in 2011 when the board attempted to build several nurseries in IZs for the first time. It faced so many strict national standards and criteria that if forced to follow these by the book, there would not be a single nursery today, he said.
Định said he argued with the inspectors that regulations for nurseries located within IZs must be flexible compared to ordinary nurseries, with the priority being care and education of workers’ children.
Similarly, policies on loan packages for landlords must also be made less rigid and ‘closer to reality,’ Định said.
He also urged quick measures from the authorities, since managing a dwelling space for workers hailing from different localities is not easy, and many landlords are already leaving the business, opting to rent their land to factories and workshops instead – easier money and less stress.
“This will further compound the lack of accommodation for workers in the city. The assistance that the authorities provide for the landlords will indirectly benefit workers, giving them a chance to live properly,” Định said.
vietnamnews.vn

Thursday, April 13, 2017

VN’s first human milk bank benefits at-risk babies

A mother donates milk at Việt Nam’s first human milk bank in central Đà Nẵng City. — Photo thanhnien.vn

Some 136 at-risk babies have received milk over two months from 46 donor mothers from the country’s first human milk bank at the Đà Nẵng Hospital for Women and Children.
International and Vietnamese experts on breastfeeding, newborn care and human milk banks heard this at a workshop held today in central Đà Nẵng City, organised to learn more about the establishment of the country’s first human milk bank.
At the event, hospital representatives shared initial achievements and challenges of the milk bank and the role of early essential newborn care in ensuring there are enough milk donors to feed all infants in need of human milk.
Since 2015, the Đà Nẵng Department of Health and the Đà Nẵng Hospital for Women and Children have been working with PATH and Alive & Thrive to highlight the importance of human milk and the ability of human milk banks to offer a solution for optimal growth and development for at-risk children. As a result of this partnership, Việt Nam’s first human milk bank opened on February 6, 2017.
The hospital has trained health staff across departments to provide breastfeeding support for all mothers and infants to ensure infants receive the best nutrition possible. Since its opening, 136 at-risk babies have received milk from 46 donor mothers, who passed strict hygiene and safety testing, totaling 60 litres of donated human milk.
Nguyễn Đức Vinh, director of the Maternal and Child Health Department at the Ministry of Health, said: “The human milk bank is giving at-risk children of Đà Nẵng City a chance of survival. We hope the lessons and experiences from this model will be applied in other locations in Việt Nam.”
“The human milk bank represents more than just a location where breast milk is donated and received to save the lives of vulnerable children; it also aims to raise awareness on the importance of breastfeeding and promote the same in society. The rate of breastfeeding in Việt Nam in general, and in Đà Nẵng city in particular, should be increased to a level of importance equal with breast milk,” director of the Đà Nẵng Health Department Ngô Kim Yến said.
“One of the key things we see in the development of the human milk bank here in Việt Nam is that it cannot operate alone -- it must be integrated within a wider model of newborn care,” Program Director of Alive & Thrive in Southeast Asia Roger Mathisen said.
“The human milk bank provides a link between neonatal care and breastfeeding, connecting at-risk newborns with human milk. An integrated approach linking neonatal care, human milk banking and breastfeeding promotion is vital to its success,” Mathisen added.
Studies have repeatedly shown that of all the known solutions to reduce child mortality (22 deaths out of every 1,000 live births among children under five in Việt Nam), human milk has the greatest potential impact on child survival and development; it contains the key nutrients infants need to build strong immune systems and is the best and easiest food for babies to digest.
While all newborns can benefit from human milk, not all women are able to provide breast milk for their babies. Sometimes the mother is too ill or on medication incompatible with breastfeeding. For infants at greatest risk -- pre-term, low weight or orphaned -- the World Health Organisation recommends donor milk as the best alternative.
The Đà Nẵng Hospital for Women and Children is the top-ranked hospital in the field of pediatrics and obstetrics with 900 planned beds and 1765 actual beds. Each year, the hospital welcomes 13,000-15,000 births. The hospital’s neonatal pediatrics department provides treatment for some 120 babies with low weight, premature birth or illness each day, and is also a training centre for neonatal care for many domestic and international hospitals.

