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Winners of National External Information Service Awards 2017 honored

April 20, 2021 by en.qdnd.vn

The 17 prizes comprise three first prizes, four second prizes, four third prizes and six consolidation prizes.

Vietnam News – the national English language daily, the Ethnic Minority and Mountainous Region Pictorial, and photojournalist Nhan Huu Sang of the Press Photography Department are among the first-prize winners.

Other first prizes were presented to individuals and groups from Thanh Nien (Young People) and Nhan Dan (People’s) newspapers, the Quang Ngai Radio and Television Station and the Vietnam Television.

The award, the fourth of its edition, also honored 15 second prizes, 18 third prizes and 27 consolidation prizes, in the categories of print newspaper and electronic newspaper in Vietnamese and foreign languages, radio broadcast, television broadcast, press photo and book.

The organizing board received 970 entries, up nearly 9 percent as compared with the previous edition, with 931 works qualified for the contest. They are made in 15 languages – Vietnamese, English, French, Russian, Chinese, Spanish, Bulgarian, Japanese, Korean, Indonesian, Lao, Khmer, Slovakian, German and Thai.

Of the entries, 22 come from foreigners. The others hail from press agencies and newspapers at both central and grassroots levels, and overseas Vietnamese.

The organizing board said the works have actively contributed to promoting the land, people and history of Vietnam to the world. They have touched upon political, economic, social and cultural lives of Vietnamese at home and abroad.

The works have reflected guidelines of the Party, policies and laws of the State, as well as Vietnam’s views and stance on regional and international issues in an accurate, timely and vivid way, while opposing false and distorted information about the country, the board said.

The ceremony saw the attendance of Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh, head of the Party Central Committee’s Commission for Information and Education Vo Van Thuong who is also head of the central steering committee for external information work, and head of the Party Central Committee’s Economic Commission Nguyen Van Binh, among others.

Addressing the ceremony, Deputy PM and FM Minh congratulated the winners of the award, which, he said, has helped enhance connectivity and coordination between foreign news service units, as well as between domestic and foreign news services.

The 2017 contest’s success has not only reflected the prestige of the award but also affirmed the important role of the external information work in national construction and development, the official said.

He attributed achievements recorded in the country’s foreign affairs in 2017, especially the APEC Year, to contributions of the external information work, including the award.

External information has helped raise trust, consensus and support of people from all walks of life, both at home and abroad, and create an aggregate strength to affirm Vietnam’s prestige and position in the international area, Minh noted.

He urged the external information work, including the award, to keep a close watch on domestic and international situations to serve the interests of the nation.

Via the award, the external information work, should renew form, content and ways to access audience, focusing on foreigners and foreign countries and territories, in an accurate, timely, flexible and suitable manner.

The official also underlined the need to increase information in foreign languages, especially news about the country’s socio-economic development, national sovereignty protection, guidelines and policies, while stepping up the application of information-technology in the work.

More attention should be paid to personnel training, he said, suggesting that the award should be rolled out on a larger scale to promote its prestige.

First launched in 2014, the contest has drawn great attention from both domestic and foreign press organizations, publishers and reporters. The number of entries to the competition has increased through years from 515 works in 10 languages in 2014 to 970 entries in 15 languages in 2016.

The award will continue to be held in 2018, open to Vietnamese and foreign individuals and groups, each of them could submit no more than 7 entries or entry series to the organizing board.

Source: VNA

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​Racist hatred leaves psychological mark on Vietnamese living in the west

April 20, 2021 by e.vnexpress.net

While Tran Hong Yen was waiting for a train in Munster, Germany last year, two white men passed by and said in German, “Go back to China and take the virus back with you.”

The 21-year-old Vietnamese student said: “I was stunned and confused. After I got home, the verbal attack was still stuck in my head and made me feel very angry. It looked like they had no one to vent their anger on and we were easy targets.”

She said the peaceful city, where she has studied for over 18 months, has changed a lot since the Covid-19 outbreak began. There are no more greetings or lifts to school from “kind” strangers.

