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Young Vietnamese on the verge of becoming ‘lost generation’ amid pandemic

February 26, 2021 by e.vnexpress.net

Nguyen Thanh Tung, 22, graduated from university in June 2020, and was thrilled to enter a new stage in life.

But reality turned out to be harsher than he thought as he spent four months looking for a job in Hanoi and HCMC only to be repeatedly told “they will contact me when the Covid-19 pandemic is contained.”

He then decided to apply for a graduate course in the U.S. and was admitted, but the university has canceled on-campus classes meaning Tung cannot leave.

“It is like someone has pressed the pause button on my life, and I do not know how to find my play button amid this pandemic.”

Millions of other young people share his plight as colleges are closed, jobs are hard to find and mental and financial issues grow.

A man wears a protective mask as he drives past a banner promoting prevention against the Covid-19 pandemic in Hanoi, Vietnam July 31, 2020. Photo by Reuters/Kham.

A man wears a protective mask as he drives past a banner promoting prevention against the Covid-19 pandemic in Hanoi, Vietnam July 31, 2020. Photo by Reuters/Kham.

Many students have been unable to cope with virtual classes and the hiatus in extracurricular activities.

“Sometimes I cannot keep track of the lessons, or just get bored of sitting in front of the computer for hours, and so feel like I have failed to prepare well enough for my final exams,” Nguyen Ba Nghia, a sophomore at the Hanoi University of Science and Technology, said.

Many young people have also been severely affected by the job market slump .

The International Labor Organization (ILO) said last year the youth unemployment rate in Vietnam was 10.8 percent, compared to 6.9 percent in 2019. It defined youths as workers aged 15 to 24.

In the third quarter the youth unemployment rate was 7.24 percent, 4.2 times the rate among people aged over 25.

On Facebook groups for headhunters and applicants, many people, mostly those embarking on a career, complain about how difficult it is to find a job.

“I spent five months looking for a job and got an internship, and then they told me they will not sign a contract because they want to cut their spending amid the pandemic,” one said.

“It is not ideal to be a young adult at the moment,” someone responded.

With the pandemic flattening dreams, plans and opportunities for young people, many face grave financial insecurity.

Some 52 percent of Vietnamese youths are worried about their financial situation, a survey by insurer Manulife found.

The travel restrictions since last year have forced many young people to put their plans on hold.

Le Thanh Trung, 23, has been waiting for months for his university in the U.S., the world’s biggest Covid-19 hotspot, to open so that he can start pursuing his graduate degree.

“I have deferred my enrollment from last fall to next summer, and so basically I have just held my breath for the last few months and waited; such a waste of time,” the Hanoian said.

Others have seen their wedding and baby plans disrupted.

There have been a lot of separations among young lovers, and many have no idea when they will meet again.

In Saigon, Nguyen Thi Kieu Trang has been waiting for her British boyfriend to come to Vietnam for their wedding, which was originally scheduled for last summer.

“There was no wedding,” Trang, 28, said. “The virus has delayed our wedding, and it will delay us having kids and other things.”

Without being able to get jobs and with other plans being disrupted, many are beginning to have mental issues.

“There has been a surge in the number of people with depression,” Dr Huynh Van Minh, head of the Vietnam Society of Hypertension, said.

The ILO has warned that high unemployment rates could lead to dangerous increases in depression and anxiety.

People wait to have unemployment benefits at the Hanoi Center for Employee Service in Cau Giay District, June 2020. Photo by VnExpress/Ngoc Thanh.

People wait to have unemployment benefits at the Hanoi Center for Employee Service in Cau Giay District, June 2020. Photo by VnExpress/Ngoc Thanh.

Silver lining

Many young people have tried to look for positive things by making new plans or taking up new habits.

“I see the Covid-19 pandemic is a catalyst that forces me to rethink my spending habits,” Nguyen Thu An, a white-collar worker in Hanoi who admitted to being a spendthrift before the pandemic, said.

Others found new hobbies during the social distancing campaign last year, such as cooking and gardening, or began to spend time with their family unlike earlier.

“I found out that I love growing plants, and my room is now full of greenery,” Tung, the new graduate waiting to leave for the U.S., said.

He also learned some barista skills, and so “I do not have to go out for good coffee.”

The pandemic has made some young people realize that they must be adaptable, sociologist Trinh Hoa Binh told VnExpress International.

Le Viet Chung, 29, of Da Lat Town said the pandemic taught him to adapt after his employer in Saigon laid him off.

“I was depressed and shocked, but then a friend suggested that I should try to embark on a new path.” The Saigon salesperson thus became a manager of a hostel in Da Lat.

