week 14 - 2012
TRANSCRIPT
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14 2012
The world this week
Myanmar's National League for Democracy party won most of the seats it contested in by-
elections that were held in 45 constituencies. Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of the democracy
movement, won a seat just outside Yangon. It was the first time the NLD had participated in an
election since 1990, when the result was overturned by the army.
Co-ordinated bomb attacks in two cities in southern Thailand, in busy commercial and
entertainment districts, killed 13 people and injured more than 300. An Islamist insurgent groupthat has been active in the south since 2004 is suspected of carrying out the attacks.
The United States put up a cash reward of $10m for Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, a founder of
the terrorist group that struck Mumbai in 2008. Wendy Sherman, America's undersecretary of
state for political affairs, made the announcement during a visit to Delhi. The reward is one of
the highest ever offered by America.
Rumours of a coup in China led the government to suspend comments on microblogging
sites. Six people were arrested and several websites shut down. Comments were allowed to
resume after three days. Speculation about political uncertainty in China has been growing
since last month's sacking of Bo Xilai, a senior Communist official.
Meeting in Washington, the presidents of the United States and Mexico and Canada's prime
minister agreed to simplify and eliminate some trade regulations in North America.
In a speech on the 30th anniversary of the outbreak of the Falklands war, Argentina's
president, Cristina Fernndez, called the British presence on the islands (which Latin America
calls the Malvinas) "absurd", but announced no further measures against Britain or the
islanders.
Spain's government unveiled the most austere budget the country has faced since General
Franco's death in 1975, with cuts and tax rises totalling 27 billion ($36 billion). Yet given
Spain's bleak economic outlook, even this may not be tough enough to cut the budget deficit as
promised.
In the wake of a visit by Pope Benedict, Cuba's communist government declared that Good
Friday would be a public holiday.
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Yulia Tymoshenko, a former prime minister of Ukraine, was allowed to leave prison to be
treated for a back condition. The opposition leader is serving a seven-year sentence for abusing
her office while negotiating a natural-gas supply contract with Russia in 2009. The Ukrainian
government appeared to be bowing to pressure from "pean Union leaders, who see Ms
Tymoshenko's conviction as politically motivated.
Pal Schmitt resigned as president of Hungary, after Budapest's Semmelweis Universitystripped him of his doctorate because of plagiarism. His resignation means that Viktor Orban,
the prime minister, has lost a loyal ally who rubber-stamped all of the government's new, and
contentious, laws.
Mali's neighbours imposed a trade embargo in protest at a recent army coup. The coup's
leaders responded with promises to restore the country's democratic constitution. Tuareg rebels
meanwhile advanced from the north, seizing the city of Timbuktu.
Syria agreed to an April 10th deadline to start implementing a UN-Arab League peace plan,
but it still insists it will not pull troops out of cities until opposition forces disarm.
Finance ministers in the euro zone agreed to raise the combined ceiling of the currency
block's temporary and permanent bail-out facilities to 700 billion ($930 billion). Some argue the
rescue pot should be bigger still.
Sino-Forest filed for bankruptcy protection. The company was one of China's biggest wood
producers until it was accused last year of fraud by Muddy Waters, a short-seller that has made
a name for itself by investigating the accounts of Chinese companies. It is now being sued by
Sino-Forest for defamation.
Wen Jiabao, the Chinese prime minister, criticised China's big banks for acting like a
"monopoly" and said private capital should be allowed "to flow into the finance sector". Mr Wen's
comments could hasten reforms in the financial sector. On the same day that he spoke China's
securities regulator almost tripled the amount of money that foreign funds can invest in capital
markets, to $80 billion.
The price of carbon permits in the EU's Emissions Trading Scheme plummeted to another
record low, after data suggested that Europe had produced a smaller amount of polluting
emissions last year than had been thought. The underlying reason why carbon prices havetanked is that the market is oversupplied with permits.
