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Covid-19 takes a toll on frontline workers’ personal lives

February 14, 2021 by e.vnexpress.net

The two, nurses in the outpatient and intensive care units at the newly set up field hospital in the northern province, Vietnam’s coronavirus epicenter now, have spent the last couple of weeks tending patients.

But they do not see each other every day and have not spoken in person for more than two weeks.

If the pandemic had not broken out, the young couple would have been celebrating the Lunar New Year with their three-year-old daughter and enjoying Valentine’s Day, Feb. 14.

Linh, 27, told VnExpress , “Before I had our daughter, Valentine’s Day was always romantic for the two of us. After [she was born] it has become a day for the whole family.”

Linh and Tuan work on two different units in the field hospital. Photo courtesy of Thuy Linh.

Linh and Tuan (pictured) work in two different wards at the field hospital. Photo courtesy of Thuy Linh.

On January 28 Hai Duong was hit by a new Covid-19 wave that broke Vietnam’s 55-day clean streak, forcing the couple to start their works at the Chi Linh District medical center, which later became a field hospital.

Tuan had previous experience but Linh was a newcomer and took several days to get used to working round the clock.

She does not dare to drink much water since that might mean having to take off her protective suit to go to the restroom.

Once she took a critically ill Covid-19 patient to the National Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Hanoi and returned to Hai Duong at 4 a.m.

“That was the first time I ever took a shower at 4 a.m. I was wary thinking about people who had a stroke while showering in the wee hours, but I was also afraid of getting infected by the novel coronavirus.”

Unable to see each other every day, Tuan and Linh call each other to talk.

On Lunar New Year’s Eve (February 11) Linh told him how her unit celebrated the holiday. Tuan told her his colleagues organized a performance at the hospital to welcome the new year.

Their daughter was sleeping with Tuan’s mother then.

The couple is not the only one to be separated at Tet or on Valentine’s Day by Covid-19.

Police officer Nguyen Van Hai looks at his wife from a distance. Photo courtesy of Hai.

Police officer Nguyen Van Hai looks at his wife from a distance. Photo courtesy of Hai.

Police officer Nguyen Van Hai was standing silently behind a barrier to see his wife, Nguyen Thi Ngoc, who was in quarantine in Chi Linh Town, a Covid-19 hotspot in Hai Duong.

Since Covid resurfaced in Hai Duong, Hai, busy with his duty, has not been home. He is extremely worried that his wife and many of their neighbors had attended a wedding related to a Covid-19 patient.

Two days after Ngoc went into quarantine, Hai finally found time to bring her some stuff. Standing at a distance from each other, they could not talk and had to silently look at each other.

“He is worried I will be unhappy in the quarantine facility, always tells me to wear masks and eat well,” Ngoc said.

Hai had also reassured her he would take care of the family during Lunar New Year.

A few hours before Lunar New Year’s Eve, Hai brought some food to the facility for his wife and some neighbors. Some time later, in the early morning, he finished his work and again visited the facility to give Ngoc li xi (lucky money).

“Just like for many other families amid the pandemic, this Tet is special for our family. But the situation makes us cherish our love and the time we spend together,” Ngoc said.

After 29 years of marriage and two daughters, the couple still never fails to celebrate Valentine’s Day with flowers and gifts.

Many other couples in Hai Duong have also been separated amid the Covid-19 battle.

Major Nguyen Van Hoa, police chief of Hoang Tan Ward, Chi Linh Town, told his wife Huyen Trang, who takes care of Covid-19 patients at the field hospital: “We are in the same Covid-19 battle.”

Since Covid-19 broke out, both have been busy. Hoa patrols and supervises several checkpoints since his ward has coronavirus cases and many residents are in quarantine.

He does not even have time to go home and get clothes for his wife to the hospital, which is five kilometers from home. But he calls her without fail every day.

Trang and Hoa talk on a video call. Photo courtesy of Nguyen Van Hoa.

Trang and Hoa talk on a video call. Photo courtesy of Nguyen Van Hoa.

Trang was initially apprehensive since her children cried when told to stay with her husband’s parents and the work at the hospital was overwhelming.

“I encouraged her, told her that she is a soldier in a white blouse and I am a soldier in a green uniform, and that we both have one goal: defeating the pandemic,” Hoa recalled.

He hoped to accomplish the mission so that his family could reunite afterward.

