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In Ho Chi Minh City, construction workers find joy in ‘nomadic’ life

April 12, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Despite being constantly on the move and staying in makeshift accommodations, construction workers in Ho Chi Minh City still move forward and are ready for whatever comes next.

Makeshift shanties erected at a construction site, secluded at a swamp next to the Saigon River, along Ven Ho Trung Tam Street in Thu Duc City, are where Nguyen Van Kiet, a 29-year-old construction worker, and more than a dozen co-workers have called home for the past several weeks.

The site is filled with noise and dust, and piles of construction materials are strewn across the area.

With walls temporarily built from corrugated iron and floors from planks of wood, the shanties, which double as the workers’ living and sleeping space, will be removed as construction nears completion.

These makeshift accommodations lack the basics like a kitchen and toilet.

Construction is ongoing at a building site. Photo: Cong Trieu / Tuoi Tre

Construction is ongoing at a building site in Ho Chi Minh City. Photo : Cong Trieu / Tuoi Tre

On the day a Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper correspondent visited the under-construction site, more than 50 workers rode off on their motorbikes, while the remaining 50 workers trudged back to the ramshackle sheds after a long working day.

Kiet, who hails from An Giang Province in the Mekong Delta, hummed a Vietnamese tune about the life of masons with his phone before taking a night’s rest.

“We masons build people’s houses, but just keep relocating and don’t have a place of our own,” his co-workers cracked a joke based on the lyrics.

Kiet used to work at a footwear factory, but the monthly salary of VND6 million (US$259) was barely enough for him to support his wife and young child.

Six months ago, he ended up in Ho Chi Minh City, where he began work in construction but until now has still struggled to adjust to the new ‘nomadic’ life.

“I couldn’t sleep sound for half a year now,” Kiet said.

As the contractors do not provide the workers with room or board and many of them are with their wives and young children, they cook their own meals and live in unsanitary conditions.

The women also help around with less physically demanding chores on the site.

The makeshift shanty, built from leaves and corrugated iron at a building site in Thu Duc City, Ho Chi Minh City, is where Nguyen Quang Hieu, Nguyen Van Kiet and their team live and work. Photo: Cong Trieu / Tuoi Tre

The makeshift shanty, built from leaves and corrugated iron at a building site in Thu Duc City, Ho Chi Minh City, is where Nguyen Quang Hieu, Nguyen Van Kiet and their team live and work. Photo : Cong Trieu / Tuoi Tre

Construction workers typically try to get as much work done as they can in the morning so they can avoid more strenuous work if the heat gets more intense later in the day.

Though staying on the site spares the workers room rent and allows them extra payment from the contractors, many find the conditions quite tough.

Tram Ngoc, from Tra Vinh Province, also located in the Mekong Delta, said extreme weather conditions can also have an effect on construction workers; scorching heat can add to their exhaustion, while windy conditions can also prove difficult.

His bedding and clothing items as well as makeshift ‘bed’ placed atop bricks all got soaked during an unseasonal downpour last week, leaving him struggling to stay dry under the porch of a household nearby the whole night.

“The heat is unpleasant but still bearable. What I dread most is unseasonal downpours that catch us off guard at midnight,” Ngoc said, adding construction materials drenched in rainwater may become unusable for the following day.

“I can’t take on the physically taxing work the next day if I go without sleep during the night.”

Theft is another of his concerns.

Ngoc, who has been on the job for more than 10 years, racked his brain trying to remember how many times he had his phones pinched.

“Thieves sneak in when we are sound asleep on breezy nights,” he said.

“Most masons have lost at least one or two phones.”

Ngoc added five such gadgets at a building site he was working at were stolen at one time, while he once had a phone he had just bought for more than VND3 million ($130) nicked.

“I’ve saved every hard-earned penny,” he said.

“It really hurt.”

Finding joy

Kiet’s ‘housemates’ are Nguyen Quang Hieu, 24, also from An Giang Province, and his 18-year-old wife, Le Thi Thao Nhi.