Apple supported the recommendations of a report by the Fair Labour Association into
conditions at the factories in China that assemble its products. Foxconn, which runs the
factories, reportedly said it would try to comply with FLA standards on working hours by July
2013.
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Vietnam PM: Reform to Stabilize EconomyBy James Hookway, The Wall Street Journal 4 Apr. 2012
Vietnam Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said he is stepping up plans to revamp the
Communist-led country's bloated state sector that have led to a series of debilitating credit-
rating downgrades and pressured Vietnam's fragile currency. In written responses to questions
posed by The Wall Street Journal on the sidelines of a regional summit in Cambodia, Mr. Dung
said he plans to push Vietnam's state-owned enterprises into closer competition with the private
sector to make them more efficient, and to revive a stalled series of partial privatizations, a
process known in Vietnam as "equitization." Creating a more level playing field between the
private and state sectors, Mr. Dung said, "is one of the key components of economic
restructuring."
Vietnam's once-booming economy has foundered in recent years, thrown off balance in part by
burgeoning debts at some of its sprawling state-owned enterprises. Mr. Dung's government
previously had adopted a policy of encouraging Vietnam's big state-owned firmswhich control
about 40% of the country's economic outputto diversify into new industries and provide apowerful counterweight to a deluge of foreign investment into the nation.
The strategy in many cases backfired. In some instances, state-owned enterprises took on
unmanageable levels of debt or invested in businesses that they didn't fully understand.
Shipbuilder Vinashin, for instance, nearly collapsed under $4.4 billion in debts in the summer of
2010 and later defaulted on some of its foreign obligations after moving into businesses as
diverse as brewing and tourist resorts. That debacle forced Mr. Dung, a 62-year-old former
security chief who was appointed Vietnam's top day-to-day executive in 2006, to acknowledge
his mistakes in a televised apology to the Vietnam's parliament. One lawmaker demanded an
unprecedented vote of no confidence, while Mr. Dung narrowly survived a behind-the-scenes
leadership challenge at the Communist Party Congress in Hanoi in early 2011.
The Vinashin crisis also ushered in a rethink of Vietnam and its state-dominated economy
among investors. International credit ratings firms such as Fitch Ratings, Standard and Poor's
and Moody's Investor Service cut Vietnam's debt ratings, while investors abandoned the
country's stock market. The crisis badly tarnished Vietnam's international reputation. It put
downward pressure on Vietnam's dong currency, and helped drive up inflation, which only now
is dropping back to the 14% on-year mark, as of March, after peaking at 28% in August last
year.
On Friday, a Vietnamese court sentenced Vinashin's former chairman and chief executive,
Pham Thanh Binh, to 20 years in prison for ignoring regulations governing the management of
state-owned enterprises in order to speed up some of the shipbuilder's ill-fated projects. Mr.
Binh said he was a victim of the global economic slump in 2008, rather than any conscious
disregard for Vietnam's rules. Eight other former executives at the firm, formally known as
Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group, were also sentenced to lengthy prison terms, and
Vietnam's government is taking additional steps to stop the rot at some other state-owned
enterprises.
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Mr. Dung recently removed the chief of Vietnam's state electricity generator after the company
diversified into the mobile phone business instead of focusing on building up the country's
sorely depleted generation capacity. Successful state firms such as Vietnam Oil & Gas, or
PetroVietnam, too, have pulled out of high-profile real-estate ventures as the government
recalibrates the state-owned enterprises' role in Vietnam's economy. In his comments to The
Wall Street Journal, Vietnam's premier said his government will now focus on determining the
scope and scale of the country's state sector. "We will define the role and functions of the state
and state-owned enterprises in a socialist-oriented market economy," Mr. Dung said, adding
that the government will "accelerate equitization to diversify the ownership of state-owned
businesses." Vietnam's leader said his goal is to "retain only a number of key state-owned
enterprises in certain industries."
