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Corporate research project

Vietnam becomes beneficiary of global project against sexual harassment in media

December 11, 2020 by hanoitimes.vn

The Hanoitimes – Vietnam is among five select Southeast Asian countries reached for the extent of sexual harassment in the media workplace.

Vietnam, together with four other Southeast Asian countries, has become the latest beneficiary of a project against sexual harassment in media industry by the World Association of News Publishers (WAN-IFRA), one of the largest non-profit journalistic organizations in the world.

Sexual harassment in workplace remains underreported

Vietnam, together with Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, and the Philippines will be reached for the extent of this problem in the ongoing Phase Two of a three-part project on addressing sexual harassment in the media workplace, spanning Sub-Saharan Africa, the Arab Region and Southeast Asia, according to WAN-IFRA Women in News (WIN).

The Southeast Asia study makes up the second phase of the project that is conducted in the partnership between WIN and City, University of London.

Widespread project

This phase of the research will run from November 2020 until March 2021, following Phase One which collected responses from Africa, specifically Botswana, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.

This new study will look specifically at those regions in order to (1) Better understand the extent of sexual harassment in the media industry in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Arab Region and Southeast Asia; (2) Contribute to global data on sexual harassment in the media industry, by filling these regional data gaps; (3) Enable informed, evidence-based responses to sexual harassment in the media industry.

The research will be a combination of a survey of media professionals as well as interviews with media executives.

The survey is targeted at media professionals regardless of their gender, hierarchy or whether or not they have witnessed or experienced sexual harassment. It is being distributed to media organizations and regional and national media associations or industry partners.

The interviews will be conducted with media executives focusing on their perceptions about the problem of sexual harassment. Findings will be anonymized and no individual or organization will be named.

“We are pleased to partner with WIN to address the systemic issue of sexual harassment in the news industry. This is an international crisis that occurs in newsrooms around the world. Having the opportunity to record the personal experiences of news personnel will help us support news organizations tremendously,” said Lindsey Blumell, senior lecturer at City, University of London.

Jen Teo, director, Southeast Asia, Women in News (left) and Norwegian Ambassador to Vietnam Grete Lochen

“In Asia, many deny that sexual harassment is a problem. But we know it remains pervasive and is therefore underreported. This research will bring out the figures and demonstrate the need for strong workplace policies prohibiting sexual harassment at work,” said Jen Teo, director, Southeast Asia, Women in News.

“Whatever the form, sexual harassment undoubtedly upsets the victim and can cause emotional harm, and physical and psychological trauma. It also causes decline in work productivity and job satisfaction. It’s therefore in the interest of individuals and of businesses to address this issue directly in their workplace,” Teo noted.

In a message sent in September 2020 to Vietnam’s female journalists and editors who participated in a sponsored career training program, Norwegian Ambassador to Vietnam Grete Lochen said “we should make zero tolerance for sexual harassment.”

Years-long efforts

In an initial study conducted by WIN in 2018, a significant gap was identified in the available data on sexual harassment in media specifically in sub-Saharan Africa, the Arab Region and Southeast Asia.

In an effort to tackle the problem, since 2018, WIN has developed a practical toolkit for media employers and employees to deal with and prevent sexual harassment in their media organizations.

WAN-IFRA Women in News (WIN) aims to increase women’s leadership and voices in the news. It does so by equipping women journalists and editors with the skills, strategies, and support networks to take on greater leadership positions within their media.

In August 2020, WIN Leadership Accelerator program kicks off in Vietnam. The two-month career training for women journalists and editors will include sessions on career development, media management, and gender balance in content.

With Covid-19 changing the way news organizations operate, the program will help women journalists acquire new skills and build their capacity for more successful careers.

This WIN’s flagship leadership media development program is funded by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida). More than 600 women journalists and editors have benefited from the program since it first launched 10 years ago.