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/society/374627/vns-first-human-milk-bank-benefits-at-risk-babies.html#YoRIJOMzrXLLd8Sx.99

Deputy PM calls for sustained, collective growth effort

Workers make clothes for export at the Đức Giang Textile Garment company Limited based in Hà Nội's Long Biên district. — VNA/VNS Photo Trần Việt

Deputy Prime Minister Trịnh Đình Dũng revisited the themes of macroeconomic stability and sustainable development yesterday as he urged a concerted effort to reach future growth targets.
In a first quarter review meeting with various departments, agencies and businesses, he also stressed the importance of maintaining trade balance and keeping inflation for the year to under four per cent.
The Deputy PM emphasised the need for increased productivity and efficiency in the oil and gas industry and greater support for the textile and footwear industry, given its high localisation rate and potential for employment generation as well as greater market penetration.
The domestic car industry and electronic parts manufacturing should also receive encouragement to better integrate into the global value chain, he said.
He reiterated the importance of geographical identification in boosting export value for made-in-Viet Nam products, saying this would also boost product quality and their domestic market share.
Hoàng Quốc Vượng, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade (MoIT), gave an assurance that his ministry would work closely with companies and business associations to resolve difficulties that they were facing.
Vượng also asserted that the oil industry’s current goal of exploiting an additional one million tonnes of natural gas this year is feasible with adequate effort.
He said mining industries need a broader market share at home and abroad for better returns, while the electricity sector and other manufacturing industries would be driven by the nation’s economic growth.
Diệp Thành Kiệt , Deputy Director of the Vietnam Leather, Footwear and Handbags Association, said that the footwear industry would continue to focus on its main import markets in the United States and in Europe without leaning towards any particular one towards ensuring a balanced export turnover.
Dũng asked the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) to focus on restructuring the agriculture sector towards tackling climate change challenges, minimizing natural disaster impacts and generating higher product values.
Nguyễn Xuân Cường, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, responded that the ministry would focus on improving domestic agricultural value chain and food safety.
Despite the agricultural sector’s poor performance in the first three months of 2017, recording a 2.05 per cent growth rate, Cường was confident that the targeted growth rate of 2.5 to 2.8 per cent for 2017 would be achieved.
His ministry would collaborate with foreign chambers of commerce to expand Việt Nam’s export markets, with particular attention to China, India and other ASEAN countries as trade partners with the highest growth potential, Cường said.
The Deputy PM called for more precise and effective policy frameworks to attract investment for infrastructure construction, mainly for transportation, energy and real estate sectors.
He asked the Ministry of Planning and Investment to work with the MoIT and the General Statistics Office to clearly define growth strategies and monitor their implementation in each and every sector under their purview.
The corporate sector, meanwhile, should take all possible economic scenarios into account in drawing up its own growth plans, he said.
Other points of interest mentioned by the Deputy PM included the need for regular, detailed research, quarter on quarter and year on year, on market demand and growth forecasts for domestic industries, particularly those with high added value.

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/economy/374603/deputy-pm-calls-for-sustained-collective-growth-effort.html#avdz3PgF5Y7vIGld.99

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Deputy Health Minister pioneers new infertility treatment

Doctor examines a patient in central Nghệ An Province’s Obstetrics and Pediatrics Hospital. The new technique will soon be transferred to city and provincial-level obstetrics hospitals to reduce overloading at the National Hospital of Obstetrics and Gynecology.— VNA/VNS Photo Dương Ngọc



A new surgical technique developed by renowned obstetric surgeon Nguyễn Viết Tiến, also Deputy Health Minister, could replace the IVF (in-vitro fertilization) method for thousands of infertile women.


