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Hitler, Saddam, Netanyahu: how Palestinians name their children says about the conflict

November 3, 2017 by e.vnexpress.net

Hitler, Castro and Saddam Hussein meet in a bar. It may sound like the beginning of a joke, but in the Palestinian territories it is actually possible.

Palestinians often name their children after famous celebrities, national heroes or backers of their cause.

Hitler Abu Hamad is not proud to carry the name of a man responsible for the slaughter of millions.

“There is no relationship between my name and the actions of Adolf Hitler,” he told AFP at his home in the city of Hebron in the occupied West Bank. “I hate what he did.”

“I am against killing, violence and human rights abuses, but I got used to my name and it is part of my character.”

How the quiet, polite 41-year-old school teacher came to be named after the most hated man of the 20th century says a lot about Israel and the Palestinians.

Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967 in a move never recognised by the international community.

Jewish settlers moved into the territory and the occupation continues.

When Abu Hamad was born in 1976, his father wanted to send a message, though in perhaps the most offensive way possible: picking the name of the man who systematically murdered six million Jews in the Holocaust.

“My father gave me the name to provoke the occupation,” he said.

“He was not political. He was a simple man who made mistakes. He wanted to make the occupation think with my name.”

The father-of-two studied English literature and is a deputy head at a school near his home, while also teaching adults.

His name is “weird for the kids at school”, he said.

He says it also causes him endless problems at Israeli checkpoints in the West Bank.

When he was 15 and living in Hebron’s Old City, an army officer approached him and asked him his name.

When he told him, the soldier flew off the handle, he alleges.

“He said ‘you are a criminal’,” Abu Hamad said, alleging he was then beaten by soldiers, leaving him with a broken nose still bent out of shape.

Israel’s military did not respond to a request for comment.

He believes the name also stopped Israelis from giving him permits to study or work outside the Palestinian territories.

“We are not against the Jews,” he said.

“We are against the occupation and don’t respect it. It destroys our homes, confiscates our possessions and restricts our freedom.”

Saddam Hussein

Many Palestinians have named children after their longtime leader Yasser Arafat, while other names heard include Castro, Guevara and Chavez — after the Latin American figures who supported their cause.

In Hebron, there is a Carter Abu Isneyna, named after former US president Jimmy Carter, who tried to get Israel to end the occupation and led the Camp David peace talks between Israel and Egypt.

Qais Hussein Omar was born in 1976 under a different name — Saddam Hussein.

He alleges he was regularly harassed at checkpoints by Israeli soldiers angered by his name, and was once hospitalised by a particularly brutal beating.

“My name was the source of psychological and physical suffering,” he said.

In other countries, too, he faced issues and it all affected his health, so seven years ago he changed it.

He urges parents not to name their children after famous people as it “won’t fit the personality”

“His name could be Yasser Arafat and he wants to become a ballet dancer.”

Benjamin Netanyahu Nicola

In the city of Haifa in northern Israel, an Arab Israeli man is named after Jules Jammal, a Syrian military hero believed to have driven his boat into a French warship during the 1956 Suez crisis.

“I am happy with my name,” he told AFP .

Naji Obeid, a Christian Arab who tries to encourage members of his community to join the Israeli army, named his son after former Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin.

“I loved the leader Menachem Begin and he was my friend, so I called my son Begin Obeid, and he serves in the Israeli navy,” he told AFP.

Arab Israeli Christian Waheed Nicola named his son Benjamin Netanyahu after the right-wing Israeli leader won elections in 1996.

Delivery man Benjamin Netanyahu Nicola, 21, has said in previous interviews with Israeli media the name has caused him no end of problems when he delivers goods in Arab areas.

Israeli media reports have said he wanted to change his name but his father, who is a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, refused.

He didn’t want to speak to AFP .

“My son is beautiful and kind and his name has caused him a lot of problems, especially after media interviews,” his mother said. “So we won’t do any more.”