Sociologist Binh is optimistic, saying the pandemic is enabling young Vietnamese to improve by overcoming “challenges that life throws at them.”

“Many of them could become part of a lost generation, but in the long run they will learn and grow.”

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Poor couple returns lost handbag with billion Vietnamese dong inside

February 26, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

A heart-warming story of a poor couple who returned a lost handbag with billions of Vietnamese dong inside has been inspiring Vietnam’s netizens throughout the first week of the Lunar New Year festival, whhich ended last week.

Nguyen Van Long and his family live in a small house located within a close-knit community in Ward 1, Cao Lanh City, which is the capital of the Mekong Delta’s Dong Thap Province.

For the three decades he has lived in Cao Lanh, Long has spent his mornings fishing in the nearby Dinh Trung River, hoping to reel enough fish for his family.

While fishing was a steadfast part of Long’s daily routine, finding a billion Vietnamese dong was not. (VND1 billion = US$43,400)

That changed when he saw a woman drop her handbag near the river while he was fishing.

Unsure of what to do, Long picked up the bag and took it home.

“I asked him whose handbag it was,” Doan Thi Tam Em, Long’s wife, recollected.

“He said he had picked it up on the way home and if no one came to ask for it, he would report it to authorities.”

Long tried to contact the woman who dropped the bag, but his try was in vain.

“I heard the bag drop, so I ran over and picked it up,” Long explained.

“I tried to yell for the woman, but she was driving too fast.

“A short while later, her younger brother came to my house to ask about the handbag.

“I asked him to describe the handbag and all the items inside, then I gave it back to him after verifying what he said.”

Verifying what was in the bag was actually the first time Long realized its worth during the ordeal.

“We hadn’t even opened the bag to take a look, but did guess there might be something valuable inside,” he recounted.

“It didn’t really matter though because we had no intention of keeping any of it for ourselves.

“We’re poor but we’re not greedy.”

Perhaps being naturally inclined to return the bag is why the couple was caught off guard when local authorities later awarded them a certificate for the good deed.

A happy smile

Long and his wife have spent decades earned their living by filling large black bags with plastic waste and paper scraps they find on the streets.

The couple washes and sorts the garbage on their mezzanine, where it stays for two to three months until they have gathered enough to sell for VND1-1.5 million ($43-65).

That money, coupled with the VND2 million ($87) they earn by working at a nearby coffee shop, is barely enough to make ends meet.

Still, the couple says they are happy.

After all, they have healthy, well-behaved children who have supported them over the years with a flat-screen TV, a refrigerator, and even the house they live in.

Long said although he has always lived in genuine hardship, he feels fortunate enough to have well-mannered children.

“I feel extremely satisfied with my life,” Em said.

Aside from gifts from their children, Long and Em’s house is filled with certificates of merit he has earned during the fifteen years he served in a local defense militia force.

His son also currently serves in the militia, and the two proudly claim they have never missed a shift.

Long and his wife on the mezzanine of their house among their daily haul of recyclables. Photo: Ngoc Tai / Tuoi Tre

Nguyen Van Long and his wife, Doan Thi Tam Em, sort their daily haul of recyclables on the mezzanine of their house. Photo: Ngoc Tai / Tuoi Tre

Putting themselves in others’ shoes

Long’s house is currently covered in wedding decorations for his son’s marriage, which was meant to take place on March 30, 2020, but was canceled because of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

He has yet to organize the wedding party for his son out of fear that the event might lead to an outbreak.

“I had prepared 15 party tables and sent out the invitations,” he told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper.

“The restaurant wanted to charge us for the cancelation, but I convinced them to sympathize with us.

“I shared the vegetables that the restaurant had bought for the party with our neighbors when I visited to tell them about the cancelation.”

Long’s son, a worker in Ho Chi Minh City, has since rescheduled the wedding, but scrapped it once again amid fears of the virus resurgence.

Recovering her lost handbag felt like a miracle to Bui Ngoc Nhung

According to Nhung, the handbag contained VND560 million ($24,300) in cash and several pieces of jewelry worth a combined VND1 billion ($43,400).

In a letter to the couple, Pham Thien Nghia, chairman of the Dong Thap People’s Committee, praised Nguyen Van Long for his good behavior.

“We deeply appreciate your kindness,” Nghia wrote.

“Despite the hardships in your life, you still chose to return VND1 billion in assets.

“It’s greatly kind of you to return the bag to the owner and still feel happy to have done such a good deed.”