The National Hospital of Obstetrics and Gynecology announced successful testing of the new technique last week.


It said the technique was studied and carried out by Tiến, known as the “golden hands” of Việt Nam’s obstetrics discipline.


The technique involves using a “catheter” to broaden the internal orifice of the uterus via an endoscopy through the womb and abdomen.


After more than 10 years of study, the technique was successfully deployed on two women diagnosed with secondary infertility.


The first patient, Nguyễn Thị Loan from the central province of Nghệ An, was diagnosed with secondary infertility 8 years after she’d had her first baby.


Doctors found that the she had an occlusion in the internal orifice of the uterus, preventing her from getting pregnant.


Both women were in good health following the surgery.


“A month after the operation, the women’s internal OS have become normal. They can have babies in the natural way after more than seven years of suffering secondary infertility,” Tiến said.


According to the doctor, the infertility rate in Việt Nam was 7.7 per cent at present. While either the wife or the husband or both can be the cause of infertility, leading causes for the woman were blocked fallopian tubes, occlusion of the internal orifice of the uterus, polycystic ovary syndrome, uterine malformation and endometriosis.


Recent studies have found that the rate of secondary infertility was about 60-70 per cent of all cases of infertility.


“The percentage is very high. Helping these couples have babies became a concern and a responsibility,” he said.


“After many years of working as doctor specialising in fertitlity treatment, I empathized with couples wanting babies,” Tiến told Lao Động (Labour) newspaper.


Fertility treatment is usually costly and takes many attempts to succeed, and many couples are left feeling hopeless.


In-vitro fertilization was an option not all couples could afford. In many cases, couples took five to 10 years to save the money. But, unfortunately, the women’s ovaries aged during this time, the doctor said.


The patients’ despair pushed Tiến and his colleagues to find an effective, affordable solution.


After years of research, the doctor was able to fashion a a new technique based on endoscopy of the womb and abdomen.


“I am really confident about the new method. Based on my experience, I am sure the patients will be able to have babies normally”, Tiến affirmed.


He said the new technique was very safe and the side effects were minimal. The operation itself just took a hour and a half.


Other methods carry high risks of complications, he said.


Thanks to the new technique, the Center for Reproductive Assistance is able to help dozens of patients every day.


“I can confidently say that with this technique, IVF or surrogate pregnancies can become a thing of the past,” Tiến said.


He said the technique will soon be transferred to city and provincial-level obstetrics hospitals to reduce overloading at the National Hospital of Obstetrics and Gynecology.


“However, one thing that concerns me now is that infertility treatment is not covered by health insurance,” Tien said.


In many developed countries, childless couples are covered for up to four IVF attempts, he said.


But in Việt Nam, even tests are not paid for by health insurance.


“In my opinion, the treatment has a humanitarian purpose, and we should consider this,” the doctor said.


Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/society/374509/deputy-health-minister-pioneers-new-infertility-treatment.html#t4V5WwewIoeuhB4x.99