There are signs now that Vietnam is regaining confidence as inflation recedes. The country's
central bank recently eased back on interest rates in order to stimulate more growth, while
investors have been cautiously returning to Vietnam's equity markets. Over the weekend,
Vietnam and the European Union also agreed to begin talks on developing a free-tradeagreement. Mr. Dung told The Wall Street Journal that closer economic integration within
Southeast Asia will also help spur on Vietnam's economy. He predicted that plans to drop tariffs
in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in 2015 will encourage a fresh surge of foreign
direct investment into the region, and will make it easier for Asean-based nations to invest more
heavily in each other's economiessomething which Mr. Dung said is "particularly significant"
for the region's less-developed economies.
Vietnamese P.M. Nguyen
Tan Dung (center) poses
for a photo with KoreaUniversity president Kim
Byoung-chul (left), and
Korea University
Graduate School dean
Park Jung-ho after
receiving an honorary
doctorate from the
university on 28 March
2012.The Korea Herald
Vietnam uncovers $1.5bn of wrongful spendingBy Ben Bland, 6 Apr. 2012
Vietnams corruption-fighting body has uncovered 30.7tn Vietnam dong ($1.5bn) of wrongful
spending at several big state-owned companies, including PetroVietnam, the oil and gas
monopoly. The body also accused Song Da Corporation, a construction group that is being
restructured with Asian Development Bank financing, of mismanagement when it unveiled its
findings on Thursday, according to the Vietnam News, the governments English language
http://www.koreaherald.com/national/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20120329000795http://www.koreaherald.com/national/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20120329000795http://www.koreaherald.com/national/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20120329000795http://www.koreaherald.com/national/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20120329000795 -
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mouthpiece.The Government Inspectorate alleged that PetroVietnam, Song Da and other state-
owned companies had mismanaged assets and made bad investment decisions. It said
PetroVietnam, whose outspoken chairman Dinh La Thang was promoted to transport minister
last year, was responsible for 18.2tn dong of losses to the state budget, according to the state-
owned Tuoi Tre newspaper. Foreign and local investors say wasteful spending and corruption at
Vietnams favoured state-owned companies has destabilised the economy and damaged the
countrys reputation.
The Communist government has vowed to clean up the state sector while ensuring that it
retains a leading role in the economy, as part of its struggle to maintain economic legitimacy.
Last week, the well-connected former chairman of Vinashin, a state-owned shipbuilder,
was jailed for 20 years on charges of economic mismanagement after bringing the company,
which had amassed more than $4bn in debt, to the brink of collapse. The scandal was a partial
trigger for all three main global credit rating agencies to downgrade Vietnams sovereign debt
rating in 2010.
Despite the large scale of the losses unveiled on Thursday, analysts said it was too early to
know if this was the start of a concerted crackdown on errant state companies or merely morerhetoric. Its not clear whether there will be any serious fallout from these allegations, one
foreign economic researcher based in Ho Chi Minh City said. Typically, the government
inspectorate identifies a token number of state-owned companies, organisations and ministries
at which to conduct an audit, they come up with all sorts of irregularities, theres some noise for
a day or two and then it goes away.
Nguyen Quang A, an independent economist and former government adviser, said he was not
surprised by the inspectorates findings as it was in the nature of state -owned enterprises to
use money for the wrong purposes. But he said this did not yet amount to a serious effort to
restructure state-owned companies because if they want to do that, they must be muchstronger, they have to change the Communist partys direction, and thats not easy.
PetroVietnam declined to comment, but said it would hold a press conference next week from
which foreign news organisations would be excluded. Song Da was not immediately available to
comment.
A sinking shipAsia Times, 05 Apr. 2012
Crony capitalism went on trial in Vietnam last week. However, the proceedings did little to quell
public skepticism or address the underlying causes of a spectacular economic and political
failure. Assigning responsibility for the near collapse of Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group
Vinashin), the state-owned entity that effectively went bankrupt in 2010 with over US$4.4 billion
in debts, a Vietnamese court on March 30 sentenced former chief executive officer Pham Thanh
Binh and eight other senior company officials to upwards of 20 years in prison. As Vietnamese
bloggers were quick to point out, Binh and his co-defendants were charged with
misappropriating $43 million in funds - which represented less than 1% of the total debt racked
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up by Vinashin. While the court ruled that the defendants caused "serious economic
consequences" and "reduced the people's trust in the government"' throwing away $43 million
as detailed in the indictment was hardly the main explanation for Vinashin's meltdown.