Hieu and his younger brother took up the construction job from their parents, who have been on the move between work sites in Ho Chi Minh City and its neighbors, Dong Nai and Binh Duong Provinces, over the past 20 years.

The young couple are hard at work to save up for themselves and take care of their baby of less than three months old.

“Our baby is doing fine,” Nhi said.

“I usually put on extra covers to keep my child from the sun or winds.”

After a long working day, what Hieu and others are most eager for is fishing at the swamps nearby, which gives the young men something to do in their spare time and some fish to eat.

Hieu’s wife also goes to the riverbanks overgrown with wild morning glory to pick some for meals.

Despite physically exhausting work and tough living conditions, Hieu and his team always try to find a reason to smile.

Nguyen Quang Hieu, a young construction worker, poses with his wife and their baby inside the shanty at a building site in Thu Duc City, Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: Cong Trieu / Tuoi Tre

Nguyen Quang Hieu, a young construction worker, poses with his wife and their baby inside the shanty at a building site in Thu Duc City, Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: Cong Trieu / Tuoi Tre

Hieu would follow his parents to building sites during his childhood, always moving to other places after construction finished.

The boy, due to such mobility and insufficient livelihood, could not make it to school.

Though unable to write, Hieu can read and loves doing karaoke, which he said helps himself and his co-workers unwind and have some fun during their casual gatherings on the weekend.

The man joked that what he likes most is no one complains about them making noise.

The man recently bought a loudspeaker for VND15 million ($648) by installments.

“I try to refrain from hanging around in order not to spend money,” Hieu shared, pointing to the brand-new device placed in the distance.

“This speaker is quite expensive, but helps alleviate our exhaustion and keep our spirit high.”

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Government of new term to pursue reform, taking action

April 13, 2021 by vietnamnet.vn

Former Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has left an indelible mark on the socio-economic development of the country. The newly-elected Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh will continue that strong reform thinking.

With the goal of “building a tectonic, integrated, dynamic Government to serve the people”, under the direction of former Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, the most impressive success of the Government in the past five years is shown through three important points: building favorable business environment, administrative reform; macroeconomic management; and effectively controlling the Covid-19 pandemic.

Tiếp nối nhiệm kỳ của các Thủ tướng khát khao cải cách và hành động

Newly-elected Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and his predecesor Nguyen Xuan Phuc, who is now the State President.

As commented by Professor Le Dang Doanh, “the head of the Government of the previous term had a very new approach”. It is estimated that in the past term, the government chief made 570 working trips. Indeed, Mr. Nguyen Xuan Phuc was an energetic, hard-working and close-to-the-people Prime Minister.

He had a very high working intensity, left a strong impression and lessons in approaching reality, and solving real-life problems in a practical way.

In particular, he has listened to opinions from experts, scientists, public opinion, and the media.

Personally, I was a retired journalist, but whenever I texted him on some hot issues, he always responded, even at midnight. He texted me very carefully. For example, “I have asked relevant agencies to immediately check the issue you mentioned…”.

Another assertive “captain”

Mr. Phuc’s successor is Mr. Pham Minh Chinh, who used to hold the following positions: Head of the Central Party Committee’s Organization Commission, Secretary of the Quang Ninh Provincial Party Committee, and Deputy Minister of Public Security.

Experiencing various positions over the past decade, he has proven himself to be a leader with a vision and one who dares to think and dare to do. In terms of working methods, he is very methodical, strong and also very drastic in supervising and speeding up subordinates to implement assigned tasks with the spirit of “Don’t put off until tomorrow what you can do today”.

Once in 2018, during an interview with Mr. Chinh in his living room to write an article about the streamlining of state apparatus, I accidentally heard his phone call. This surprised me very much because when he talked to me, he was very gentle and delicate.

He asked the person on the phone about the results of a project that he had submitted to officials of the Party Central Committee’s Organization Commission for consultation. I did not know how that person answered, but I realized the dissatisfaction of the head of the Central Organizing Committee. He said on the phone: “You are the department leader, but why have you waited for such a long time? If you did not receive feedback from your superiors, you should have called them to ask directly why they did not have feedback. You must change working methods if you want to perform your tasks efficiently and smoothly…”.

