30/12/2008
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Advanced core technology of the nation’s first Dung Quat Oil Refinery in the central Quang Ngai will be ready for operation by February 25, next year. With an investment capital of US$2.5 billion for the first stage, this is one of the most significant projects in Viet Nam and is expected to accelerate the volatile economy. | VietNamNet Bridge - In the face of global financial turmoil, the Vietnamese economy has been no exception to unexpected volatility – one of the most challenging issues that the country has struggled with this year.
What started out as a mere fear of recession, has spread into global panic, with many of the world’s economies fearing the recurrence of the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Even before the chaos spread, global price storms were felt, the price of almost everything is skyrocketing, with oil notably peaking at an unprecedented US$147 per barrel. In the face of all this, inflation at home was pushing struggling families in Viet Nam back below the poverty line and smothering businesses.
The country’s consumer price index (CPI) continued to skyrocket in the first half of the year, with the worst inflation the country had seen in over a decade. The General Statistics Office (GSO) expects CPI to close off at 22-24 per cent for the year.
As families struggled to feed themselves, the Government took action in March, devising and enforcing eight major measures to bring the situation under control. Key measures included tightening monetary policy, bolstering exports, forcing State-owned giants to cut costs and suspend unnecessary projects, capping oil, power and coal prices, and ensuring a comprehensive supply of essential goods like petrol, rice, pharmaceuticals, cement, steel and fertiliser.
More than two months later, these efforts paid off, as families saw prices come back under control with inflation easing thanks to lower growth rates as of June this year. Unfortunately, the year’s financial problems had only just begun. Just as inflation was easing, the country felt the domino effects of slowdowns of major economies like the US, Japan, Germany, the UK and China. Governments everywhere pumped hundreds of billions of dollars to bail out their economies and support enterprises, but reports of failing businesses and rising unemployment continued to fill the pages of the newspaper.
With its economy intertwined in the global scene, Viet Nam also witnessed the initial signals of economic slowdown. After 18 months of ceaseless increases, month-on-month CPI fell 0.19 per cent in October and continued to drop 0.76 per cent in November. The GSO predicts that CPI will continue to fall in December.
As countries put all of their resources into keeping their own economies up, Viet Nam suffers the consequences, watching falls in foreign direct investment, industrial production, exports, and subsequently consumption in the fourth quarter.
To deal with this economic downturn, while avoiding inflation, the Government issued five groups of solutions at a conference in mid-November. Most notably, it pledged to inject US$1 billion from the nation’s foreign reserves to stimulate the economy.
At a meeting with young enterprises on December 14, Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Sinh Hung said the money would be used to build houses for the poor, support farmers, workers and students and others feeling the greatest impact of the global economic crisis.
The fund would be used for infrastructure construction, irrigation work, schools and hospitals. The Government also pledged to exempt or reduce company taxes.
Hung later unveiled an economic stimulus package of up to $6 billion, with the final figures and specifics to be announced by the end of December.
Global and domestic economic turmoil have inevitably had their consequences. While the country originally targeted a growth rate of 8.2 per cent of GDP, that figure had to be cut. As the end of the year approaches, that figure will likely be close to 6.5 per cent. That figure is still impressive in the global context, and foreign direct investment should still reach over $60 billion, with the trade deficit hitting around $17 billion.
Expanded Ha Noi
One of the country’s greatest geographic changes of the year was the expansion of the capital’s administrative borders, ratified by the National Assembly in May, and coming into effect on August 1.
The new capital now has a total area of 3,325sq.km (or 334,470ha) with a population of over 6 million, double from the previous 3 million, living in 29 districts and 577 wards, communes and townships.
The expanded city includes the former Ha Tay Province, four communes from Luong Son District in Hoa Binh Province, and Me Linh District in Vinh Phuc Province.
Those borders continued to be changed throughout the year, as municipal authorities decided to set up Ha Dong District (instead of the previous Ha Dong City) and Son Tay Township (instead of the previous Son Tay City), at a four-day meeting of the Ha Noi People’s Council that concluded on December 12.