The root problem can be traced back to 2006 when Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung
reorganized many of the country's state-owned enterprises and placed the largest corporate
groups under the direct control of the prime minister's office. Dung's ambitious plan was to
pursue a corporatist development strategy along the lines of South Korea's chaebolswhile
building a personal power base. Dung appointed close allies to run Vinashin and the other
business groups. According to critics, the prime minister's office succeeded in consolidating
control but did not exercise real oversight.
Thanks to preferential credit policies, Vinashin got cheap domestic loans from state-owned
banks and lots of dollars from international lenders which it used to expand into unrelated
businesses such as real estate, motorcycle manufacturing and tourism. Benefiting from a
government guarantee, even the proceeds from Vietnam's inaugural dollar bond of $750 million
and a high-profile syndicated loan arranged by Credit Suisse worth $600 million were funneledto Vinashin. Vinashin's shoddy management and unsustainable expansion eventually led to a
debt crisis with wider economic implications for the country. Vietnam's sovereign credit rating,
for example, was downgraded to four notches below investment grade by international credit
agencies partly because of the failing shipbuilding company's potential impact on government
finances.
Lenders naturally want to know whether a sovereign borrower can service its debts. But in the
case of Vietnam, how much debt the Hanoi government is on the hook for is a big question
mark. According to official statistics, the outstanding amount of government debt has been
expanding quickly and is currently at 60% of gross domestic product (GDP). However, this
figure does not account for borrowings by state-owned enterprises. If the debt of these entities
are included on the central government's balance sheet, Vietnam's debt position is markedly
worse. Just how much worse is anyone's guess.
Besides Vinashin, Electricity of Vietnam (EVN), Vietnam National Coal and Mineral Industries
Group (Vinacomin) and Vietnam Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) are among several big
state-owned companies carrying high debt loads and seen as potential trouble spots, especially
in a market downturn. The circumstances that catalyzed the Vinashin collapse - government-
directed lending, corruption and a distorted playing field - are still rampant in Vietnam.Unfortunately, the trial last week only focused on individual criminality instead of systemic
malfeasance.
One seemingly logical solution would be to privatize state-owned firms in Vietnam to bring an
end to government-run chaebols. In a press interview on the sidelines of the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit this week Dung conveyed this very point to reassure
foreign investors. Specifically, he pledged to "accelerate equitization to diversify the ownership
of state-owned businesses". However, privatization without transparency and accountability is
no panacea, according to the candid assessment of a World Bank senior economist with
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experience on Vietnam. Instead, "equitization" (communist Vietnam's euphemism for
privatization) could open the door to the looting of public assets. This economist, speaking off
the record, compared the possible outcome in Vietnam to that of Russia in the 1990s when
much of the state sector passed into the hands of a coterie of politically-connected individuals.
Indeed, the bosses of many of Vietnam's largest investment firms today are the friends and
family of the prime minister. His daughter, Nguyen Thanh Phuong, is the founder and
chairwoman of VietCapital Asset Management. The prime minister's son-in-law, Henry Nguyen,
is the head of IDG Ventures Vietnam, another large private equity fund. Given the level of
corruption in Vietnam, it is not unreasonable to believe that politically favored investors would
have significant advantages in any equitization deal. As demonstrated by the Vinashin saga,
there are currently no checks and balances.
A developing country surely requires talented and successful businesspeople, including those
who are related to political leaders. What Vietnam can do without are Russian-style oligarchs or
the crony capitalism that contributed to the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. Ultimately, what
Vietnam sorely needs is equal doses of fundamental economic and political reforms. Only byleveling the economic playing field, ensuring transparency through a free media, and generating
democratic reforms and accountability, can there be no more Vinashins.