Filed Under: english, world palestine, name, oddity, Hitler, Saddam, Netanyahu: how Palestinians name their children says about the conflict - VnExpress International, how israeli palestinian conflict started, israeli palestinian conflict how did it start, palestinian children's relief fund, palestinian israeli conflict causes, palestinian jordanian conflict, israeli palestinian conflict why did it start, palestinian conflict for dummies, books about palestinian israeli conflict, netanyahu no palestinian state, why netanyahu doesn't want a palestinian state, israeli palestinian conflict palestinian point of view, netanyahu anti palestinian quotes

VnExpress International named among top 15 English news websites in Southeast Asia

December 1, 2016 by e.vnexpress.net

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VnExpress International , the English version of Vietnam’s most-read news site VnExpress, has been listed among the top 15 English websites in terms of information quality and presentation in Southeast Asia.

It is the only website from Vietnam on the list, standing together with established sites in the region such as Channel NewsAsia and The Straits Times of Singapore, Bangkok Post and The Nation of Thailand, The Star Online of Malaysia and Indonesia’s Jakarta Post . The Philippines also has several sites on the list.

The six countries, which make up 95 percent of total ASEAN GDP, are the most advanced countries and more proficient in English than their peers, according to ASEAN UP, which compiled the list.

The websites are great sources of information about their respective countries from a local perspective, it said. They have a large reader base and are also popular on social media.

vnexpress-named-among-top-15-english-news-websites-in-southeast-asia

The homepage of VnExpress International

Florian Bansac, founder of ASEAN UP, said it first came up with a bigger list of 50 media outlets that included several other English news sites from Vietnam.

The “quintessential list” was selected based on four criteria: quality of information, quality of design and user experience, web domain authority and the number of social media followers.

VnExpress International was launched last April, targeting global readers with daily news updates and analysis of Vietnam’s culture, travel and development. Its Facebook page now has nearly 10,700 fans.

“The criteria that make VnExpress stand out from its peers is especially its clear design and structure of information that enables a much better user experience and intuitive navigation through the news that each visitor might be interested in,” Bansac said.

He said the online domination of the Vietnamese version of VnExpress also makes its English version more recognized through search engines than other Vietnamese news websites.

Officially launched in April 2014, ASEAN UP has been focusing on finding and spreading quality resources from top companies, media and government agencies while creating its own resources.

Related news:

> AT&T to buy Time Warner for $85 bln, create telecom-media giant

> Da Nang bans civil servants from social media during work hours

Filed Under: Uncategorized Vietnam, media, information, VnExpress International named among top 15 English news websites in Southeast Asia - VnExpress International, international news in english, internal body parts name in hindi and english, news about southeast asia, international metalworking news for asia

Senior Vietnamese Communist Party official on sick leave with unknown illness

August 1, 2017 by e.vnexpress.net

A senior official who is the de facto number two of the Communist Party has taken sick leave to seek treatment for an unspecified disease.

Dinh The Huynh has run the influential Central Committee Secretariat since February 2016.

The Party announced on Tuesday that it has deputized Tran Quoc Vuong, chairman of the Central Inspection Committee, to take charge in Huynh’s absence.

The Secretariat oversees the Party’s day-to-day policy implementation. Both Vuong and Huynh are members of the elite Politburo, the Party’s decision-making body.

It is not clear how long Huynh will be out of action for. Before taking charge of the Secretariat, he headed the Party’s propaganda body.

Vuong was Vietnam’s top public prosecutor until 2011, when he was installed as Chief of Staff of the Party’s Central Committee. He was selected to chair the Central Inspection Committee in January 2016.

Filed Under: Uncategorized politics, Communist Party, Tran Quoc Vuong, Dinh The Huynh, Central Inspection Committee, Senior Vietnamese Communist Party official on sick leave with unknown..., Chinese communist party, sick leave form, South African Communist Party, The Chinese Communist Party, communist party of britain, Communist Party in China, The Communist Party of China, China Communist Party, sick leave, Communist Party in India, paid sick leave, Communist Party Members

These Vietnamese entrepreneurs are leaving foreign careers behind to invest back home

February 11, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Hoping to transform Vietnam’s tech sector into a global leader in industry and trade, three successful Vietnamese engineers have returned home from lucrative jobs abroad to invest in the motherland.