Historic rains and flood
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The severe rain that flooded Ha Noi’s inner city blocked traffic not only in the downtown area, but also the Lang - Hoa Lac freeway. | While the country is no stranger to natural calamities, the capital and its neighbouring regions suffered severely this year, witnessing from October 30 to November 3 the most serious rains they had seen in the past 24 years.
The damage was extreme for the area, costing both dollars and lives. The death toll reached a devastating 94 and damages are estimated at VND7.3 trillion ($430 million), according to official statistics from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD).
Tens of thousands of households were waterlogged during the flood, while transportation, power stations, health care centres and schools were also seriously damaged.
The rains may be over, but the damage to regional agriculture will continue to be felt. The floods destroyed 210,000ha of vegetables, 30,000ha of rice, 10,000ha of orchards, 40,000ha of fish ponds and nearly 200,000 livestock animals.
The deputy director of the National Centre for Hydro-meteorological Forecast, Nguyen Lan Chau, said that such sudden heavy rain had rarely occurred in the country’s history, noting that the root cause was almost certainly global warming.
Affected provinces included Nghe An, Ha Tinh, Hoa Binh, Vinh Phuc, Thanh Hoa, Quang Binh, Quang Ngai, Bac Giang, Ninh Binh, Thai Nguyen and Phu Tho.
UNSC chair
Viet Nam made history on the world stage this year, taking a seat for the first time as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) on January 1 for the 2008-09 term.
The position was heightened as the country took the chair of UNSC in July.
Taking advantage of this position, Viet Nam affirmed its increasing political role in settling issues of international conflict to ensure security in the world.
"Viet Nam is committed to contributing to the settlement of conflicts through dialogue and peaceful negotiation, and respects the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries," said Ambassador Le Luong Minh, Viet Nam’s permanent representative to the UNSC at a conference in July.
The country took part in important activities of the UNSC and chaired a high-ranking open discussion following the monthly agenda. Viet Nam further helped build UNSC working programmes and agendas and helped countries reach joint agreements.
Viet Nam hosted and managed around 40 closed and public conferences in July. In its capacity as chair, the country worked with media outlets and reported the outcome of UNSC’s conferences to UN member countries.
As the main representative of the UNSC, Viet Nam also held regular meetings with the UN Secretary General and other senior leaders of the UN’s Secretariat, the President of the UN’s General Assembly, the President of the UN’s Economic and Social Council, and those countries whose pressing issues needed attention.
Uncle Ho
As Viet Nam reaches new heights and moves forward, it continues to remember the past and pay tribute to its national hero. The movement ‘Studying and Following the late President’s morals’ was evidence of this, with several activities carrying his legend forward.
One of these activities reached out to thousands of local residents and Vietnamese living abroad, encouraging them to come forward in a competition on telling stories about Ho Chi Minh’s exemplary morals.
Dozens of other activities helped remind the Vietnamese people, from leaders and senior officials to workers and farmers, that in these times of change they must strive to lead a virtuous life, struggling against corruption, red tape and waste.
Environmental woes
The country opened its eyes to environmental crimes on Vietnamese soil this year, witnessing a company’s blatant disregard effectively killing a section of the Thi Vai River.
Vedan Viet Nam Co, a Taiwan-invested monosodium glutamate (MSG) producer, was caught red-handed dumping untreated waste into the river in southern Dong Nai Province, killing almost every form of life in the water surrounding the plant.
The company had been pumping waste into the river through a concealed underground pipe system since 1994.
These actions led to immeasurable pollution levels in the river’s waters and surrounding land. Hundreds of households have since launched law suits against Vedan, claiming that the pollution has devastated their aquaculture.
Faced with such an alarming crime, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung released instructions in November that Vedan must follow directives by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment or face a complete shut down.
Vedan had its licence suspended, was fined VND267.5 million ($16,718), and charged another VND127 billion ($7.7 million) in over-due environmental protection fees.
"The punishments for Vedan’s violations of environmental protection rules must be implemented strictly and clearly in appropriate steps, to ensure that it will stop dumping waste into the water source, ending the serious environmental pollution and maintaining production," Dung once said.
Scientists held a seminar to see if they could save the polluted river on December 10. The proposals include the development of a mangrove and cajeput forest to absorb pollutants in the water, controlling discharge sources and supervising wastewater discharge, digging an irrigation canal to link Thi Vai with Dong Nai River with the difference in tides diluting the level of pollutants.