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Vietnamese firms to provide foundations, harbor services for La Gan wind power project

February 25, 2021 by english.thesaigontimes.vn

Vietnamese firms to provide foundations, harbor services for La Gan wind power project

The Saigon Times

The signing ceremony of four memorandums of understanding between the La Gan Wind Power Development Corporation and four Vietnamese suppliers – PHOTO: EMBASSY OF DENMARK IN VIETNAM

HCMC – Four Vietnam-based contractors–CS Wind Corporation, PTSC Mechanical and Construction, Southern Petroleum Construction JSC and Vietsovpetro–will provide foundation and harbor services for the La Gan offshore wind farm project in the central province of Binh Thuan.

On February 24, the La Gan Wind Power Development Corporation, the developer of the 3.5-gigawatt offshore wind farm project owned by Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners, Asiapetro and Novasia, virtually signed four memorandums of understanding (MOUs) on foundation supply and harbor services with the four contractors, the Embassy of Denmark said in a statement.

The supply of foundations and harbor infrastructure is among the most critical elements of the offshore wind supply chain. The cooperation between the La Gan offshore wind farm project and the four suppliers will contribute to the ongoing efforts to localize the Vietnamese offshore wind supply chain as well as help build the capacity of local suppliers to compete in the international market.

Under the MOUs, the La Gan offshore wind farm project and suppliers will work together to promote offshore wind power in Vietnam. In addition, the project will facilitate knowledge transfer and provide advice on the foundation’s design, facility layouts, logistics and infrastructure requirements, which will enable the suppliers to take the offshore wind market to international standards.

Kim Højlund Christensen, ambassador of Denmark in Vietnam, said in the statement, “One of the key priorities in our long-term cooperation with Vietnam is to support green development and a green transition in the country’s energy sector.”

The development of foreign investment projects such as La Gan will contribute to further expanding and intensifying Denmark’s close cooperation with Vietnam in knowledge sharing and capacity building for industry experts and practitioners, especially in the offshore wind supply chain, he added.

According to an economic impact study by international experts from BVG Associates-the World Bank’s consultants-the La Gan offshore wind farm project will contribute more than US$4.4 billion to the Vietnamese economy and create over 45,000 full time equivalent (FTE) jobs in Vietnam, where an FTE is a job for a year. The localization rate is projected to be 45% of the full supply chain of the project.

Maya Malik, CEO of La Gan Wind Power Development Corporation, said the signing with the four Vietnamese suppliers confirmed the firm’s serious commitment to facilitate knowledge transfer and promote the localization of the offshore wind industry in Vietnam. The firm wanted to ensure that its investments pass onto the local economy and the Vietnamese people, wherever feasible.

The engagement of the four local suppliers also shows the dedication of local industry leaders to invest in offshore wind energy and to support the Vietnamese Government’s vision for green energy transformation, she added.

With a potential capacity of 3.5 gigawatts, the La Gan offshore wind farm project is one of the first large offshore wind farm projects in Vietnam. It is expected to improve Vietnam’s profile in renewable energy in the region and the world as a whole.

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Vietnam, West Virginia bolster bilateral cooperation

February 25, 2021 by en.vietnamplus.vn

Vietnam, West Virginia bolster bilateral cooperation hinh anh 1 The MoU was signed online on February 25 (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Representatives from the Vietnamese Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) and the US state of West Virginia signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on February 25 to accelerate cooperation in economy, trade, and energy.

The two sides aim to form a comprehensive cooperation framework to facilitate bilateral trade and investment ties in industry and energy, while increasing the exchange of information on business opportunities and supporting cooperation projects and the operations of businesses of both sides.

Addressing the signing ceremony, Minister of Industry and Trade Tran Tuan Anh highlighted the special Vietnam-US partnership while lauding the role and effort of Congresswoman Carol Miller and Governor Jim Justice of West Virginia in promoting the US’s economic and trade ties with Vietnam in the US Congress and Government.

This is a suitable time for the two sides to boost the partnership intensively, to speed up economic recovery and cope with the COVID-19 pandemic, Anh said, stressing that the US is an important and long-term partner of Vietnam in the field of energy. He described it as an important foundation for the strengthening of cooperation in specific areas in the long term.

Vietnam, West Virginia bolster bilateral cooperation hinh anh 2 An overview of the ceremony (Photo: VNA)

According to Vietnamese Ambassador to the US Ha Kim Ngoc , Vietnam-US relations have seen strong progress in all fields since the comprehensive partnership was set up in 2013.

For her part, Miller expressed her hope of further boosting bilateral cooperation in industry and trade, especially energy.

Vietnam and the US have seen continuous growth in bilateral trade and investment relations over the years. Two-way trade exceeded 90 billion USD for the first time last year and the figure is expected to reach 100 billion USD this year.

