Vietnam Deel 2

Deals and debts: Young people in Ho Chi Minh City turn to credit cards

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Young people in Ho Chi Minh City opt to use credit cards because of favorable deals but fall prey to debts. Photo: Cong Trieu / Tuoi Tre


Credit services can be a double-edged sword.
While many young people in Ho Chi Minh City find them a good tool to enjoy promotion and discounts, others slip into unpayable debts.
“I want it, I get it," said Le Quang, a 27-year-old blue-collar worker in Tan Phu District, Ho Chi Minh City.
"Credit services will take care.
"It’s nonsense to save up enough money for things you desire.
"If I apply for a loan, an interest rate will be the same.”

Deal hunting
With more than four years of experience and five credit cards, 28-year-old Duong Gia Hung in Tan Binh District said he was a 'worshipper' of technology and cashless payment. Besides meeting standards on income and passbooks, to enjoy the highest credit card limit of VND56 million (US$2,400), he has to fully comprehend how the system works and have a 'flawless' history of transactions.

Although card maintenance fees range from VND3 million ($130) to VND4 million ($173) per year, Hung said it was a fair trade-off and he knew ways to derive benefits.
“Allowing holders to buy first, pay later and offering good deals are the attraction of credit cards," he said.
"As I have to spend on so many things, special offers can make up for card maintenance fees and even generate profits.”

Ho Thi Ngan, 31, in District 3 said she 'hunted' for deals, cashback, and points by using credit cards to pay for her acquaintances’ air tickets, bills, and shopping. The plan, however, did backfire: a friend once refused to pay her back for an item, causing her to lose all of the money and bear an additional penalty for late payment.

Ngan said as credit cards were becoming common, banks eased provisions and proceedings. The number of people losing the ability to pay and fleeing to escape loans is on the rise, according to Ngan.
“One of my friends is too into deals that he could not control his spending," she said.
"He had to flee to avoid paying debts.
"Of course, his name is on the black list now."

Dead end
For young professionals who generate stable income, using finance solutions including credit for daily expenditure can help to save even more.

Painstakingly cleaning a brand-new motorbike in front of his tenanted house in Tan Phu District, Quang Thai, 37, originally from the Mekong Delta province of Ben Tre, proudly told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper that it was a reward after a belt-tightening period.
“We’d ridden a ramshackle motorbike for years," he said.
"Although fixing expenses may reach millions of dong per month, we had to endure the pain because of having no money to buy a better bike.
“Realiszing that saving is not a solution, we made an installment instead.
"Eventually, we paid off the loan."

Adoring his new motorbike, bought at VND100 million ($4,336), 26-year-old personal trainer Tran Trung in District 9, which is now Thu Duc City, said he weighed all pros and cons before pulling out a wallet as his savings at the time were only VND45 million ($1,950). To buy the vehicle, he had to sign a loan contract of VND70 million ($3,000) with a credit company.
“I have to pay VND5 million [$216] a month, for both the principal and interest, in 18 months," said Trung, adding he had to state his income to apply for the loan.
"I’m not so sure whether I can make it.”

To Le Hong Gam, 27, in Tan Binh District, owning a motorbike is not as simple as it sounds. In early 2020, Gam bought a motorbike, valued at VND30 million ($1,300), with an installment payment over 12 months. However, by mid-2020, she had been laid off under the pressure of COVID-19, disabling her paying off the debt. Gam had to pawn it for VND13 million ($564).
“VND13 million is just enough to cover the loan," she cried.
"As I had not obtained a vehicle registration, the pawnshop only gave me additional VND6 million [$259] to buy out the motorbike.
"I did not only lose my motorbike but also dozens of millions of dong, eventually.”

Tam, the 32-year-old owner of the H.T. pawnshop in Tan Phu District, said even before the pandemic, it was not strange to know a lot of people running up huge debts on their credit cards.
“It is easy to turn a person into a debtor if he cannot tell the difference between credit and usury," he said.
"For pawning, you still have ways to cover debts while making loans with credit cards, you may be pushed into a dead end.”



Bron: Deals and debts: Young people in Ho Chi Minh City turn to credit cards


Tot slot morgen het grote geld.
 
Southeast Asia's longest road tunnel to close within days of opening

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A view of the Hai Van Tunnel 2 connecting Da Nang and Thua Thien-Hue when it opened on January 11, 2021. Photo by VnExpress/Nguyen Dong.


The Hai Van Tunnel 2 will close after briefly opening during Tet since the government has not invested its share of the cost, the private partner in the project said.

Following its opening on Monday, the tunnel connecting Thua Thien-Hue Province and Da Nang City will allow traffic for 20 days from February 1 before putting up the shutters. Deo Ca Group JSC of HCMC, the private partner in the public - private partnership that built the tunnel, said it costs VND100 billion ($4.33 million) a year to operate the tunnel, but it faces financial issues since it has not received the government’s share of the VND8.52 trillion ($367 million) cost of construction.