While these actions may help buffer the damage, the region will likely suffer for decades, and the incident brought much needed attention to pollution taking place all over the country.
(Source: VNS) | 29/12/2008Press release from MUNICH RE 29th December 2008
A large number of tropical cyclones and the earthquake in Sichuan made 2008 one of the most devastating years on record. Although there was a drop in the number of loss-producing events compared with the previous year (from 960 to 750), individual catastrophes pushed up the numbers of victims and the losses appreciably. Throughout the world, more than 220,000 people died as a result of natural catastrophes this year. Overall losses totalled some US$ 200bn (2007: US$ 82bn) but were still below the record set in 2005 (US$ 232bn in current values). Insured losses in 2008 rose to US$ 45bn, about 50% higher than in the previous year.
Driven by high losses from weather-related natural catastrophes, 2008 was – on the basis of figures adjusted for inflation – the third most expensive year on record, exceeded only by the hurricane year of 2005 and by 1995, the year of the Kobe earthquake. Torsten Jeworrek, member of Munich Re's Board of Management: "This continues the long-term trend we have been observing. Climate change has already started and is very probably contributing to increasingly frequent weather extremes and ensuing natural catastrophes. These, in turn, generate greater and greater losses because the concentration of values in exposed areas, like regions on the coast, is also increasing further throughout the world." Munich Re is a world leader in terms of investigating risks from natural hazards of all kinds. "2008 has again shown how important it is for us to analyse risks like climate change in all their facets and to manage the business accordingly," said Jeworrek.
Some of the main events in detail:
In 2008, Asia was again the continent affected by the worst human catastrophes. Cyclone Nargis is estimated to have claimed the lives of more than 135,000 people in Myanmar: 85,000 deaths have been officially confirmed, whilst 54,000 people are still missing. With very high wind speeds, record rainfalls, and a storm surge, the tropical storm caused devastation primarily in the low-lying Irrawaddy Delta and in the old capital, Rangoon. Since large parts of the mangrove forests – a natural form of coastal protection – have disappeared in recent years, there was nothing to prevent storm surge travelling as far as 40 km inland. The country was inundated with water up to 3.5 metres deep, and more than a million of Myanmar’s inhabitants were made homeless.
The earthquake that hit the Chinese province of Sichuan, a region classified as being highly exposed to earthquake, was a further human catastrophe. According to official statistics, around 70,000 people were killed, 18,000 are still missing, 374,000 were injured, and almost five million were made homeless. At the same time, the Sichuan quake – which occurred in May – also produced the largest single overall loss of 2008. The total figure of US$ 85bn made it the second most expensive event of its kind after the Kobe earthquake (Japan, 1995).
Earlier in the year, China had already suffered enormous losses amounting to more than US$ 21bn due to an unusual cold spell with huge volumes of ice and snow. These had a major impact on the infrastructure in 18 provinces: roads and railways were blocked and in some places destroyed, and the electricity supply collapsed.
In terms of insured losses, Hurricane Ike was the most expensive individual event in 2008. Whereas in the previous two years, the US mainland had largely been spared by heavy cyclones, the 2008 hurricane season generated substantial losses which also affected the insurance industry. Six tropical cyclones (Dolly, Edouard, Fay, Gustav, Hanna, and Ike) reached the US coast in close succession this year, the severest being Ike, which made landfall as a Category 2 hurricane near Galveston (Texas). The storm surge triggered by Ike submerged large sections of the Texas and Louisiana coast. As the storm progressed over the mainland, extreme precipitation caused more and more damage, resulting in an insured loss estimated at US$ 15bn (not including the claims covered under the National Flood Insurance Program). The overall loss caused by Ike was US$ 30bn. The year’s second most expensive hurricane was Gustav, with an overall loss of US$ 10bn and an insured loss of US$ 5bn.