HCM City makes plans to improve PCI ranking

A view of HCM City. — Photo bizlive.vn

HCM City officials held a meeting on Tuesday to discuss what steps to take to improve the city’s Provincial Competitiveness Index (PCI), which dipped last year.
The city slipped to the eighth position in 2016, after being sixth in 2015.
Trần Vĩnh Tuyến, vice-chairman of the municipal People’s Committee, urged for swift action to lift up the city’s PCI ranking, and said the city must work to improve the sub-indices that earned lower points.
Local departments and agencies must focus on the sub-indices of land access, informal charges, policy bias, pro-activity of provincial leadership, and legal institutions, Tuyến said.
Though land access for businesses was among the five sub-indices with higher points – it rose from 5.18 points in 2015 to 5.45 in 2016 – the rise was very modest, indicating that this sub-index has not improved substantially, Tuyến pointed out.
Regarding informal charges, he asked heads of all municipal departments and agencies to hold dialogues with and listen to businesses while stepping up the provision of online services to minimise direct contact, thus cutting red tape and saving time and expenses for enterprises.
Tuyến also called for businesses to co-operate by turning down civil servants’ informal requests.
To resolve the issue of policy bias, he said HCM City would immediately set up an enterprise support centre to help solve difficulties that businesses are facing.
The vice-chairman has also asked civil servants to review feedback from enterprises and determine the cause of dissatisfaction with the administration’s performance, which led to a lower pro-activity index.
Legal institutions index saw the biggest drop last year, from 5.04 to 4.25 points, so all concerned agencies must immediately set up supervision mechanisms to ensure that the viewpoints of businesses are considered appropriately. Officials must review economic disputes and accelerate the enforcement of civil judgments so as to improve the business community’s trust in the city’s law protection agencies, he added.
Nguyễn Hoàng Minh, deputy director of the municipal Department of Planning and Investment, said that though HCM City’s PCI ranking in 2016 fell from the previous year, its average score has risen by 0.36 points, from 61.36 to 61.72 points.
Around 36,000 companies were established in the city in 2016, a year-on-year rise of 14 per cent. The local business environment was also highly valued at international economic forums, Minh pointed out.
HCM City should also conduct its own research and surveys on its investment environment based on ground-level realities in order to take timely steps to overcome its problems, he suggested.

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/economy/374552/hcm-city-makes-plans-to-improve-pci-ranking.html#ybsSClKlmVtCeXjh.99

Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Hùng Kings’ Day: honouring founding fathers

Ceremonial: A long-standing tradition is maintained, with soldiers in traditional attire accompanying the palanquin. — VNS Photo Nguyễn Trung Kiên

“When we drink water, we remember its sources.
“When we eat a sweet fruit, we are grateful to those who plant it.”
Gratitude to ancestors is an axiom of Vietnamese life and culture, and the event that gives greatest expression to this gratitude is the Hung Kings Memorial Day, which falls on the 10th of the third lunar month (which falls on April 6 this year on the Gregorian calendar).
The nation as a whole pays tributes to its legendary founders on this day.
After lighting incense at the Celestial Temple on top of Nghĩa Lĩnh Mountain to pay tributes to the nation’s founders, Lê Hồng Vân, chairman of Việt Trì City’s People’s Committee, cited the above-mentioned homilies on gratitude.
“These are the reminders that are handed down from generation to generation,” he said.
At 6.30am sharp, many people were standing in line for the nonstop, uphill walk to the top of the Nghĩa Lĩnh Mountain, where the 6th King Hùng Huy Vương of the Vietnamese legend was buried.
Vietnamese people from all parts of the country had made their way to Việt Trì City to pay their tributes to their ancestors.
“We come here from Bình Dương Province,” Đặng Thị Giàu told Việt Nam News. “There’s one temple dedicated to the Hùng Kings at the Đại Nam Complex near where we live."
“But this is the original site where our ancestors were buried so we want to come here,” she said as she prepared to light incense and pray at the Celestial Temple.
In the last six years, Giàu has been here five times with a group of six friends in their 70s and 80s.
But it is not just the elderly who take the 500 or so steps to the temple atop the mountain. Many young people, students, and people of all ages and walks of life come here to connect with their roots.
It is estimated that over the last two days, a staggering two million people have visited Hùng King’s Temple, truly the country’s biggest pilgrimage site every year.
Leading an entourage of more than 100 civil servants in Việt Trì and a royal carriage on the shoulders of a dozen strong men to the mountain top, Lê Hồng Vân, chairman of Việt Trì People’s Committee, lit incense in the inner altar, open to a very limited number of people. 
“Today we stand at the Celestial Temple at the top of the sacred Nghĩa Lĩnh Mountain with enormous gratitude toward our ancestors: the Hùng Kings, our nation’s founding fathers,” he said.
“We share a common heritage,” he continued, “and all of us commemorate the Hùng Kings Memorial Day every year. It is our tradition, our common background, our great unity.”
Legends and artifacts
Vietnamese people tend to disagree with each others on many things, but there is no difference of opinion on one important thing that the Hùng Kings are our ancestors.
The blend of history and legend has it that the first ruler of what is Việt Nam today was Kinh Dương Vương, a great-grandson of the Agriculture God, who looks over all farming work in Heaven. He then married the Dragon Queen and give birth to Lạc Long Quân, or Dragon King.
Lạc Long Quân met his future wife Âu Cơ, or the Phoenix Queen in a cave during one of his travels around his kingdom. He took her to settle down at the Nghĩa Lĩnh Mountain. The couple gave birth to one hundred men.
One day Lạc Long Quân told his wife, “My dear, I belong to the Dragon family, while you to the Fairy family. So we cannot live together for long.”
So when their sons become adults, Lạc Long Quân sent 50 sons to go with their Mother Âu Cơ  to live in the mountains. He took 49 other sons and headed out to sea.
They left their eldest son Hùng Quốc Vương to rule the country known as Văn Lang.
Hùng Quốc Vương lived in the Văn Lang Citadel, now Việt Trì City. The Hùng dynastry lasted for 18 generations.