The two nations have designed an action plan featuring a range of specific solutions, towards a harmonious and sustainable trade relationship./.

VNA

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National database systems on population and citizen identification management launched

February 25, 2021 by hanoitimes.vn

The Hanoitimes – Once becoming operational, these systems will help cut paper costs, reduce verification for authorities and travel time for citizens as well as saving public fund.

The Ministry of Public Security has officially put into operation the national database system on population and citizen identification management on February 25 with the attendance of Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc.

The event was held in the form of online conference between the Ministry of Public Security and the public security agencies of 63 provinces and cities throughout the country.

Prime minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc gave speech at the launching ceremony of National database system on population and citizen identification issuance and management systems. Photo: VGP.

At the launching ceremony, Prime Minister Phuc took part in the experience features and effects of the national database system on population and electronic chip-mounted citizen identification cards.

The “National Population Database” and “Citizen Identity Card Production, Issuance and Management” are two important projects implemented by the Ministry of Public Security.

Once becoming operational, these systems will help cut paper costs, reduce verification for authorities and travel time for citizens as well as saving public fund.

According to preliminary calculation, the national database system on population will help decrese the cost for preparing the application and declaration by VND4,864 billion (US$212,000).

Participants to the opening ceremony. Photo: VGP.

The Ministry of Public Security has reviewed, built, and amended relevant legal documents to be consistent with the creation of a national database on population. The ministry has also basically completed the collection of population information nationwide in accordance with the Law on Citizenship.

The national population database system is designed to connect and to allow other information systems to use the shared data through the National Data Sharing Integrated Platform and the National Public Service Portal.

As a result, it will increase the ability to use and update information about the population as well as reducing budget spending in building IT infrastructure of specialized databases.

By the end of January 2021, the Ministry of Public Security had collected more than 86 million survey cards and imported information of more than 81 million cards into the national database on population.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Vietnamese national database on population, national database system on population and citizen identification issuance and management, national incident management system, relational database management system, relational database management systems, National Natural Resources Management System, database management system, Integrated Database Management System, video database management system, national student loan database system, National Court Management System, database management systems

Vietnam Buddhist Sangha accepts online donations and support

February 25, 2021 by vietnamnet.vn

In an effort to avoid gatherings amid the Covid-19 pandemic, the Buddhist Sangha of Vietnam (BSV) has told some pagodas to accept online donations and offerings via e-wallet.

Vietnam Buddhist Sangha accepts online donations and support

Most Venerable Thich Duc Thien, BSA’s Vice President and General Secretary.

Most Venerable Thich Duc Thien, BSA’s Vice President and General Secretary, on February 23 met with the press to explain the plan to allow people to offer donations and make offerings via e-wallet, which began during the Tet holiday.

In recent days, some pagodas have begun doing so. This has raised concern among Buddhists that this might be a scam in the 4.0 era. What do you think about this?

The Vietnam Buddhist Sangha has released documents guiding Buddhists and pagodas to have the anti-epidemic spirit at the highest level and ensure that spiritual needs are satisfied during the spring festival, which is a long standing traditional culture of Vietnamese people.

The Vietnam Buddhist Sangha implemented online Lunar New Year peace praying ceremony and many pagodas organized online prayers well.

Many pagodas plan to organize peace praying programs on the 15th day of the Lunar New Year. The Vietnam Buddhist Sangha, via its social network, has opened a portal to take registrations for online peace praying.

The Vietnam Buddhist Sangha believes that praying for peace is what everyone wishes for. Together with praying for peace, people may want to offer donations. This is voluntary.

In an effort to avoid gatherings, the Vietnam Buddhist Sangha decided to create conditions for Buddhists to offer donations via e-wallet. This has been piloted at some pagodas. To date, 12 pagodas have accepted online donations and offerings.

Some scammers could counterfeit pagodas’ websites to get donations. What should be done to prevent this?

Accepting donations via an app is a method to prevent scams. E-wallet service providers will serve as the filter.

We plan to release a document to inform the executive boards about the decision to choose MoMo e-wallet. There are some bank accounts which are true accounts of pagodas, while others are counterfeit that need to be blocked.

Online offerings remain a new thing for worship facilities. Have there been any problems so far?

We are living in the 4.0 era and we won’t make progress without renovation.

The Vietnam Buddhist Sangha plans to apply this method on a trial basis for three months before reviewing to decide whether to continue it.

I personally think that this will help to avoid gatherings and make offerings transparent. In the future, people will not be putting small change into the hands of statues.

Tinh Le

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