The number of tropical cyclones in the North Atlantic in 2008 was much higher than the long-term average and also higher than the average of the current warm phase since 1995, which is more pronounced as a result of climate change. A total of 16 tropical cyclones were counted during the year; the average for the warm phase so far is 14.7. Eight of these windstorms reached hurricane strength, five of them being classified as major hurricanes (Categories 3–5). In terms of both the total number of storms and the number of major hurricanes, 2008 is the fourth most severe hurricane season since reliable data have been available. The tornado season in the United States, which runs from April to September, was also unusually severe. There were roughly 1,700 tornadoes in 2008, generating an aggregated loss of several billion US dollars.
According to provisional estimates published by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), 2008 was the tenth warmest year since the beginning of routine temperature recording and the eighth warmest in the northern hemisphere. This means that the ten warmest years ever recorded have all occurred in the last 12 years. "It is now very probable that the progressive warming of the atmosphere is due to the greenhouse gases emitted by human activity. The logic is clear: when temperatures increase, there is more evaporation and the atmosphere has a greater capacity to absorb water vapour, with the result that its energy content is higher. The weather machine runs in top gear, bringing more intense severe weather events with corresponding effects in terms of losses. This relationship is already visible today in the increasing heavy precipitation events in many regions of the earth, the heat waves, and the hurricanes in the North Atlantic. The loss statistics for 2008 fit the pattern that the calculations of climate models lead us to expect," said Prof. Peter Höppe, Head of Munich Re’s Geo Risks Research.
Compared with the devastation that natural catastrophes caused in Asia and America in 2008, the losses in Europe were relatively moderate. Nevertheless, there were also two events in Europe that generated billion-dollar losses for the insurance industry. At the beginning of March, an intense low-pressure system named Emma swept across large parts of central Europe with very high wind speeds, thunderstorms, and hail; in Germany, Denmark, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Switzerland, and Austria, it caused an overall loss of US$ 2bn, of which US$ 1.5bn was insured.
Hilal, a low-pressure storm that crossed southwestern Germany (especially Baden-Württemberg) at the end of May and the beginning of June, caused major damage due to strong gusts, hailstorms, and flash floods. With an insured loss of US$ 1.1bn, Hilal was the seventh most expensive natural catastrophe in the global statistics for the year.
Board member Dr. Torsten Jeworrek: "For us as a leading reinsurer, the natural catastrophe trends of recent years have resulted in three action strategies, which we are resolutely pursuing. Firstly, we accept risks in our core business only at risk-adequate prices, so that if the exposure situation changes, we adjust the pricing structure. Secondly, with our expertise we develop new business opportunities in the context of climate protection and adaptation measures. Thirdly, in the international debate, we – as a company – press for effective and binding rules on CO2 emissions, so that climate change is curbed and future generations do not have to live with weather scenarios that are difficult to control." Munich Re performs scientific analyses on the effects of climate change and cooperates with many scientific institutes. In 2008, Munich Re launched a cooperation with Professor Lord Nicholas Stern and the London School of Economics (LSE), the aim being to advance research into the economic impact of climate change.
Munich Re actively supports ambitious climate protection goals. This approach also opens up enormous opportunities because of the new technologies that emerge with very large growth potential. As a risk carrier with innovative coverage concepts in the field of alternative sources of energy (wind, solar, geothermal), Munich Re promotes these technologies and thus secures additional business potentials for itself. Board member Dr. Torsten Jeworrek: "The next climate summit in Copenhagen must quite clearly fix the route for reducing greenhouse gases by at least 50% by 2050 with corresponding milestones. If we delay too long, it will be very costly for future generations."
Munich Re assigns natural catastrophes to one of six categories for assessment purposes. The annual list includes all events with more than ten fatalities and/or losses running into millions.
Service: As of January 2009, graphs and tables derived from current analyses of natural catastrophes will be available at our NatCatSERVICE download centre www.munichre.com/geo.
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Bird flu has resurfaced in poultry in northern Thai Nguyen Province after many months without any cases in the nation, the Tuoi Tre daily quoted a report from the Vietnam News Agency on Saturday. |
Animal health officials confirmed on Saturday that the H5N1 virus had killed several birds among a flock of more than 100 ducks in Thai Nguyen Town, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Hanoi.
Earlier this year in late January, officials had detected the virus in dead chickens at a farm in the same town and nearly 4,200 chickens had been slaughtered.