Hai and Ngoc were lucky that Ngoc finished her quarantine on February 13, a day before Valentine’s Day. Hai picked her up in the afternoon, and their daughters had cooked dinner to celebrate their family reunion.

It was the 30th Valentine’s Day that Hai and Ngoc spent together.

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Live streaming startup GoStream raises seven-figure funding from VinaCapital Ventures

January 18, 2021 by www.vir.com.vn

live streaming startup gostream raises seven figure funding from vinacapital ventures
GoStream will use the new tremendous funding to expand operations

GoStream was founded in 2017 by three seasoned engineers with track records in digital enablement. GoStream is an easy-to-use platform for any type of user, even for those with little or no technical knowledge. It enables users to reach a larger audience from different platforms to increase visibility and get more views. Currently, the company is serving multiple corporate clients and facilitating over 100,000 livestreaming sessions daily.

GoStream is dedicated to providing an interactive experience that encourages viewer participation in live videos. This increases viewer engagement and contributes to the building of a larger and more loyal community that follows a user’s content.

Marketwise, social networks are recognised as the next most common channel for online shopping in Vietnam, just behind e-commerce sites. According to PwC Social Surveys, Vietnam ranked seventh in the world in the number of Facebook users (68 million) which accounted for 68.7 per cent of the country’s entire population. In 2020, Vietnam’s “digital economy” reached $14 billion and is expected to grow to $52 billion in 2025, according to a recent report by Google, Bain & Company, and Temasek.

Trung D. Hoang, partner at VinaCapital Ventures, commented, “We are excited to invest in GoStream, which has been leading the way in integrating livestreaming across a number of sectors. Their innovative streaming technology is helping more businesses reach more viewers and customers, and we look forward to working with them as they further expand their capabilities and play an even greater role in Vietnam’s growing digitalisation.”

In November 2020, GoStudio – a product of GoStream Technology JSC – won first prize at Vietnam Techfest 2020. The contest’s organising committee recognised the product’s ease-of-use and adaptability to a range of online channels, including social commerce (livestream commerce), online training (e-learning), online entertainment (live gameshows). This became especially important as the COVID-19 pandemic swept the world. GoStudio does not require software downloading or installation and it is stable and compatible with popular web browsers, enabling more users to apply livestreaming across various sectors.

By GoStream

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Niigata Prefecture, Japan hosts Facebook live event EXPLORING NIIGATA ONLINE with Cheesie vol.3 featuring popular influencer

February 8, 2021 by bizhub.vn

NIIGATA PREFECTURE, JAPAN - Media OutReach - 8 February 2021 - Niigata Prefecture and Yuzawa Town in Japan will host on February 20, 2021 EXPLORING NIIGATA ONLINE with Cheesie vol.3, a Facebook live event to promote Niigata Prefecture featuring the popular influencer Cheesie.

Niigata Prefecture welcomed an increasing number of travelers every year from 2017 through 2019, making the prefecture one of the most popular destinations in Japan. Since 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has restricted inbound visitors to Japan. Today, people still cannot visit Niigata Prefecture (chart on the below). 

Niigata Prefecture and Yuzawa Town are hosting a Facebook live event to provide people with the opportunity to explore Niigata online even if they cannot physically visit Niigata Prefecture.

 

EXPLORING NIIGATA ONLINE with Cheesie lets people explore sceneries, culture, seasons, and food in Niigata Prefecture, featuring Cheesie, one of the most popular influencers in Singapore and Japan tourism specialist. Held for the third time, this event includes live streaming from a ski resort in Yuzawa Town, Niigata Prefecture, known as one of the snowiest places in Japan, showcasing snow activities, making of Japanese traditional ‘soba’ noodles, ‘sake’ rice wines, and other attractive aspects of the snow resort.

Filming of Vol.1

A representative in Niigata Prefecture who planned this event said:

“Before tourists were restricted due to COVID-19, we had seen for several years significant growth in the number of visitors to Niigata Prefecture from Southeast Asia. Today, we cannot welcome tourists, but we understand that many people in Southeast Asia are looking forward to traveling to Japan when international travel restrictions are lifted. In such a situation, we will provide people with the opportunity, through Facebook Live and in collaboration with the influencer Cheesie, to find out about the sightseeing spots and other attractive aspects of Niigata. Through this, we create ties with people interested in visiting Niigata, hoping that many people in Southeast Asia become interested in visiting our prefecture when they can travel freely again.”