Their projects are just three out of dozens of innovations being developed at the high-tech business incubator of the Saigon Hi-Tech Park in Thu Duc City, Ho Chi Minh City.

AI-powered toy: New friend for Vietnamese children

Tong Vu Than Dan’s AI children’s toy may look like an ordinary wooden playset at first glance, but the hi-tech car set actually provides the opportunity for kids to conquer various transportation scenarios using an AI-powered car.

Dan, 38, had been a mechanical engineer for several American companies, as well as a professional in Japan’s semiconductor industry, before returning to Vietnam to take up a position at Intel Products Vietnam.

Despite his success at the international level, Dan felt he needed to give back to his home country. He left his secure corporate job behind and embarked on a mission to elevate Vietnam’s AI industry.

According to Dan, the idea to create an AI-powered toy was inspired by his child’s addition to smartphones. Dan felt that creating an intersection between toys and technology was an opportunity to engage children without the need for a screen.

His invention, named Kodimo, is the result of that inspiration – a highly educational, modern update to typical wooden blocks that children can use to create roadways and other infrastructure designs.

After investing three years and billions of dong (VND1 billion = US$43,000) into Kodimo, Dan is finally beginning to see success, with two versions of the AI toy currently being trialed in the South Korean market. Each toy costs about VND5 million ($217) and can currently be found on various e-commerce sites.

Instructions and language programming for the toy are in English.

“The great thing about this toy is that it uses technology to promote imagination and creativity in a way that is very familiar to children. That is why I believe this project will be successful,” Dan explained.

Vietnamese product for Vietnamese market

Luong Vu Dang Quang presents laser devices to Nguyen Van Nen, secretary of the Ho Chi Minh City Party Committee, at a startup product launching event in Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: T. Trung / Tuoi Tre

Luong Vu Dang Quang (R) presents laser devices to Nguyen Van Nen (C), secretary of the Ho Chi Minh City Party Committee, at a startup product launch event in Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: T. Trung / Tuoi Tre

Luong Vu Dang Quang worked for a U.S. electronics company in Vietnam before serving as the head of R&D at a tech company in South Korea.

But even with his success, the 41-year-old felt the need to use his talent in order to bring Vietnamese-made products to the Vietnamese market.

Since leaving South Korea, Quang has founded Amed, a startup focused on optics and laser technologies for medical equipment.

After seven years of producing laser equipment for medical and beauty applications meant for other countries, Quang figured he had the skills to start his own company in the field in order to reduce his country’s reliance on expensive, foreign-made products.

“I can absolutely make the same products here in Vietnam at a much cheaper price,” Quang explained.

Despite his experience in the sphere, Quang faced many risks by choosing to launch his company in Vietnam. In South Korea, unlike in Vietnam, materials like circuits and screws are quality-ensured.

It took nearly all of his savings, but Quang is currently earning revenues with the sale of his first product – a ‘fractional carbon dioxide laser resurfacing device’ currently in use at 108 Military Central Hospital in Hanoi. He also exports other devices to the U.S. and South Korea.

Quang and his associates are currently conducting research on skin pigmentation treatment devices, hoping to create such products in Vietnam in order to reduce costs for customers in the country and other Southeast Asian markets.

An engineer on a mission

Le Trung Hieu sets up the Ewater filtration system with his associates at a factory in Vietnam. Photo: T.H.

Le Trung Hieu sets up the Ewater filtration system with his associates at a factory in Vietnam. Photo: T.H. / Tuoi Tre

Ahead of the North Korea–United States Hanoi Summit in 2019, engineer Le Trung Hieu was sent to Hanoi to carry out a special mission: installing a water filtration system he designed into Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi Hotel – the site of the historic meeting between the leaders of the two countries.

Ewater – Hieu’s device – was invented in 2016 as a means of treating water electromagnetic technology instead of chemicals.

Hieu has since applied technology to several areas, including steam boiler treatment, industrial water treatment, and agricultural water treatment.