Dragon steps: The palanquin team from Chu Hóa Commune at the foot of the Nghĩa Lĩnh Mountain is accompanied by a dragon dance team. — VNS Photo Nguyễn Trung Kiên
In his book, The Hùng Kings Temple — Historic Memorial, writer Vũ Kim Biên lists all the 19 Hùng Kings and the duration of their reigns.
But legend has also been infused into the list. It is said the first Hùng King ruled for 221 years and lived up to 260 years, and that the second Hùng King ruled for 300 years and lived up to 646 years.
While these are obviously legends orally handed down from ancient times, some of the “legendary” stuff has been supported by artifacts unearthed by archaeologists.
The last Hùng King did not have a son to continue his lineage, so he gave the throne to a nephew. Thục Phán An Dương Vương defeated the last of the Hùng Kings in 257BC.
Later, Thục Phán lost his kingdom to the neighbouring Qin dynasty’s general Zhao Tuo, who used his son to seduce, marry and gradually steal weaponry secrets from the daughter of Thục Phán An Dương Vương. This story, known to every Vietnamese, is purportedly a legend, but several details of the story are backed by real-life artifacts.
The earthen spiral citadel, or Cổ Loa, 16km northeast from central Hà Nội, was the location of the Âu Lạc Kingdom, with Thục Phán as King An Dương Vương.
The giant turtle’s claw, used as trigger on the magical crossbow that can fire thousands of bronze arrows at a time, is the stuff of legends. Many bronze arrows can be seen today at the National Museum of History in Hà Nội.
Archaeologists have also found bronze drums at the Cổ Loa Citadel site. Produced in 600BC or even earlier, the drums are one of the finest examples of metal works creted by the Đông Sơn Culture. Weighed up to 100 kilos each, the drums are intricately decorated with geometric patterns, scenes of daily life, wartime, birds and other animals, and boats. The drums were objects of trade and family heirlooms.
Same ancestors
The Vietnamese people have always valued the dedication and sacrifice of previous generations and see the anniversaries of their death as an opportunity to pay tributes. This custom is observed by every family, with children sharing the cost of the family feast or making the best offerings they can at the ancestors’ altar.
The same tradition applies when it comes to worshipping the national founding fathers.
This year four localities, including Hà Nội, Thái Bình, Bình Phước and Bến Tre Province, offered to co-host the ceremonies and series of accompanying activities during the Hùng Kings Memorial Day.
“I am the master of ceremonies and I have been entrusted to chair the ceremony commemorating the Hùng Kings,” said Lương Phú Thuận, 80.
“Vietnamese, wherever life takes you to,” he said, “remember to turn your heart and soul toward the Hùng Kings Temple. The Kings will bless you.”