 

[Event overview]

– Date/time:

20th February (Saturday)

13:00-13:45 (Indonesia, Vietnam : GMT+7)

14:00-14:45 (Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines : GMT+8)

15:00-15:45 (Japan : GMT+9)

 

– Streaming:

Facebook Live (https://www.facebook.com/enjoyniigata)

* Live streaming on Niigata Tourism Information (Enjoy Niigata) account

 

– Special online event page:

https://www.facebook.com/events/119132883407318

 

– Note:

The program is subject to change depending on the COVID-19 situation in Japan.

0

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Lecturer encourages young people to live green

February 13, 2021 by vietnamnews.vn

Members of Go Green Việt Nam clean up an area in the outskirts of Vinh City. — Photo zingnews.vn

HÀ NỘI — Lê Minh Tân, a lecturer of Vinh University, central Nghệ An Province, not only follows a green-living lifestyle but also encourages people around him to take a leaf out of his book and follow in his footsteps.

Over the past three years, he has initiated a series of campaigns encouraging young people in his community to categorise garbage at source, recycle old items and raise their awareness about plastic waste.

“We can all protect the environment with the smallest action,” said Tân, a 31-year-old teacher at the Foreign Language Education Faculty of Vinh University.

One of his projects that attracts the participation of young people is Go Green Việt Nam ơi – a green journey with activities aiming at creating sustainable, environmental values.

He hopes the project will encourage everyone to live green and make it a habit, not just a short-term campaign.

Tân started green living three years ago when he got married.

The amount of waste he and his wife discharged everyday surprised him.

“The waste amount increased when we bought items for our baby. Items we buy at the supermarket are wrapped with plastic,” he told zingnews.vn .

People living in suburbs are suffering from waste overload more than those living in the cities due to the growing of unmanaged waste dumps.

“Empty roads have become places to dump waste or construction materials. Solutions of local authorities are short-term. We really need to change public awareness to tackle the root of the problem,” he said.

Go Green Việt Nam set challenges like cleaning waste and shopping without using plastic bags. A lot of young people in Vinh City accepted the challenges, recorded videos, photos and posted them on social networks to spread the word.

Shopping without single-use plastic bags. — Photo zingnews.vn

Tân’s projects also changed his wife’s habit of taking plastic bags while shopping. Instead, she takes her own bags to go to the market, sorts out garbage at home and makes compost from waste.

Go Green-Go Sharing, a campaign of Go Green Việt Nam, was recently launched sending the message of sharing utensils, reducing shopping and reducing waste. The project has created a network of nearly 200 people trying to live green and are always ready to take part in environmental activities.

Tân said videos clips of environmental protection activities of Go Green Việt Nam had been widely shared. An English teacher in Indonesia used the videos to spread the environmental spirit to his students.

Go Green Việt Nam has the ambition to create a network of people interested in making compost from waste in Vinh City. The compost will be used to grow vegetables and plants.

If the project is maintained regularly in households, a huge amount of domestic waste discharged into the environment each day would be significantly reduced, Tân believes.

He also wants to find a young team with a large amount of time, creative ideas, and enthusiasm for environmental issues to continue the mission.

He added: “Environmental protection is not the responsibility of just the government, company or organisation, but the responsibility of everyone. Every little action has a direct impact on the environment.” — VNS

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Vietnamese Tet book honours country’s traditional values

February 14, 2021 by en.vietnamplus.vn

As a compilation of articles from Indochina Magazine, Tet Viet Nam Xua (Ancient Vietnamese Tet Festival ) provides readers with a panorama of how Vietnam ese people prepare for the Tet holiday, describing typical rituals, customs, and hobbies.

Tet Viet Nam Xua is a collection of writings from Vietnamese and French scholars.

The writings were compiled by Associate Professor Nguyen Manh Hung from the Institute of Vietnamese Studies over the course of many years. With nearly 200 pages, the book is divided into three parts: Tet rituals, Tet customs, and Tet hobbies, including 50 lively illustrations.

Tet is a time for people to bid farewell to the old year and prepare to welcome in the new. One section of the book describes in detail the traditional rituals and customs performed in the hope of a better year.

Meanwhile, the section on Tet customs is the most interesting, as it brings together writings from foreign authors and travellers and French and other international scholars, such as “Letter from Lunar New Year’s Eve” and “Tet in the Village” from French writer Jean Marquet, and others.

The book presents a lively and interesting overview of the Vietnamese Lunar New Year, the most important and largest holiday of the Vietnamese people.