WIN is currently working with more than 80 media from 15 countries including: Botswana, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Somalia, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe (WIN Africa); Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Palestine (WIN Arab Region); and Myanmar and Vietnam (WIN Southeast Asia).

Filed Under: Social Affairs World news publishers, WAN-IFRA, Women in news, win, Southeast Asia, /sexual-harassment/, Norway, sexual harassment at work law, sexual harassment at work lawyers, define sexual harassment, defining sexual harassment, sexual harassment in a workplace, sexual harassment at the workplace, whats sexual harassment, sexual harassment workplace, sexual harassment work place, sexual harassment is

USAID-funded project helps Vietnam combat HIV/AIDS, TB

December 16, 2020 by vov.vn

The project is being launched with the aim of strengthening the Government’s capacity to sustainably manage HIV and tuberculosis (TB) programmes, thereby moving towards the goal of achieving the country’s commitment to end HIV and TB by 2030.

Through the LHSS Vietnam project, USAID will continue working alongside the Government to strengthen public financial management systems for the local health sector and find greater efficiencies in terms of social health insurance. In addition, the scheme will increase and improve the efficiency of domestic financing of HIV prevention and treatment services, whilst strengthening the capacity of local supply chain management systems, and integrating TB services into social health insurance.

Addressing the launching ceremony, USAID Vietnam director Ann Marie Yastishock congratulated the Government and the Ministry of Health on the successful transition of their HIV response from donor to domestic funding, with Social Health Insurance (SHI) now becoming the primary financing mechanism.

“Vietnam now has 90% of HIV patients enrolled in SHI. All treatment facilities can now be reimbursed for HIV services. Most importantly, SHI funds are now used to procure anti-retroviral drugs, the most expensive component of an HIV response. This is a remarkable trajectory of success and one we are all proud to share with Vietnam. USAID, through PEPFAR, has supported the Government in updating policies and building systems that would support this transition,” she added.

LHSS Vietnam represents a four-year project that will run until 2024 and comes with a planned budget of US$13.9 million which is funded by the United States Government through PEPFAR and USAID.

It is part of USAID’s global initiative in terms of strengthening integrated health systems to help low- and middle-income countries transition to sustainable and self-financed health systems to support access to universal health coverage.

Filed Under: Uncategorized United States Agency for International Development, USAID, Local Health System Sustainability, LHSS, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, Society, United States Agency for..., what is the incubation period for hiv/aids, of hiv aids, full meaning of hiv aids, what the symptoms of hiv aids, the symptoms of hiv aids, syptoms of hiv aids, symtoms of hiv aids, symptom of hiv aids, treatment of hiv aids, causes of hiv aids, sign of hiv aids, prevention of hiv aids

Work on $15-million textile factory underway in Tay Ninh

March 5, 2021 by bizhub.vn

The factory’s ground breaking ceremony. — VNA/VNS Photo Duc Hoanh

The Happytex Joint Stock Company began construction on Thursday of a US$15 million textile factory at the Trang Bang Industrial Park in the southern province of Tay Ninh.

Covering an area of 25,000sq.m, the factory is designed to produce 2,000 tonnes of woven fabric each year for export. Construction is scheduled for completion in six months.

According to the Management Board of Economic Zones of Tay Ninh, since the beginning of this year local industrial parks and economic zones have attracted four projects, including three foreign-invested projects worth $373.12 million USD.

As of February, the province had attracted 364 investment projects, including 265 FDI and 99 domestically-invested projects with combined capital of over $8.3 billion, creating jobs for nearly 34,000 workers, it said. — VNS

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Big C in Viet Nam gradually becoming GO!, Tops Market

March 5, 2021 by bizhub.vn

A Big C in HCM City after being renamed as Tops Market. — Photo courtesy of Central Retail

Retail chain Big C is being renamed as GO! and Tops Market gradually given a completely new look to change customers’ shopping experience.