Asian Bloc Split on Disputes With ChinaThe Wall Street Journal, 4 Apr. 2012
Southeast Asian leaders closed a two-day summit by uniting behind a call to bring Myanmar into
the international mainstream, but remained divided over thornier issues involving territorialdisputes with the region's powerhouse, China. Leaders of the 10-member Association of
Southeast Asian Nations, in a closing statement issued Wednesday by host nation Cambodia,
urged Western nations to drop sanctions on Myanmar following Sunday's groundbreaking
elections in that country. ASEAN leaders found it harder to reach some common ground on how
to approach resolving territorial disputes in the South China Sea, a resource-rich stretch of
water that carries around half of the world's total trade and is claimed in whole or part by China,
the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino III urged the group's nations to draft a code of conduct on
how to resolve competing claims in the waters, which have heated up in the past year. ThePhilippines and Vietnam allege that Chinese naval vessels have harassed oil-exploration
vessels working in what United Nations maritime laws define as these countries' domestic
economic zones. Under the Philippine plan, which was backed by Vietnam, ASEAN would
present its proposal to China for further discussion. Beijing has sought to exert influence over
ASEAN's deliberations over how strong a stance it should take against China, diplomats say,
pointing to a state visit to Cambodia by China's President Hu Jintao shortly before the summit
began. Chinese officials weren't immediately available for comment.
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On Wednesday, the Philippines and Vietnam urged Cambodia, Asean's chair this year, to make
it clear that Asean alone would craft its version of the proposed code of conduct before bringing
China into process. In its closing statement, Cambodia didn't mention the South China Sea
controversy. Speaking to reporters, Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, a strong ally of Beijing
and a major recipient of Chinese aid, dismissed speculation that his country was being
pressured by China to block the discussions. "I've never heard of any suggestion from China's
leaders that Cambodia should do this or do that," Mr. Hun Sen told reporters. China denies
allegations that it has sabotaged oil exploration in Vietnamese or Philippine waters. But Beijing
has publicly warned the Philippines and Vietnam to seek its permission before drilling for oil and
natural gas.
ASEAN Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan said a failure by Asian nations to resolve their
differences over how to approach the South China Sea problems could undermine how
investors perceive the stability of the region. "They have the right to be concerned," Mr. Surin
said in an interview. "We're a bright spot in the world. If anything derails our growth, it would
have important implications." In the meantime, Mr. Surin said, there will be informal discussions
with China over the code, which is envisioned as a legally binding document to guide theresolution of territorial disputes.
The ASEAN nations had few difficulties speaking with a common voice over member-nation
Myanmar, which has enacted a series of changes that appear to have brought a greater degree
of democracy to the formerly military-run state. Delegates were gushing in their praise for
Myanmar President Thein Sein, after a series of by-elections Sunday that were marked by a
strong turnout for pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi and her party.
Cambodia's Mr. Hun Sen said ASEAN would first urge the European Union to drop stiff political
and economic sanctions against the former military state, which is also known as Burma, "We
called for the lifting of all sanctions on Myanmar immediately in order to contribute positively to
the democratic process and economic development in that country," the Asean leaders said in a
statement. The elections in Myanmar were for 45 vacant seats in the country's 664-seat
parliament, but assumed huge significance because Ms. Suu Kyi was among the winning
candidates after two decades as a political prisoner.
Vietnam Craves Rhino Horn; Costs More Than Cocaine
By Mike Ives, Associated Press, 04 Mar. 2012
Nguyen Huong Giang loves to party but loathes hangovers, so she ends her whiskey benders
by tossing back shots of rhino horn ground with water on a special ceramic plate. Her father
gave her the 4-inch (10-centimeter) brown horn as a gift, claiming it cures everything from
headaches to cancer. Vietnam has become so obsessed with the fingernail-like substance it
now sells for more than cocaine. "I don't know how much it costs," said Giang, 24, after showing
off the horn in her high-rise apartment overlooking the capital, Hanoi. "I only know it's
expensive."