This means it could not afford to keep the tunnel open after Lunar New Year, or Tet, it said.

Hai Van Tunnel 2 was envisaged as part of a public - private partnership (PPP) master plan along with three other tunnels in the central region at a total cost of VND21.61 trillion, with the government’s share being VND5 trillion.

The other three have been completed and opened to traffic, and the government duly paid its share of the cost of two of them. Deo Ca Group said in 2017, after paying off the two, the government had VND1.18 trillion left under the master plan. The government has not said why it has delayed payment or when the payments will be made.

Between the 20th of the 12th lunar month and the 10th of the new year, Vietnamese flock home to celebrate the Lunar New Year, and major roads in the entire country would be gridlocked.

Hai Van Tunnel 2, at 6.2 kilometers (3.85 miles), the longest road tunnel in Southeast Asia, is meant to help reduce traffic in an existing tunnel 30 meters away.

Ngo Truong Nam, CEO of Deo Ca Group, said: "This is undesirable but we are waiting for authorities to [resolve] the finance issue." Besides, the company was allowed to collect toll at six stations for 27 years, but has subsequently been told it cannot do so on the La Son – Tuy Loan Expressway in Da Nang because it is a publicly funded highway. Nam said though "closing the tunnel would cause significant losses to the firm," there is no choice.

Last year the Ministry of Transport urged the government on several occasions to pay its share of the tunnel cost and an additional VND2.28 billion to make up for the toll the company could not collect on the La Son – Tuy Loan Expressway.

Nguyen Viet Huy, deputy head of the ministry's PPP investment project management department, said PPP projects must have financial support from the government to safeguard the benefits of all parties. "Closing the tunnel is a loss to both the investor and the public."

He hoped the government would soon take on board the ministry’s recommendation and make payment to the company.



Bron: Southeast Asia's longest road tunnel to close within days of opening - VnExpress International


O-)

Gisteren had ik het over "grote geld en slot". Toen vond ik nog iets over echt groot geld. Waarbij bovenstaande bedragen in de categorie “zakcentje” vallen. .

Morgen dus, zoals het er nu uitziet, het echte slot.
 
Users lost over $1bn to computer viruses in Vietnam in 2020: report

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People wearing balaclavas are silhouetted as they pose with a laptops in front of a screen projected with the word 'cyber' and binary code, in this picture illustration taken in Zenica October 29, 2014. Photo: Reuters


Users in Vietnam had more than US$1 billion stolen by computer viruses in 2020, when cyberattacks hit tens of thousands of people, according to a report by a local tech firm. Those figures were included in a cybersecurity assessment report conducted in December 2020 and unveiled on Tuesday by Vietnamese security software and electronics company Bkav.

Computer viruses caused VND23.9 trillion ($1.03 billion) in losses to users in Vietnam last year, according to the report. Hackers stole hundreds of billions of dong, mostly via cyberattacks aimed at compromising one-time passwords in Internet banking. (VND100 billion = $4.3 million) They duped users into installing spyware on their smartphones to steal the OTP needed for transferring money between bank accounts.

Bkav said it had detected over 15,000 instances of spyware installed on smartphones a month. The VN84App, a piece of OTP collection spyware, infected thousands of smartphones in Vietnam last year, the company pointed out. Experts advised that users should only download apps from official stores while equipping their phones with security software to secure their banking.

Many major e-commerce websites and delivery platforms were compromised and had their data stolen last year, according to Bkav.

The firm warned users against clicking on dubious apps on social media as this could lead to their personal information stolen for wrongful use.



Bron: Users lost over $1bn to computer viruses in Vietnam in 2020: report


Niets aan toe te voegen.
 
Two Vietnamese photographers win big at int'l Monochrome Awards

Two Vietnamese photographers claimed third prizes at the annual International Monochrome Photography Awards.

Le Viet Khanh won third prize in the architecture category for his shot "Buddha on the Top of Indochina" which captured a bronze statue of Buddha on Mount Fansipan at a height of 3,143 meters above sea level.
"This photo is an extremely rare moment when clouds follow the wind over the top of the mountain, but just enough to see this structure. The photo was taken on a very cold winter morning, after all-night-long heavy rain in this mountainous area," Khanh said.
"In order to build this statue, all materials were carried by local porters to the top of the mountain via a narrow steep trail."

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"Buddha on the Top of Indochina" by Le Viet Khanh.


Dubbed the "Roof of Indochina", Fansipan is located in northern Vietnam's Lao Cai Province, nine kilometers southwest of Sa Pa Town, a famous tourism destination.

Another shot titled "Old Man Cham" by Saigon lensman Nguyen Tan Tuan won third prize in the portrait category. The photo depicts an old man from the Cham ethnic minority reading an ancient Cham book.

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"Old Man Cham" by Nguyen Tan Tuan


The Cham are descendents of an ancient kingdom that once spanned large parts of central and southern Vietnam a millennium ago.