On March 1 three Big C stores in HCM City (Big C An Phu, Big C Thao Dien, and Big C Au Co) became Tops Market, and in the third quarter of this year four stores in Ha Noi will be renamed.

Last December-January five Big C hypermarkets in Nha Trang, Di An, Can Tho, Ha Long, and Vinh Phuc became GO! stores.

Besides, Central Retail, the owner of the chain, last year also opened new GO! hypermarkets in shopping malls in My Tho, Ben Tre, Tra Vinh, Buon Ma Thuoc, and Quang Ngai.

This year more hypermarkets are expected to be renamed.

In 2016 Central Group acquired Big C Vietnam from France’s Groupe Casino for US$1.14 billion. — VNS

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Government shows urgency in climate change battle

March 5, 2021 by www.vir.com.vn

1533 p22 government shows urgency in climate change battle
As Vietnam is among the most threatened countries by climate change, the state and people take decisive action, photo Le Toan

The government has promulgated Resolution No.06/NQ-CP on the Action Programme on continuing the implementation of Resolution No.24-NQ/TW by the 11th Party Central Committee on active response to climate change, improvement of natural resource management, and environmental protection.

The action programme, to be implemented until 2025, lays a foundation for ministries, agencies, and localities to formulate and implement their own plans on responding to climate change while strengthening natural resource management and environmental protection.

Under the programme, efforts are to be made to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 7.3 per cent below the business-as-usual scenario by 2025, and achieve 5-7 per cent in energy conservation out of gross energy consumption.

To this end, some key solutions are to be taken. Specifically, the government orders ministries and agencies to formulate and implement sturdy policies on shifting to digital economy, and development and expansion of models on circular economy, green economy, and low-carbon economy.

In addition to an increase in state budget in investing into responding to climate change, and managing natural resources and the environment, the government will have a flexible mechanism on allocating the use of natural resources under a market mechanism. Notably, the government will “develop markets for environmental goods and services, the carbon market, public-private partnership models, and green credits and green bonds, as well as mobilise investment capital from non-state sources,” according to Resolution 06.

To enable investors, Resolution 06 stressed that a number of related laws will be revised soon, including the Law on Land 2013, the Law on Minerals 2010, and the Law on Efficient Use and Saving Energy, as well as many other related documents.

Championing the cause

Disaster and climate challenges have become a top priority for policymakers in Vietnam. This is evidenced in national and sector strategies, and these challenges are identified as one of the key pillars of the new national development plan for the next decade. For example, the government approved the National Climate Change Strategy in 2011, and the Vietnam Green Growth Strategy in 2012, which lay out a vision through 2050. Also, the government adopted the Support Programme to Respond to Climate Change for 2016-2020 that supports policy reform, capacity building, and increased investment for prioritised climate change and green growth actions in key sectors including energy, transport, forestry, and water resource management.

Internationally, the government has also championed the cause of the environment, including at the 2015 Paris Conference.

Climate and disaster risks are now recognised as a direct threat to Vietnam’s aspiration to become a high-income economy. Direct and indirect disaster losses are affecting not only the economy’s resilience and sustainability, but also its capacity to maintain rapid and inclusive growth. For instance, rapid infrastructure development in the absence of the consideration of disaster and climate risks is leading to rapidly growing exposure and vulnerabilities to adverse natural events.

“With an anticipated growth of 265 per cent over the next 10 years, annual average direct disaster losses on the coast alone are expected to grow to $4.2 billion a year,” stated the World Bank in its recently-published report on how Vietnam can become a champion of the green recovery.

The Asian Development Bank also said that the rapid expansion of gross fixed capital formation has been unplanned and without consideration of climate and disaster risks, leading to the rapid growth in people and assets exposed to adverse natural events. When all this environmental damage is combined, it is estimated to cost between 4 to 8 per cent to GDP every year due to a combination of direct negative effects on the stock of natural capital, as well as that of indirect externalities on labour productivity and on quality of physical infrastructure.