According to Deputy Health Minister Trinh Quan Huan last week, there was a very high risk of bird flu returning during the winter and spring in northern Vietnam. The H5N1 strain seems to thrive best in low temperatures.
The Tet Lunar New Year festival late next month is also considered a high-risk time for the spread of bird flu because the slaughter, trade and consumption of poultry, and smuggling of birds from neighboring China, rises sharply.
The Health Ministry last week issued a nationwide bird flu alert, urging cities and provinces to step up detection and epidemic control measures.
Five Vietnamese have died of bird flu so far this year out of six reported H5N1 infections and all were found in northern Vietnam during the first quarter of the year. No new human deaths have been reported since March.
The Southeast Asian nation has recorded 106 infections, the second highest number of cases among the 15 countries with known human cases, after Indonesia.
Since 2003, the World Health Organization has confirmed 391 human cases of bird flu, of which 247 people have died. In Vietnam, 52 people have died, the second highest toll after Indonesia, where the virus has killed 113 people.
Bird flu mainly kills animals, but scientists fear it could mutate to jump easily from human to human, sparking a global pandemic. |
28/12/2008
Thua Thien-Hue (VNA) - Hue city in central Thua Thien-Hue province is struggling to retain one of its lesser known but highly valuable cultural resources. The garden houses (nha vuon) that dot the city's landscape have experts concerned that unless concrete steps are taken quickly to restore and preserve the unique structures they will be lost forever.
Over 100 years old, in disrepair and confronted with sky rocketing land prices many of their owners have been forced to demolish or sell the homes that have been in their families for generations.
The city of Hue is home to ancient citadels and the extravagant tombs of the Nguyen Kings that through an explosion in tourist numbers over the last five years in particular have become known throughout the world, but it is the homes that Hue’s citizens feel are symbolic of the spiritual life of the city and it’s people. “Nha vuon” is a characteristic cultural trait of Hue, a city on the poetic bank of the Huong (Perfume) River and the capital for the royal dynasties of the Nguyen until the French occupation of the country began in 1884 .
The homes themselves are built and eventually lived in using the ancient Chinese design method of Feng Shui that believes each home is must blend harmoniously into the natural environment and that the success or failure of this basic principle will directly correlate to the inhabitants health, prosperity and luck.
Each aspect of the “nha vuon” building process, in particular the gate and front doors, must strictly adhere to a rule of measurement based on the Luban carpentry ruler, which was originally designed by an 8th Century Chinese engineer. The ruler is separated into segments thats measurements signify amongst others longevity, wealth, happiness, success, academia, good and bad fortune, property loss and separation.
The calculations derived from the ruler map out the internal and external physical features of the home, that in turn translate to intangible predictions of the households future.
A typical “nha vuon” in Hue comprises of both a front and back entrance, a surrounding fence, a “binh phong” (masonry screen), a garden comprised of various plants, trees, bonsai, a water-lily pond, and at the centre of the garden, a “nha ruong” (a small house for worship that has been designed according to geomancy and the owner’s spiritual personality and life skills).
Roofed with brick tiles, “nha ruong” is made entirely of precious and solid wood, such as lim (iron wood), gu (sindora) or thong xanh (teranthera pine). Its frame is made up of criss crossed beams and pillars that are all beautifully carved and joined by mortise and tenon, not nails. The entire home stands on large pillars that are placed on a round or square stone base.
A tree is often placed in front of the home’s front gate. The gate is always decorated with elaborately-carved designs and is topped with a small roof that is large enough to give passers-by temporary shelter from the elements.
The path leading around the wall from the entrance gate is lined with tea bushes or apricot trees and from time to time sits beside a half-moon shaped lotus pond.
The first row of flowers that are farthest away from the house are made up of decorative plants according to the taste of the owner. The second row must include slim fruit trees, such as thanh yen (a type of citrus tree), arena or lime trees as these are offered to Buddha or the ancestors at the family’s altar. The third row is composed of large fruit trees such as jack-fruit, longan or guavas that is followed by rows of aromatic herbs or medicinal plants.