Ceremonial: A long-standing tradition is maintained, with soldiers in traditional attire accompanying the palanquin. — VNS Photo Nguyễn Trung Kiên

Food story: It is said that Prince Lang Liêu, the youngest and poorest son of the 18th Hùng King, invented the square and round sticky rice cakes to gift his parents. This is a tradition maintained by the Vietnamese people ever since. — VNS Photo Trung Kiên


On the way up: People of Việt Trì City on their way to honour Hùng Kings. VNS Photo Đoàn Tùng

Orderly departure: Locals carry traditional flags, a large palanquin with offerings to walk up nearly 500 steps to the Upper Temple. — VNS Photo Đoàn Tùng


Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/life-style/374094/hung-kings-day-honouring-founding-fathers.html#ZCDTEvJjl81GPqQ2.99

Citizens are more concerned for the environment

A Mù Cang Chải District General Hospital doctor examines an ethnic minority baby in Lào Cai Province. The 2016 Việt Nam Provincial Governance and Public Administration Performance Index (PAPI) report says there was a significant rise in the reported quality of free child health care, with 32% saying that the service for children under 6 years of age was “excellent,” compared to 23% in 2015. — VNA/VNS Photo Dương Ngọ

Findings from the 2016 Việt Nam Provincial Governance and Public Administration Performance Index (PAPI), which was released yesterday, revealed that concerns about the environment have become a more salient topic among Vietnamese citizens.
Over 14,000 citizens randomly selected from all 63 provinces were interviewed for the 2016 PAPI report, which assesses citizens’ experiences with national and local government performance in governance, public administration and public service delivery, which helps to motivate public officials, civil servants, and public employees at different levels and in different sectors to perform better in citizen engagement.
Within the framework of the report, citizens were asked to describe their issues of greatest concern in 2016. While poverty remained the most important issue for respondents, 2016 witnessed a significant increase in concern for environmental issues. More than 12 per cent of respondents cited the environment as their most important concern, which is a dramatic 10 per cent increase from 2015.
The most obvious explanation for the sudden, dramatic shift was the widespread reporting of the mass fish death in central Viet Nam due to toxic industrial discharge into the sea, as well as saline water intrusion in the Mekong Delta, and rising air pollution in big cities and the Red River Delta, the PAPI report said.
The report went further and asked for the willingness of people to trade off support for the environment against other concerns like poverty reduction and economic development.
In terms of variation by geography and demographics, further analysis reveals that respondents in the North Central Coast provinces of Nghệ An, Quảng Bình, and Hà Tĩnh were more willing to sacrifice growth for the environment.
And in terms of demographics, education level was the strongest determinant, with more educated citizens far more likely to rank the environment over economic growth compared to less educated citizens.
When asked about the most important environmental concern facing the country, 60 per cent mentioned some form of water or air pollution. Respondents were conclusive in saying that water quality has declined. More than 67 per cent of those polled said water quality was worse than three years ago.
Regarding air quality and the change over time, respondents were evenly split, with 36 per cent indicating that air quality was worse compared to three years ago, and 38 per cent responding that it had improved.
Six dimensions
PAPI details provincial performance in six dimensions, including participation at local levels, transparency, vertical accountability, control of corruption in the public sector, public administration procedures, and public service delivery.
Of these six dimensions, the greatest gain was seen in public service delivery, with 35 provinces improving their scores in 2016 compared to 2011.
The PAPI report says that in particular, citizen perceptions of public health quality surged due to a jump in the proportion of citizens with health insurance, from 62 per cent in 2015 to 73 per cent in 2016. There was also a significant rise in the reported quality of free child health care, with 32 per cent saying that the service for children under 6 years of age was “excellent” compared to 23 per cent in 2015.
There was a slight increase in the overall provincial performance in the health service sector, bringing it back to its 2011 level after falling in 2014 and 2015. The main contributor to the positive move was a higher percentage of respondents who felt that public health care workers at district hospitals did not request bribes (51 per cent) compared to 2015 (48 per cent).
However, the trend of declining provincial performance in control of corruption in the public sector continued in 2016, with noticeable spikes in the numbers of respondents saying citizens had to pay bribes for state employment, for land use right certificates, and for teachers to pay sufficient attention to their children in public primary schools.
For example, approximately 54 per cent of respondents felt that bribes were needed in order to get a government job, up from 51 per cent in 2015 and 46 per cent in 2011. Reported cases of public officials diverting state funds at the local level also increased.
Meanwhile, the bribe amount citizens are willing to tolerate kept rising in 2016, with victims of corruption saying they would not make a denunciation in a case unless the bribe being asked reached around VNĐ25.6 million, higher than the reported figure in 2015.
Equity in state employment contributes significantly to a strong and clean (non-corrupt) state apparatus. However, the PAPI report said that it seemed difficult to reach this goal, especially when personal relationships and informal payments still play an important role among those who wish to pursue careers in the public sector. This has recently been recognised as a danger to an effective and facilitating government by the Government of Viet Nam, with the Prime Minister requesting dismissal of any bureaucrat whose appointment was influenced by nepotism.
“The 2016 PAPI results paint a mixed picture. On the one hand, there has been steady improvement in the performance of public service delivery over the past six years. However, most provinces can do more to improve the competence and attitude of civil servants and public employees, and enhance the transparency, responsiveness, and accountability of their institutions,” said Kamal Malhotra, UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative in Việt Nam, said.
Đặng Ngọc Dinh, Director of the Việt Nam Center for Community Support and Development Studies, said he hoped that with the 2016 PAPI data and evidence from PAPI surveys over the next five years, the Government of Việt Nam can better oversee how it moves towards ‘the government that facilitates development and serves its people’