That was the working style of Mr. Pham Minh Chinh.

Tiếp nối nhiệm kỳ của các Thủ tướng khát khao cải cách và hành động

Quang Ninh’s Party Secretary Pham Minh Chinh visits families in Phinh Ho village, Bac Son commune, Mong Cai city in January 2012.

In 2014, I had the chance to talk with Quang Ninh Party Secretary Pham Minh Chinh to listen carefully to his thoughts.

I found him openly handling tasks, especially for the leader of a very complicated border province with 1.2 million people like Quang Ninh, the only province to have both land and sea border with China.

Quang Ninh’s border line with China is quite long. According to Mr. Chinh, protecting the border does not mean no exchange, no relationship. In a border province, when the two sides are only separated by a small stream, if in the process of exchanging and doing business, dealing with border-related issues must be flexible to avoid collision in order to maintain solidarity and friendship.

Mr. Chinh saw the limitations that made it difficult for Quang Ninh to get rich even though it is rich in natural resources and has great potential for tourism development.

He proposed to change the growth model of Quang Ninh from “brown to green”. Even though coal mining is the province’s advantage, Quang Ninh should think of other plans to develop its economy in a sustainable way.

Under Mr. Chinh’s leadership, Quang Ninh has been a bright spot for other provinces to learn in streamlining the administrative apparatus and the political system in general.

The most common thing about the former Prime Minister and newly-elected President Nguyen Xuan Phuc, and the newly-elected Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, former Head of the Central Party Committee’s Organization Commission, is that they all have a strong desire for institutional reform and for taking action, being creative for the prosperous development and longevity of the country. All for the happiness of the people!

Quoc Phong

Filed Under: Uncategorized PM Pham Minh Chinh, new government, new cabinet, election, Vietnam politics news, Vietnam breaking news, Vietnam news, vietnamnet news, ..., what are the long term effects of taking omeprazole, take down lever action, corporate governance reforms, can you take omeprazole long term, can you take nexium long term, can you take miralax long term, taking miralax long term, taking nexium long term, can i take nexium long term, long term effects of taking omeprazole, side effects of taking omeprazole long term, long term effects of taking nexium

An Hao Solar Farm turns new page for local people

April 13, 2021 by english.thesaigontimes.vn

An Hao Solar Farm turns new page for local people

By Phuong Nam

Nested at the foot of Cam mountain in An Hao Commune, Tinh Bien District, An Giang Province, amid a vast green area with breathtaking view, An Hao Solar Farm has added colors to and made Bay Nui (seven mountains) more mighty and especially help the life of the local people turn a new page and escape poverty.

Not simply a tourist site, the solar farm has also nurtured and brought cultural values into the landscape and heritage of the mountainous region, significantly increased its investment in developing infrastructure facilities and related services, as well as contributed to the stable social, economic, and political development of the southwestern border region.

An Hao Solar Farm – A new tourist destination at That Son (Seven Mountains).

A couple of years ago, when visiting An Hao, many people would immediately think of it as a poor moutainous commune where there was little land for production, no electricity, no clean water, no paved roads and children could not go to school. The poverty had been haunting the locals all year round, prompting the farmers to abandon their paddy fields, and young people to leave their villages for other places to look for jobs. In the dry season, even weeds withered in deserted fields. Maybe no one at that time could believe that this place now has become a tourist attraction worth thousands of billions of dong.

However, everything has changed when the construction of the Sao Mai solar power plant project began and then the An Hao Solar Farm was developed. Hundreds of local people were employed with stable incomes, while many people who earlier had left their hometown to make a living also returned home.

Talking with Chau Hoang Minh, director of the An Hao Solar Farm, we learned that half of the employees at the solar farm are local residents. Many of them are ethnic minority people and even some have gained trust and were selected to hold high posts at the tourist site.

The joy of labor in the border region.