The rules for the houses are rigid, each home must follow the principles closely if they wish to maximise their fortunes and be bestowed with good luck. But it is this very rigidity and adherence to the rules by families that have lived in the “nha vuon” for generations that make them so culturally significant.
According to a recent survey conducted by Hue People’s Committee in 25 communes around Hue there are around 890 garden-houses, of which 705 are “nha ruong” with s ome 237 of them being designated as being in need of urgent restoration.
The city’s provincial authorities had previously initiated a programme to provide a portion of the costs of refurbishment to homeowners that were prepared to undertake preservation work on the houses. However there proved to be little interest as most homeowners were not financially able to meet even part of the costs of repair.
To date almost 40 of the sites that were designated to be in the most need have been either demolished to make way for land sales or sold outright, which more often than not has proved to end with demolition in any case.
In a bid to deal with the problem, the city has kicked off a project to save the “nha ruong”, that is being funded by the French region of Nord-Pas de Calais. 150 homes have been selected to become cultural heritage sites, with the first four to undergo restoration this year a cost of 558.6 million VND.
Experts hope that the programme proves to be a success. If not and if the trend continues, what is left of the “nha ruong” will be relegated to the history books.- | | VietNamNet Bridge - A strong cold spell is likely to hit the northern region of Vietnam on Dec. 30, according to Deputy Director of the Lao Cai Hydro-meteorological Forecasting Centre, Luu Minh Hai.
Temperatures in the northeastern region will reach a low of 9 to 11 degrees Celsius, while the northwestern region will face very cold weather, at 7-9 degrees Celsius, even 2-4 degrees in some mountainous areas. There will also be scattered rainstorms in central coastal areas when the front moves further to the south.
This is the second time this year northern people will feel the damp chill. The cold spell is forecast to last for about four days.
A strong spell spread across Vietnam five days ago, before Christmas celebrations took place.
28/12/2008
22:44' 28/12/2008 (GMT+7) |
VietNamNet Bridge - The Hanoi-based My Dinh National Stadium exploded in the last minute of the second leg final match of the AFF Suzuki Cup as striker Cong Vinh headed the ball in Thailand ’s goal to draw the game at 1-1, making Vietnam the new champion of Southeast Asia.
In the first leg of the final in Bangkok on Dec. 24, Vietnam won 2-1 over Thailand. With the draw match on Sunday, the team secured a 3-2 victory over Thailand.
This is the first time Vietnam has won the AFF Cup championship for decades.
Thailand opened the score with a header by Dangda at the 21st minute, but they failed to keep their edge over the hosts.
The champion received bonus of $100,000, while the runner-up took $50,000 bonus. The two third teams were Singapore and Indonesia.
Tonight will be a sleepless night for Vietnamese football fans.
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The Vietnamese team and the AFF Cup. | | 25/12/2008
Bandah Aceh - July 2005 - Photo DWF
LAM TUTUI, Indonesia, Dec 25, 2008 (AFP) - When the deadly waters of the Asian tsunami smashed into this fishing village in Indonesia's Aceh province four years ago, not one house was left standing. Now there are too many of them.
Recovery has been uneven in the dozen countries hit by the 2004 Indian Ocean disaster, which killed more than 220,000 people. While some communities have rebounded and flourished on a multibillion dollar outpouring of aid, others have languished.
In Lam Tutui, 54-year-old villager Keuchik Baharuddin recalled how he heard the monkeys in the trees screaming wildly before the tsunami hit, killing his wife and all five of his children.
"I saw our village had been levelled to the ground," he said.
One of only 75 people from the village of 545 to survive, Baharuddin has rebuilt a semblance of his old life in a gleaming new village, marrying a tsunami widow who has just given birth to a baby son.
So many houses have been built with aid that survivors are now making money on the side by renting them to tenants while other houses sit empty, he said.
In Aceh, which along with nearby Nias island was the region worst hit by the disaster, with at least 168,000 killed, reconstruction has been a qualified success.
Authorities have spent around 6.7 billion dollars of the roughly 7.2 billion dollars in aid pledged by donors, building nearly 125,000 houses and infrastructure from schools to roads and bridges, according to Indonesia's Aceh-Nias reconstruction agency (BRR).