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Experts say Vietnam's surging demand is threatening to wipe out the world's remaining
rhinoceros populations, which recovered from the brink of extinction after the 1970s thanks to
conservation campaigns. Illegal killings in Africa hit the highest recorded level in 2011 and are
expected to worsen this year. This week South Africa called for renewed cooperation with
Vietnam after a "shocking number" of rhinos have already been reported dead this year. China
has long valued rhino horn for its purported though unproven medicinal properties, but
U.S. officials and international wildlife experts now say Vietnam's recent intense craving, blamed
partly on a widespread rumor that rhino horn cures cancer, is putting unprecedented pressure
on the world's estimated 28,000 remaining animals, mainly in South Africa.
"It's a very dire situation," U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe said by telephone.
"We have very little cushion for these populations in the wild." Although data on the global rhino
horn trade is scarce, poaching in Africa has soared in the past two years, with American officials
saying China and Vietnam are driving the trade that has no "significant" end market in the
United States. Wildlife advocates say that over the last decade, rhino horn has become a must-
have luxury item for some Vietnamese nouveau riche, alongside Gucci bags and expensive
Maybach cars. Between 2006 and 2008, three diplomats at the Vietnamese Embassy in Pretoriawere linked to embarrassing rhino trafficking scandals including one caught on tape. In
February, U.S. agents busted an alleged interstate rhino horn trafficking syndicate with
Vietnamese-American ringleaders.
According to a court affidavit obtained by The Associated Press, Felix Kha, one of the alleged
traffickers arrested in the recent U.S. bust, allegedly traveled to China 12 times between 2004
and 2011 and to Vietnam five times last year. "There are still horns going into China but
Vietnam is driving the increase in poaching for horns," said Chris R. Shepherd, deputy regional
director for Southeast Asia at the wildlife advocacy group TRAFFIC. "Vietnamese authorities
really need to step up their efforts to find out who is behind horn trafficking ... and put them outof business."
The rhino horn craze offers bigger payoffs than other exotic wildlife products such as bear bile
or tiger bone paste. American officials say the crushed powder fetches up to $55,000 per
kilogram in Asia ($25,000 per pound) a price that can top the U.S. street value of cocaine,
making the hoof-like substance literally as valuable as gold. The drive is so great, thieves are
now pinching rhino horns from European museums and taxidermy shops, sometimes smashing
them off with sledgehammers before fleeing. According to Europol, the European law
enforcement agency, 72 rhino horns were stolen from 15 European countries in 2011, the first
year such data was recorded.
Poachers in South Africa are also using chain saws to rip rhinos' horns off, mutilating the hulky
animals while they're still alive and leaving oozing bloody cavities in the heads of those lucky
enough to survive. Sometimes, they simply shoot the beasts dead, even though the horns can
grow back within two years without harming the animal if carefully cut. Officials and nonprofits in
South Africa are preemptively cutting some rhinos' horns in an attempt to save them, but some
poachers are killing anyway just for the nubs.
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Vietnam wiped out its own last known Javan rhinoceros in 2010, despite the country's earlier
efforts to protect it. The last of the population was found dead in a national park, shot through
the leg with its horn hacked off. Tran Dang Trung, who manages a zoo outside Hanoi that
imported four white rhinos from South Africa, said he worries for the animals' safety even though
the zoo has 24-hour security. "If thieves wanted to kill the animals and steal their valuable parts,
they could," Trung said recently outside the rhinos' basketball court-sized outdoor pen.
Laws in Vietnam surrounding the business of importing horns are murky and crackdowns are
rare despite government pledges to root out traffickers. Officially, no more than 60 horns are
legally imported into Vietnam as trophies bagged from South African game farms each year, but
international wildlife experts have estimated the actual number of trophy horns taken by
Vietnamese nationals from South Africa each year may exceed 100.