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/politics-laws/374111/citizens-are-more-concerned-for-the-environment.html#7EhxW5RtDrIfH7We.99

Viet Nam, UN fight drought malnutrition

Two-year-old Va Vi Nhong Kim holds a ready-to-use therapeutic food sachet, his daily nutrition enhancement staple. -- Photo courtesy of UNICEF



Thousands of children under the age of five living in Central region drought-hit areas are recovering from malnutrition due to an Emergency nutrition intervention programme project.


The news was revealed in a report from National Institute for Nutrition (NIN) at a seminar held in Hà Nội.


The programme, with financial support worth US$4 million from UNICEF and the Government of Japan, has fulfilled its target of improving nutrition conditions for 7,640 children with severe and acute malnutrition (SAM) in 6 provinces of Ninh Thuận, Kon Tum, Gia Lai, Trà Vinh, Hậu Giang and Cà Mau.


The children were among 27,500 young kids suffering from malnutrition. In addition, 39,000 pregnant and lactating women lack nutrition in the 18 provinces affected by drought, the report said.


The programme focused on areas of safe water supply, promotion of sanitation and hygiene, providing micro-nutrient supplements for the most vulnerable women and children.


According to the institute, about 83,560 pregnant and lactating women , 62,270 children of six to 23 months are benefiting from the programme. They were provided multiple micronutrients for three months and participated in various nutrition training courses.


In addition, there was an increase in malnutrition among children at drought-affected regions, it announced.


Specifically, the number of children under the age of five suffering severe acute malnutrition (SAM) rose from between 1.3-1.8 per cent to between 1.9-2.1 per cent in 2016, it said.


Addressing the event, Deputy Minister of Health Nguyễn Thanh Long praised the project’s achievements, saying it has not only helped improve nutrition conditions of women and children but also enhanced knowledge for local health workers.


Jesper Moller, deputy representative of the UNICEF in Việt Nam, expressed his hope that the project’s initial results would help boost nutrient and health care services for Vietnamese women and children in disaster affected areas.