We had a quick talk with Chau PhuonL, a staff taking care of bonsai trees at the tourist site. The simple-minded man with strong physical appearance said to us blissfully: “I and my older brother came to the tourist site for work since the beginning of the year, when the solar farm project was under construction. Since we started working here, our lives have become more stable. If we stay at home and cultivate one rice season per year, we will still be jobless during the rest of the year. Now, we not only have improved income but also receive meal allowances from the company, thus everyone are pleased and wish to work here for a long time.”

Under the solar panel layers shining radiantly are workers that are laboriously sowing green seeds into a tough land. They, saying nothing to each other, are focusing on their own tasks assiduously and seriously. Also, we can feel the honesty of the mountainous people still remaining intact, the gratefulness toward the company’s kindness for the Khmer people.

From an agriculture-only area, the An Hao people knew how to move from farming works to other jobs and develop various commerce and services such as food stores, restaurants, hotels to meet tourists’ demand, resulting in the locals’ life being improved. Besides this, the awareness of protecting tourism resources and the environment of the locality has been increasingly improved, enabling tourists at home and abroad to fully relish the beauty of the mountainous region.

Employees work assiduously and seriously as they want to express their gratefulness to the solar farm operator.

Aside from bringing about economic benefits to the locals, the tourist site also helped An Hao shed the gloomy look and put on a new coat. Many roads were paved by the investor and hundreds of decent houses were built. Given such convenient traffic conditions, the number of visitors to the locality is on the rise and the distance between rural and urban areas has been steadily shortened.

The light from the solar farm now has spread over the That Son area and the new energy from now on will spread further to turn tough lands into green areas, which will be home to wide paved roads, clean agricultural zones and modern tourism projects. All these things are gradually taking shape, making a magical change for this place, creating an economic breakthrough for the southwestern region, and opening new chapters in the journey encouraging the region to growth stronger.

Read more:

A meadow of green power at Cam Mountain’s foot

Sao Mai annually earns VND1 trillion from solar power

Filed Under: Uncategorized SaiGon Times Daily, SaiGon Times tieng anh, thời báo kinh tế sài gòn, báo kinh tế việt nam bằng tiếng anh, tin kinh te, kinh te viet..., innovative solar farms, topaz solar farms, turn to page 394, spcg solar farm, turn the page bob seger, emu downs solar farm, 50 mw solar farm, solar farm cost, whyalla solar farm, greenough river solar farm, download metallica turn the page, yellow pages find people

Black sticky rice cakes – a dish steeped in Tày philosophy

April 13, 2021 by vietnamnews.vn

Lê Hương

The Tày ethnic group in Văn Bàn District, in the northern province of Lào Cai, are renowned for their black sticky cake – a popular dish and an indispensable custom for festive events.

As well as being a delicious dish, the black sticky rice cake is a cultural symbol of the locality.

Among the most prestigious traditional cake making workshops, the one owned by Hoàng Thị Huế in Khánh Yên Town provides the tastiest cakes to not only locals but also neighbouring provinces and cities.

Hoàng Thị Huế boils sticky rice cake at her home, also her workshop. VNS Photo Lê Hương

Her product has been granted a provincial-level three-star OCOP (One Commune One Product) certificate for good quality and clear origin.

“Currently, there are diverse kinds of sticky rice cake products in Lào Cai Province,” Huế said proudly. “Yet cakes made in Văn Bàn still have more significant colour and distinguished taste than those made in other localities.”

Huế said her careful selection of ingredients and secret tips handed down through generations have resulted in success.

The form of black sticky rice cake bears the philosophy of yin and yang. VNS Photo Nguyễn Nam

The black cakes are made of local Cẩm Dương sticky rice, green bean, fresh pork, dong leaves, spices and powder from the burnt flour of núc nác (Indian trumpet flower), which bring the black colour for the cake.

Locals gather núc nác plant, dry it, burn it and pound it to get a black powder. The powder is then mixed with the sticky rice, which is then used to make the cake. Tày people wrap the inside of the cake on dong leaves in a square, round, or cylinder form. The cake is boiled for between 10 to 12 hours. When the cakes are cooked, the sticky rice smells good with the yellow-green beans inside, fatty pork, pepper and the smell of dong leave and the fragrance of núc nác plant.