The BRR, which is set to wind up its mandate overseeing the local and international aid effort next April, has been praised for getting the job done with little of the corruption that routinely infects Indonesian government projects.
The recovery has also been aided by peace forged between the separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM) and the Indonesian government in the wake of the tsunami's devastation, ending a three-decade civil war that claimed 15,000 lives.
Concerns now are that as reconstruction ends -- and the sugar-rush of foreign money dries up -- Aceh will return to misery, and possible instability.
Unemployment, currently around 10 percent, is expected to rise and the economy to slow as the BRR wraps up its work, said Aceh Governor Irwandi Yusuf, a former GAM fighter allowed into politics as part of the peace deal.
"I never dreamed that we would be able to remove all Acehnese from hell and bring them to heaven. I just wanted to try to remove them from hell," he said.
There are also fears unemployment among ex-fighters, currently estimated at around 20 percent, could lead to a rise in violent crime or clashes during elections in April.
Adding to potential woes is the fact that while aid has transformed the tsunami-hit coast, those living in inland areas devastated by the civil war have been left out, BRR head Kunturo Mangkusubroto said.
"The rural economy on the coastline that was hit by the tsunami is back, I can say that with full confidence. The rural economy in the hinterland that was affected by the conflict is not back," he said.
While the tsunami helped end a war in Aceh, the fog of Sri Lanka's dragging war with Tamil separatists has hampered efforts to rebuild devastated parts of the nation. Around 31,000 people died in the tsunami in Sri Lanka and around 10,000 still live in temporary camps.
The state auditor general in 2005 said only 13.5 percent of the 1.16 billion committed to assist victims had been spent. There have been no government audits released since then.
Waste and bureaucratic bungling was underscored in October when the government destroyed more than five tonnes of rice and lentils donated by the World Food Programme for tsunami victims, as it rotted before distribution.
Mismanagement has also tainted the much smaller aid effort in Malaysia, which lost 68 people in the disaster and where government auditors have found mishandling of aid money that ended up in shoddy houses or fishing boats unsuitable for local waters.
In Thailand, where 5,400 people were killed -- half of them foreign holidaymakers -- tourism has bounced back, only to be buffeted by ongoing political turmoil.
The recent closure of airports in the southern province of Phuket and the capital Bangkok by anti-government protesters has led to a dip in arrivals, said Yiamsuriya Palusuk, the governor of Phangnga province, one of five Thai provinces hit by the tsunami.
Date: 25 Dec 2008 by Nurdin Hassan 24/12/2008
The buffalo appears in proverbs, folk-songs and chants of all ethnic groups in Vietnam. The buffalo is the symbol of health, industriousness, and it has been the friend of farmers for thousands of years.
In Vietnam, since rice fields are divided into small plots, buffaloes are the most suitable for ploughing and raking. Many rural areas have used farming machines but buffaloes are still the most effective tool.
But now
And always...
BONNE ANNEE
HAPPY NEW YEAR
FELIX BUENO ANO
SABAIDI PI MAI
CHUC MUNG NAM MOI
Hue Décembre 2008
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The National Traffic Safety Committee has reported that 11.522 traffic accidents occurred in 2008, killing 10,397 people and injuring 7,413 others.
The numbers of traffic accidents, dead and injured victims in 2008 felt compared to these of 2007. Yet, the numbers of railway, waterway and marine traffic accidents rose this year.
There are 55 provinces and cities that had less numbers of dead victims caused by traffic accidents over 2007, particularly the southern province of Dong Nai (a reduction of 177 people), HCM City (132), Hanoi (110), the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai (104), and the central province of Binh Dinh (97).
One of the main reasons causing traffic accidents in the country is the fast increase of land vehicles compared to the development of the infrastructure. In the last 11 months, the number of newly registered motorbikes grew by 10.9% and cars by 12.6% year on year. By December 2008, Vietnam had 1,351,080 cars and 25,273,088 motorbikes.
Another major reason causing traffic accidents is the problems associated with business policies of inter-provincial transport service companies. As these firms set the traveling time and revenue for coach drivers, many drivers had to violate traffic rules in term of speed, number of passengers, etc. Many tragic accidents happened for coaches this year because of this. |
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