He has so far installed more than 3,000 products in Vietnam and around the world, including at the Da Nang City Hall and Landmark 81 skyscraper in Ho Chi Minh City.

“A lot of people call me crazy when I gave up my high-paying job to launch my startup, but luckily my products were beloved by the community,” Hieu said.

“I’m really motivated to keep researching more porducts.”

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Vietnam Life - These Vietnamese entrepreneurs are leaving foreign careers behind to invest back home, TTNTAG intellectuals, foreign direct investment in china, foreign direct investment china, foreign currency investment, foreign property investment, foreign direct investment, Foreign Direct Investment Statistics, foreign direct investments, foreign capital investment, chinese foreign direct investment, vietnam foreign direct investment, vietnamese teacher for foreigner, Vietnamese Entrepreneurs

A feast worthy of the name

February 11, 2021 by vietnamnews.vn

Hoàng Vân Anh

Our entire lifestyle news desk went out to Bát Tràng recently, not for its famed pottery but to try the much-hyped “Bát Tràng feast” from culinary artisan Nguyễn Thị Lâm.

The chef is now over 70. She used to live in Hà Nội’s Old Quarter, where home cooks are known not only in the capital but also countrywide for their refined methods. She was trained by her mother and mother-in-law, and has now passed down the craft to her daughter-in-law, who doubles as her sous-chef.

OUTDOOR DÉCOR: Traditional ceramic tiles and a miniature pond on the terrace. Photo Vân Anh

The house is traditional, with a large terrace filled with greenery and ceramic tiles. Inside are three tables for guests.

The feast did indeed fill us up, with a range of different dishes. There are generally seven plates and three bowls of food on a full festive table of Bát Tràng delights.

The seven plates include stir-fried kohlrabi and dried squid, assorted vegetable salad, fried spring rolls, stewed beef in bordelaise sauce, boiled chicken, stir-fried shrimp and vegetables, and sticky rice. The three bowls were different but delicious soups: pork skin soup, bamboo shoot and dried squid soup, and pigeon stew.

UP TO THE HYPE: The feast was very much something to look forward to. Photo Vân Anh

The bamboo shoot and squid soup had dried bamboo shoot stripped thinly by hand, which is uniquely Bát Tràng style, mixed with stir-fried dried squid in chicken broth.

The pigeon stew featured pigeon stuffed with a delicious filling of minced meat, vermicelli, and mushrooms. As typical as the ingredients may sound, as the majority make up Vietnamese meatballs, the boiling process, combined with the flavour of the pigeon, gives it a special taste hard to find elsewhere.

The pork skin soup apparently has up to 12 ingredients. Typically eaten only over the Lunar New Year (Tết) holiday or at wedding feasts, it was equally yummy.

Dried squid is a specialty at Bát Tràng, found not only in the bamboo shoot soup but also the stir-fry. The stir-fried kohlrabi and squid stood out to me for two reasons: I’ve had stir-fried kohlrabi many times but never with dried squid, and they use thinly-sliced yellow dried squid instead of fresh, white squid. The drying process adds a much more pungent flavour and savour to the stir-fry, and I savoured every moment of it given I’m unlikely to come across it again outside of Bát Tràng.

The spring rolls were equally unique. While every family makes their own, these featured fresh rather than minced dried shrimp and had a different rice paper wrapping. There was also less meat compared to the typical homemade spring rolls I’m used to. I found them a little oily, but they were still a big hit with many of our group.

The beef stew was delicious too. My grandmother often makes it whenever I go home for a holiday, since it’s one of my favourites. And here it’s also made very well. With bread also dip into the flavourful soup, every super tender bite was a delight.

Our order was specially added with bánh chưng (glutinous rice square cake). The cake was cut very differently as well. Typically, it’s cut into eight pieces, the way a birthday cake may be cut. At Bát Tràng, though, they cut it into 16 mini squares. Since we were all so full from the other dishes, the smaller bite was the perfect size to let us try this local version of a Tết (Lunar New Year) dish loved by all Vietnamese.