In addition, development gains could be undermined by the loss of human life; destruction of commercial property, cultivable land, and infrastructure; reduction in agricultural yields and labor productivity; loss of tax revenues; and strained public budgets from spending on relief and reconstruction. For example, farmers in the Mekong region have already recorded declining agricultural yields caused by poor development practices, including water mismanagement and land exhaustion, according to the World Bank.

Changing behaviours

“Vietnam is standing at a crossroads of post-pandemic recovery. It has an opportunity to set itself on a greener, smarter, and more inclusive development path that will bolster resilience to future shocks from both pandemics and climate-related disasters,” said Carolyn Turk, World Bank country director for Vietnam. “The authorities must tackle the environmental and climate challenges with the same sense of urgency as they have done with COVID-19 because the costs of inaction are already visible and will become increasingly irreversible. The recent tropical storms in Vietnam’s central region and rising air pollution in the country’s major cities are good illustrations of this fragility.”

According to the World Bank, two lessons from the successful management of the global health crisis could be extended to the environmental agenda. The first lesson is that the best way to cope with an external shock is to be prepared in advance and move with early and bold actions. Secondly, beyond vision and capacity, the ability to embrace innovation and experiments is instrumental to change individual and collective behaviours, which lays at the root of strategies to cope with health and climate threats.

Ocean levels have already risen 20cm over the past three decades and could increase by a further 75cm by 2050 compared to the latter part of the 20th century. This could lead to flooding of 40 per cent of the Mekong Delta, 11 per cent of the Red River Delta, 3 per cent of coastal provinces, and over 20 per cent of Ho Chi Minh City, directly impacting 10-12 per cent of Vietnam’s population and 10 per cent of GDP, according to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment.

By Khoi Nguyen

Filed Under: Uncategorized climate change, Government, Coverage, global climate change, climate change and global warming, global warming and climate change, global warming climate change, what is global climate change, natural causes of climate change, causes of climate change, change climate change, climate change change, how to change climate change, climate and climate change, governing climate change

VN-Index ends week in the green

March 5, 2021 by e.vnexpress.net

The index plunged 13 points in the first 45 minutes of trading but quickly returned to the starting point and went sideways in the 1,160 range before ending with a marginal 0.17-point gain.

It ended the week with four gaining sessions but was down 1.47 percent from Monday after plunging 18 points Thursday, when it entered the 1,190 range. This could show the investors’ lack of confidence that the index will return to the 1,200 peak it reached 2018.

Trading value on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HoSE), on which the index is based, fell nearly 11 percent to VND14.99 trillion ($645.64 million). The bourse saw 264 stocks gain and 169 lose.

The VN30 basket, comprising the 30 largest capped stocks on the HoSE, saw 10 tickers gain, led by POW of electricity distributor PetroVietnam Power Corporation, up 6.7 percent, ending four consecutive losing sessions.

It was followed by STB of Ho Chi Minh City-based lender Sacombank, up 1.9 percent, and GAS of state-owned PetroVietnam Gas Jsc, up 1.8 percent.

GAS is now 1.2 percent away from reaching its January peak.

The seven remaining blue chip gainers saw marginal increases, with MSN of conglomerate Masan Group up 0.9 percent and MBB of Military Bank up 0.7 percent.

On the losing side, BVH of insurance company Bao Viet Holdings fell 1.7 percent, followed by VHM of real estate giant Vinhomes, down 1.6 percent, its fifth losing session in a row.

Foreign investors were net sellers for the 11th session in a row to the tune of VND1.34 trillion, highest in the last 14 sessions.

Strongest selling pressures were seen on POW, VNM of dairy giant Vinamilk and CTG of state-owned lender VietinBank.

The HNX-Index for stocks on the Hanoi Stock Exchange, home to mid and small caps, gained 1.58 percent, while the UPCoM-Index for stocks on the Unlisted Public Companies Market fell 0.77 percent.

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