Being so deeply-rooted in the national culture, Tet still lives in the heart of every Vietnamese, despite industrialisation, urbanisation, and technological development and their effect on customs and attitudes./.

VNA

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Hopes raised for conservation of world’s rarest turtle in Vietnam

August 29, 2020 by en.nhandan.org.vn

“We are now excited about the prospects of a second animal in Dong Mo Lake which could potentially increase the number of known living Swinhoe’s Softshell Turtles to four individuals, with three in Vietnam and one in China,” read the statement from the Asian Turtle Program (ATP) of Indo-Myanmar Conservation (IMC) – the organisation is sparing no efforts in protecting the critically endangered species in Dong Mo Lake.

The Hoan Kiem Turtle is believed to be almost extinct in the wild. No surviving populations were known until the first wild animal was confirmed in Dong Mo Lake on the outskirts of Hanoi in 2007. It was a long wait until a second animal was confirmed on May 24 of the same year in nearby Xuan Khanh Lake.

Fishermen in Dong Mo Lake have long claimed that a second, smaller individual of the species lived in the lake. One large Swinhoe’s Softshell Turtle has regularly been photographed and is the same individual who escaped during a dam break in 2008 which resulted in the rescue and return of the 69kg individual to the lake.

However, in May 2011, staff of the ATP/IMC, who continuously monitor the lake, did see a softshell turtle that appeared to be smaller than the big turtle that is regularly seen. Although some photographs have been captured of this individual in recent years, the images have not been clear, and some doubt remained over if was only one animal being seen or not.

Finally, on August 20, 2020, Nguyen Van Trong, the ATP/IMC local field officer, was able to capture a photo of two large softshell turtles emerging simultaneously. Although they appeared for only a few seconds, he was able to capture some amazing pictures.

The identity of the smaller turtle’s species cannot be confirmed with these photos but, together with previous observations by staff, its size of 40-50kg is a good indication that it might be a Rafetus. (Photo: Nguyen Van Trong – ATP/IMC)

The well-known large individual sits in the foreground weighed in at 69kg in 2008 when captured and could weigh between 100-130kg now in 2020. The second animal is seen not far behind and, although it’s not clear enough to see head markings, this also looks to be a large animal that could be 40-50kg in weight.

“With few other species reaching this size in Vietnam, it gives us good hope that at least two, and possibly more, of these critically endangered Swinhoe’s Softshell Turtles still survive in Dong Mo Lake, although further work is required to confirm this new turtle’s identify,” the ATP/IMC’s statement said.

With a number of other sites already identified by the ATP/IMC in Vietnam, the new findings bring the hope that additional Swinhoe’s Softshell Turtles may be found, giving more options for the future conservation of the world’s rarest turtle species in Vietnam. These new photos will boost monitoring efforts at Dong Mo and will hopefully draw more attention to the species.

The larger well-known individual can be seen clearly in the centre of the image, while the smaller turtle appears behind it in the top left corner. (Photo: Nguyen Van Trong – ATP/IMC)

Living in wetlands, streams and large rivers in northern Vietnam, southern China and possibly Laos, the giant Swinhoe’s Softshell Turtle can reach up to 150kg or more in size. It was heavily hunted for food from the 1970’s until the 1990’s and is believed to be almost extinct in the wild.

Only three individuals have been recorded, with two in Vietnam (in Xuan Khanh and Dong Mo Lakes) and one in China.

In January 2016, the only remaining turtle in Hoan Kiem Lake in the centre of Hanoi, known as Cu Rua (Great-Grandfather Turtle) by Hanoians, was reported dead due to old age. It was believed to have lived for 200 years.

Dong Mo Lake offers hope for the world’s rarest turtle to recover. (Photo: Nguyen Tai Thang – ATP/IMC)

The two turtles in Dong Mo or more may be the only hope of conservation for this species in the world. Therefore, this lake has always been strictly supervised by the authorities and conservation organisations for many years.

The ATP/IMC has partnered with the local authorities and other conservation organisations around the world to implement a conservation action plan for the species since 2003.

ATP/IMC staff have been working hard at Dong Mo for the last 13 years to record sightings and the behaviour of the large individual while working with local communities to promote conservation. (Photo: Nguyen Tai Thang – ATP/IMC)

Nguyen Van Trong grew up on the lake and was a fisherman before picking up a camera and becoming a key part of the field staff protecting the world’s rarest turtle. Photo by: Nguyen Tai Thang (ATP/IMC).

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