JUST ENOUGH: Perfect bite-sized servings of ‘bánh chưng’ are great for kids or even adults with full stomachs. Photo Vân Anh

Some people at the office found the dishes quite salty, but that didn’t overly bother me.

Towards the end, we took a table outside for a dessert of “xôi chè” – glutinous rice with Vietnamese sweets cooked from yellow bean and cassava. A warm tea cup accompanied it to balance out the sweetness. Having dessert outdoor was ideal, since we not only got to enjoy the sunshine but everyone squeezed around one table and we got to bond over good food and good company.

Reservations are a must. A full set is designed to serve six to seven people. If you go in a group, you can also give pottery a try or go to nearby Ecopark to enjoy luscious green spaces hard to come by in downtown Hà Nội. VNS

Filed Under: Uncategorized food, culinary art, Vietnam, Vietnam News, Politics, Business, Economy, Society, Life, Sports, Environment, Your Say, English Through the News, Magazine, ..., flavor packed feast worthy chuck roast

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

February 21, 2021 by e.vnexpress.net

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

The series “Colors of Mekong Delta” by An, 28, from Kien Giang Province was completed during trips to Soc Trang, Hau Giang and Can Tho. The photographer won the first prize at the 34th Mekong Delta Art Photography Festival in 2019, hosted by Hau Giang.

This photo features the bustling and colorful market at Soc Trang Town’s center. The market operates from early morning to late afternoon with a full range of items from fresh food to fabrics and home appliances.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

Peaceful sunshine lighting a countryside road running through areca and banana plantations in An Lac Thon Town, Ke Sach District, Soc Trang Province.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

The Vi Thanh countryside market in Hau Giang Province grows especially busy during the Tet (Lunar New Year) rush .

At this market, vendors sit in fixed spots of ​ two to four square meters each in long line s , row after row, leaving only small paths for customers to shop.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

Farmers harvest Cau Duc pineapples. The name of this pineapple stems from a bridge built by the French in the 1930s across Cai Lon River, connecting the two provinces of Hau Giang and Kien Giang . T he bridge was eventually rebuilt and re named Cai Tu.

Cau Duc pineapple s are some of the major products of Hau Giang. The Department of Intellectual Property granted the certificate of geographical indication for this pineapple in November 2020. Cau Duc pinepapple s are harvested mainly in February and March and during the off-season in July and August.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

A woman named Ut with her betel tray.

On Tet holidays in the countryside, betel and areca are always placed centrally on the altar as an offering to ancestors. A beautiful areca or betel tray represents a year full of luck and love.

An said h e travels whenever he has free time, sometimes alone or with friends who share similar interests. Vi Thanh Town of Hau Giang is one of the places that he likes to take photos the most since it was with him throughout his high school years.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

C hildren revel in a chicken fight in Vi Thanh Town.

Chicken fighting is a folk hobby . A chicken fight in the countryside always attracts the attention of people from around the neighborhood. After each match, the winner will not be awarded money but treated to a meal by the opponent.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

During festivals or parties, groups of musicians gather to herald spring, perform, exchange and share their experience to preserve and promote traditional national culture. The photo was taken in Hau Giang.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

The busy Phong Dien floating market in Can Tho City.

Near Tet , life across the floating market is considerably more vibrant with many boats selling different products like pork, watermelon, flowers and fruits. The market lies about 17 k ilometers from central Can Tho to the southeast and usually lasts from 4 to 8 a.m . daily .

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

Hai’s family pack s cylindric glutinous rice cake ( banh tet ) for Tet in Phong Dien District, Can Tho.

Banh tet is not only a new year dish but also a typical Tet cultural feature in the south. A few days before Tet , locals eagerly prepar e ingredients to make the cake including banana leaves, sticky rice, and p ork , all cooked together.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

An old woman meticulously ties a cake with bamboo strings.

Nowadays, only a few hous eholds pack banh tet themselves , with the rest buying at the market.

The colors of life in Mekong Delta

A Mekong Delta local dressed in a traditional outfit cooks Vietnamese pancakes filled with shrimp, bean sprouts, and served with spinach, lettuce, herbs and sliced star fruit.

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