A joint rapid assessment conducted in March last year by the Vietnamese government, the UN, and non-governmental organisations estimated that in the 18 most severely-affected provinces, around two million people were without access to water and 1.1 million people were in need of food aid. More than 60,000 women and children are already malnourished, and about 1.75 million people have lost their livelihoods as a result of the worsening situation.


In the same month, the government requested assistance from international partners for its relief efforts, prioritising support to ensure safe drinking water, sanitation and hygiene practices and nutritional support in drought-affected areas and enhanced monitoring of potential disease outbreaks.


On 26 April 2016, the Government of Việt Nam, United Nations and partners appealed to the international community to support a US$48.5 million joint Government-United Nations emergency response plan to address the El Nino drought, affecting as many as two million people in southern and central regions.
Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/society/health/374129/viet-nam-un-fight-drought-malnutrition.html#hZbepq3QPGuAKS4f.99

Saturday, April 1, 2017

FPT looks to sell trading and retail units in 2017

Programmers work at FPT Corporation. Viet Nam’s largest ICT group saw a slight increase in its pre-tax profit for 2016. — Photo chungta.vn

FPT Corporation may complete its divestment from FPT Trading and FPT Retail sub-units in 2017, officials said at the company’s annual shareholder meeting yesterday.
The divestment of the two subsidiaries is a must, according to FPT chairman Trương Gia Bình, as FPT targets to be a pure ICT group with rapid and sustainable growth, while many investors have expected the group to part with the trading and retail units.
The group’s trading and retail units recorded a negative growth rate with its revenue and pre-tax profit falling 9 per cent and 25 per cent to VNĐ23 trillion (US$1 billion) and VNĐ544 billion, respectively.
The reason for the decline in FPT’s trading and retail segment mainly came from the fall of cellphone distribution business. Distributing iPhone products brought FPT a yearly profit of VNĐ300 billion between 2013 and 2015. In 2016, profit from iPhone distribution fell 90 per cent to only VNĐ34 billion.
The US-based tech giant Apple changed its distribution policy for Viet Nam’s market by allowing local retailers such as Mobile World to directly import iPhone models.
In 2016, Microsoft, another technology company, eliminated its Lumia smartphones and relevant services, forcing FPT to cut prices for Lumia products and reduce its stockpiles of those products.
"The company will not hold the controlling stakes in the two subsidiaries after the divestments are complete," Bình said.
"The income from the divestment deal will be recorded in FPT’s earnings report after 2017," he added.
FPT planned to offload parts of its ownership in FPT Trading and FPT Retail as a whole in 2016, however, the plan did not work out as the group failed to negotiate with buyers.
Bình said that the company was amending the divestment plan. The new plan would separate the sale of FPT Trading from that of FPT Retail and had drawn attention from some investors.
Regarding the future of FPT Telecom, Bình said that the group might increase its stake in FPT Telecom in case the Government sells its stake in the company but the future remains uncertain.
At the annual shareholder meeting, shareholders approved the group’s plan to pay a 20 per cent dividend in cash for 2016’s performance. Half of the dividend was paid in August 2016, the other will be paid in the second quarter of 2017.
Shareholders also approved the plan to pay a 20 per cent dividend in cash for 2017’s performance.
In 2016, FPT recorded a combined revenue of VNĐ40.54 trillion, equal to the previous year’s number, and a pre-tax profit of VNĐ3 trillion, a yearly increase of 6 per cent.
For 2017, FPT targets combined revenue of VNĐ46.6 trillion, a yearly increase of 15 per cent from 2016, and pre-tax profit of VNĐ3.4 trillion, a year-on-year rise of 13 per cent.
In 2017, FPT will focus its resources on the telecommunication business and penetrating the 4G market.
FPT is listed on the HCM Stock Exchange under code FPT. The company’s shares yesterday went up 0.4 per cent to close at VNĐ47,300 per share.

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/economy/373940/fpt-looks-to-sell-trading-and-retail-units-in-2017.html#UbqrjF4jGcMU1iFB.99