Huế said the núc nác powder helps the black sticky cakes stay fresh for 7-10 days at room temperature in winter and 3-5 days in summer.

The núc nác powder has anti-biotic and anti-inflammation features among other good usages that make it a popular herbal medicine, she said.

The ingredients are chosen carefully. VNS Photo Nguyễn Nam

Profound meaning

According to folk culture researcher Hà Lâm Kỳ, in the past, there was a salt scarcity in the northwestern region.

The ancestors of today’s Tày ethnic group went to the forest and chopped down a kind of tree called the ‘salt tree’ to bring home. They took the bark of the tree, dried it and burnt it to coal. They used that kind of coal in cooking instead of sea salt. The black colour in sticky rice was created by the coal powder from that tree.

When it is cooked, the cake has a salty flavour and a little smell of wild plants. Besides the salt tree, Tày people also use cây gùn (a local wild plant) or cỏ chanh (grass with the smell of lime) and burn them to make coal powder for making the cake.

Cut cake. Photo daidoanket.vn

“This was an innovation by the Tày people when they had to overcome difficulties in life and live with nature,” Kỳ said.

Kỳ added that the way to wrap the black cake features a yin-yang balance.

Tày people think heaven is round while the earth is square, which is expressed in the form of the cake: a round body and both ends in square form.

Yin-yang features are also found in the way they use the dong leaves, with two placed at two different sides and ends facing each other. The number of bamboo strings used to tie the cake is an odd number, either five or nine.

“The figures follow circulation: birth – old age – weakness – death – birth again,” Kỳ said. “It always contains liveliness and development.”

When giving one another the cakes as a gift, they always give them in a pair to create a harmony of yin and yang.

When they tie up the bamboo string, Tày people tie it in a spiral. One bamboo string is tied above another one, which holds the cake firmly inside the leaves while the sticky rice swells inside in the heat.

Huế’s workshop offers a stable income to many local women. VNS Photo Lê Hương

Kỳ said the way of tying bamboo strings means the next generation obeys those that came before them.

When the cake is well cooked, locals use bamboo to cut the cake into many small pieces.

Besides boiled black cake, people may also bake cakes by putting them on coal till the insides smell good. VNS

Sticky rice produced at Huế’s workshop has an OCOP stamp to ensure the origin and quality of the product. VNS Photo Lê Hương

Filed Under: Uncategorized food, chef, restaurant, cuisine, culinary, delicacy, dining, Vietnam News, Politics, Business, Economy, Society, Life, Sports, Environment, Your Say, English..., sticky rice, sticky rice cakes, sticky toffee cake, sticky rice and mango, mango sticky rice, sticky rice cake, sticky rice steamers, sticky rice recipe, sticky rice dc, sticky rice menu, sticky rice with mango, sticky rice cafe

Japan says to release contaminated Fukushima water into sea

April 13, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Japan plans to release into the sea more than 1 million tonnes of contaminated water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear station, the government said on Tuesday, a decision that is likely to anger neighbours such as South Korea.

The move, more than a decade after the nuclear disaster, will deal another blow to the fishing industry in Fukushima, which has opposed such a step for years.

The work to release the water will begin in about two years, the government said, and the whole process is expected to take decades.

“On the premise of strict compliance with regulatory standards that have been established, we select oceanic release,” the government said in a statement after relevant ministers formalised the decision.

The water needs to be filtered again to remove harmful isotopes and will be diluted to meet international standards before any release.

An aerial view shows the storage tanks for treated water at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Okuma town, Fukushima prefecture, Japan February 13, 2021, in this photo taken by Kyodo.  Kyodo/via REUTERS

An aerial view shows the storage tanks for treated water at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Okuma town, Fukushima prefecture, Japan February 13, 2021, in this photo taken by Kyodo. Photo: Kyodo/via REUTERS

The decision comes about three months ahead of the postponed Olympic Games to be hosted by Tokyo, with some events planned as close as 60 km (35 miles) from the wrecked plant.