Earlier this week, the South African government said it was working with the Vietnamese to stop
the potential abuse of hunting permits. Hanoi has also been asked to conduct inspections to
make sure rhino trophies imported from South Africa still remain in the hunters' possession. It's
impossible to track how other rhino horns are entering Vietnam, wildlife advocates say, but theypoint to local media reports suggesting Vietnamese diplomats are implicated in the international
trade that's been largely banned since 1976.
In 2006, a diplomat at Vietnam's South African Embassy was arrested for trafficking rhino horn,
while another was filmed two years later trading the substance outside the mission's gates. A
third diplomat was also questioned that same year after 18 kilograms (40 pounds) of rhino horn
was found in his car outside a casino. In a statement, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Luong
Thanh Nghi said those incidents reflected badly upon Vietnam's image, and that the diplomats
all faced disciplinary measures.
Meanwhile, illegal rhino killings in South Africa are skyrocketing from 122 in 2009 to 333 in
2010 and a record 448 in 2011. The country reported last week that 150 rhinos had already
been poached this year, nearly 60 percent taken from Kruger National Park. In Hanoi,
Vietnamese buy rhino horn on the streets of the city's bustling old quarter, where a traditional
medicine dealer recently told the AP that the average prescription costs 200,000 dong ($10).
Hanoi doctors report that some of their clients take the powder as a supplement to western
medicines, believing it cures fever and other common ailments. Others use it as a last-ditch
effort against cancer.
Nguyen Huu Truong, a doctor at Hanoi's Center for Allergy Clinical Immunology, said a handfulof patients visit him each year complaining of rashes he links to rhino horn consumption. "Many
Vietnamese believe that anything expensive is good, but if you're going to spend a lot of money
on rhino horn, you might as well bite your nails," he said. Rhino horns are composed of keratin,
a protein found in human hair and fingernails. Giang, the young Vietnamese woman who
regularly uses rhino horn to prevent hangovers, says she's unfazed by doctors' assessments of
the substance's efficacy and doesn't care to know how her father acquired the horn.
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Experts say some rhino horns passing through Vietnam are fakes, and the AP couldn't verify the
authenticity of Giang's horn, which she grinds on a plate with a rough finish made specifically for
the task. She ingests the liquefied form when she has allergic reactions or after tippling on too
much top-shelf liquor. Because Giang only takes rhino horn shots once or twice every three
months, she estimates her horn will last another 10 to 15 years. But once her stash is depleted,
there may not be any rhinos left on earth to satisfy her craving.
Red Cross Issued an Emergency Appeal to Fight Disease in VietnamVOA 03 Apr. 2012
The Vietnam Red Cross has launched a public education campaign to fight the spread of hand,
foot and mouth disease in Vietnam. The organization issued an emergency appeal Tuesday for
nearly $1 million in international donations to help fund a campaign aimed at more than 750,000
people in 13 provinces. The Red Cross says there have been more than 15,000 cases of hand,
foot and mouth disease reported in Vietnam so far this year - seven times higher than during the
same period in 2011 - and a more virulent strain of the disease has killed 11 children.
Bhupinder Tomar, head of the Vietnam Red Cross, tells VOA the most common methods of
prevention will reduce the spread of HFMD. "The campaign is very simple, because this
disease is very simple," Tomar explained. "It's an epidemic that has no medical cure to it, but it
can be prevented by just washing your hands, and improving the general hygiene in the
population. And so the campaign is largely targeted at caregivers and in schools, where the
young kids are out of their homes, and during the day they are living with the caretakers."
The Red Cross says it will mobilize 2,700 volunteers for door-to-door visits to homes and day-
care centers, and it plans community information sessions. Tomar says the Vietnamesegovernment has been pro-active in the public relations effort, sending out notices at its lowest
government levels, including in communes and provinces, to increase preventative measures.
The campaign will continue for the next nine months, to cover the two peak periods for HFMD -
between April and May, and then in August and September.
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Thnh ti phm v tha hnh v c u i
Khng nn t thm bt c loi thu, ph noNgui lm chnh sch cn ngh su, nhn xa
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