She is now afraid to go outside.

Tran Hong Yen, a Vietnamese student in Munster, Germany. Photo courtesy of Yen.

Tran Hong Yen, a Vietnamese student in Munster, Germany. Photo courtesy of Yen.

Yen said one of her Asian friends had to see a psychiatrist for counseling after frequently facing discrimination and uncertainty caused by the pandemic.

Four years ago Long, a Vietnamese student in Washington, D.C., was on his way home from his part-time job when he was stopped by a young White man who begged for some change. Long politely refused and in return faced a torrent of abuse of Asians.

Two months later he happened to bump into the same person, but this time he was with a Black friend.

He said: “They followed and threatened me, pretended to have guns in their pockets and took my money. I was punched, knocked to the ground, kicked, and racially abused,” Long recalled about the incident that happened four years ago.

He was scared but tried to fight back.

“It affected me mentally for a while. I worry the same thing could happen again, especially during winter when it gets dark early and I often travel alone by bus. Will things get even worse this time?”

Long and Yen are but two of the myriad Asian victims of bigotry, racism and xenophobia in western countries, and these have only worsened following the Covid outbreak.

In Vancouver, Canada, the number of hate crimes reported against Asians increased by 717 percent last year.

But many countries like France, Germany and Belgium do not collect demographic data based on race, making it difficult to accurately understand the scale of the problem.

Data from the London Metropolitan Police shows there were more than 200 attacks on East Asians between June and September 2020, a 96 percent increase year-on-year.

In a 2019 report, the Spanish government said 2.9 percent of Asian citizens were victims of racism.

In France, campaigners say the global pandemic has worsened the lives of Asian communities. In Paris alone, attacks on or insults against Asians happen every two days.

In the U.S., social advocacy group Stop AAPI Hate said it received nearly 3,000 reports of attacks targeting Asian Americans between March and December 2020.

President Joe Biden has said attacks against Asians “skyrocketed” and called on the American people to resist “the rise of xenophobia.”

There is more and more research showing that being stigmatized is affecting the mental health of Asians in the west. The U.S.’s 2018 National Health Interview Survey found that nearly 44 percent of Asian Americans had experienced depression and sought out a psychiatrist.

People from Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam are at high risk of post-traumatic stress disorder, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

An Asian-American boy at a ‘Kids vs. Racism’ rally against anti-Asian hate crimes at Hing Hay Park in the Chinatown-International District of Seattle, Washington, the U.S. on March 20. Photo by Reuters/Lindsey Wasson.

An Asian-American boy at a ‘Kids vs. Racism’ rally against anti-Asian hate crimes at Hing Hay Park in the Chinatown-International District of Seattle, Washington, the U.S. on March 20. Photo by Reuters/Lindsey Wasson.

The American Psychological Association said victims of hostile and racist behavior often experience stress, depression, anxiety, anger, and lack of confidence after trauma. According to experts, it also exposes the deficiencies in the healthcare system for Asians studying and working abroad.

In the U.S., Asian Pacific Islander communities have less access to mental health services than any other ethnic group. International student health insurance usually does not cover the cost of psychological examination. Language barriers and the lack of understanding of Asian history and culture make it difficult for professionals to counsel their clients.

Mandy Diec, director of California at the Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (SEARAC), said: “This is not new, but it does cause a lot of damage. The biggest problem is that we are living with a healthcare system that does not meet the needs of the community.”

A survey by SEARAC of the Cambodian, Vietnamese, Laotian, and Chinese communities in the U.S. found that 29 percent of respondents encountered problems due to insufficient understanding of mental health services.

For Long, the incident four years ago does not affect his current life too much but he is worried about the growing wave hatred toward Asians, especially following the Covid-19 outbreak.

Yen said many of her Asian friends are often hesitant about talking about discrimination and trauma.

“I don’t understand why people feel so embarrassed. We are not at fault. Everyone should raise awareness about the issue of racism and discrimination against Asians. Don’t wait until you or relatives experience it to speak up.”

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