The disposal of contaminated water from the Fukushima Daiichi plant, run by Tokyo Electric Power, has proved a thorny problem for Japan as it pursues a decades-long decommissioning project.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Vietnam Life - Japan says to release contaminated Fukushima water into sea, TTNTAG Japan, TTNTAG Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, tap water contaminants, epa water contaminants, drinking contaminated water, diseases caused by drinking contaminated water, effects of drinking contaminated water, treatment for drinking contaminated water, flint michigan water contamination, va compensation for camp lejeune water contamination, update on camp lejeune water contamination, latest news on camp lejeune water contamination, latest on camp lejeune water contamination, sweet water sea

Like the Moon in a Night Sky 2021 film project showcases shorts, animations, and documentaries

April 13, 2021 by vietnamnews.vn

The film Ferry Tale (Nguyễn Hồng Quân và Michal Shanny, 2017) will be screened on April 14. — Photo courtesy of the organisers

HCM CITY — A series of Vietnamese films, including contemporary short films, animations, and documentaries are being screened in HCM City from April 11 to 18 under the Like the Moon in a Night Sky 2021 project.

The films thematic categories include Eternal Sadness, And So It Was, Another Life, The Month of May, The Faces in Time, and Two Worlds.

They are being shown at Hoa Sen University’s Charlie Chaplin Theatre (8 Nguyễn Văn Tráng, District 1) and Dcine (6 Mạc Đĩnh Chi, District 1).

The programme kicked off on Sunday with five contemporary short films made by renowned and emerging Vietnamese filmmakers, with each film lasting 14 to 18 minutes.

A series of pre-2000s Vietnamese animated films, including Đáng Đời Thằng Cáo (Lê Minh Hiền, 1960), Sơn Tinh Thủy Tinh (Trương Qua, 1972), Giấc Mơ Bay (Hữu Đức, 1976), À! Ra Thế (Nghiêm Dung, 1981), Bộ Xương Biết Múa (Bảo Quang, 1993), Xe Đạp (Phương Hoa, 2000), and Bản Nhạc Của Thỏ Trắng (Minh Trí và Phương Hoa, 2001) were screened on April 12, with four animation screenings in their original versions and three others with new soundtracks.

In addition, many independent Vietnamese documentaries such as Ferry Tale (Nguyễn Hồng Quân và Michal Shanny, 2017), Nhà Ngoại (Nguyễn Hoàng Bảo Anh, 2018), Bến Nước Buôn Tring (Tạ Minh Đức, 2020) and Mùa Xuân Vĩnh Cửu (Việt Vũ, 2021) will be screened on April 14.

Two films, Tháng Năm, Những Gương Mặt (The Month of May, Faces in Time) and Chung Cư (The Apartment Building) by Đặng Nhật Minh and Việt Linh will be shown on April 15, and many other films, including Hai Thế Giới (Two Worlds), will be screened until April 18.

Made in 1953 by the then Paris-based Phạm Văn Nhận, Two Worlds opens a window into the Vietnamese community in France during the times of the Indochina wars. The film was digitised and restored by Cinémathèque Française, premiering in 2014.

KI}{INEMA curatorial group and directed by emerging filmmakers Đào Thu Uyên and Cao Việt Hoài Sơn, the project and the acts of intimacy it centres on enters a public space in today’s COVID-19 world.

Like the Moon in a Night Sky 2021 is co-organised by TPD and COLAB Vietnam, with support from the British Council Vietnam, Vietnam Film Institute, Hoa Sen University, Dcine Cinemas, XineHouse and many other organisations and individuals based in HCM City and Hà Nội.

Initiated in 2020 by the TPD Centre for the Development of Movie Talents, the project includes a series of events about Vietnamese cinema, past, present and future. VNS

Filed Under: Uncategorized Vietnam News, Politics, Business, Economy, Society, Life, Sports, Environment, Your Say, English Through the News, Magazine, vietnam war, current news, ..., what did the moon look like last night, piper animated short film full, dreamworks animation short films

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