The contest attracted 7,000 photographers from 91 countries and territories to compete in categories like abstract, architecture, street, portrait, landscape, beauty, nature, fine arts and nude.

Monochrome Photography Awards organizers said its mission is to celebrate monochrome visions and discover the most amazing photographers worldwide.


Bron: Two Vietnamese photographers win big at int'l Monochrome Awards - VnExpress International


Voor wie meer wil zien: Monochrome Photography Awards - International Black and White Photography Contest - Home
 
Ao dai show livens up ancient Hoi An

A weekly cultural show featuring traditional ao dai is helping Hoi An shake off the pandemic blues.

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The ao dai (Vietnamese long dress) show first commenced at 5:30 p.m. on Jan. 2 at attractions including
Bridge Pagoda, An Hoi Bridge and many streets across the central town.


The “Thuc Giac Hoi An” (Hoi An Awakens) project, created by local authorities and enterprises, seeks to revive tourism following the impact of Covid-19.

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The shows aims to depict
Hoi An as a safe and attractive destination.


The town typically welcomes about five million visitors each year but in 2020, due to the pandemic, the number declined dramatically, forcing many businesses to close.

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Along with conical hats, in this case lit, iron-frame lanterns are signatures of Hoi An.


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Crowds gather to enjoy the performance at Bridge Pagoda. The national relic that appears on VND20,000 bills is an iconic landmark of the 400-year-old town.


The bridge was built in the early 17th century by Japanese traders who once made up a large part of the town’s population.



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Models pose in ao dai, usually made of Vietnamese silk, representing 1920's and 30s aesthetics.


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Many visitors had flocked to Hoi An Saturday night because of the show, according to representatives from the city's Center of Culture, Sports and Broadcasting.


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To welcome visitors to Hoi An in 2021, the ancient town will host folk games as well as eco-friendly flower garland and colored lantern shows.


Vietnam has successfully contained the coronavirus outbreak thanks to efficient quarantine and tracking measures. The country recorded 1,537 infections as of Saturday and 35 deaths, with no community transmissions in over 40 days.



Bron: Ao dai show livens up ancient Hoi An


De tweede dame op de eerste foto mag wel heel voorzichtig haar linker bochten nemen om te voorkomen, dat haar witte Ao Dai vuil wordt.
En op de vijfde foto het enige object in Hoi An, dat ik zelf echt de moeite waard vind: de schitterende Japanse brug.
 
Monkeys vandalize neighborhood in Ho Chi Minh City

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Three monkeys climb on the roofs of houses in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City in this supplied photo.


A troop of monkeys has been causing trouble in a neighborhood in Ho Chi Minh City, and local authorities have yet to come up with a proper way to deal with the issue.

The situation has been taking place in a neighborhood in Thanh Xuan Ward, District 12. According to the observation of Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper reporters on Tuesday, multiple monkeys were seen on the roofs, fences, electric wires, and trees within the residential area.

The monkeys have long tails, with the fully grown ones weighing about 15 kilograms.



*** Voor de video zie de bron ***


Residents said that several monkeys raised by a local household had escaped about 10 years ago. The primates then inhabited an area on a nearby riverbank with dense vegetation, and the troop eventually grew bigger. Their habitat was recently narrowed down after many trees in the area were chopped down, forcing the monkeys to head back to the residential area to find food.

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Monkeys are seen in a neighborhood in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City in this supplied photo.


The troop has about 15 to 16 monkeys, Le Thi My Lien, a 56-year-old resident, said, adding that they often come in groups of five or six and eat fruits from trees grown by locals. The primates sometimes sneak into Lien’s grocery store and steal snacks. They also make loud noises as they jump on the roofs. “A monkey once attacked a dog and bit the dog’s ear. Many people are worried that the monkeys may also harm their children,” Lien stated.


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A monkey climbs on the fence of a house in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City in this supplied photo.


Trinh Thi Ngan, 62, said she had set up a trap on her house roof but has been unable to catch any monkeys so far. “Other residents are also trying to capture these monkeys so that they no longer vandalize our neighborhood,” Ngan elaborated.

Nguyen Xuan Dat, chairman of the People’s Committee in Thanh Xuan Ward, told Tuoi Tre that the administration had received reports from local residents and is seeking assistance from the municipal forest protection department to deal with the situation.


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A monkey trap is set up at a house in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City, January 12, 2021. Photo: Ngoc Khai / Tuoi Tre


According to a representative of the city’s forest protection department, the troop of monkeys has the characteristics of the macaque species, which is listed in Appendix 2 of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

Residents should not handle the animals themselves and should instead contact competent authorities, he added.



Bron: Monkeys vandalize neighborhood in Ho Chi Minh City


Bij het horen van de karaoke-aso’s hier met hun grote bek (met o.a. het bedreigen van dorpsgenoten etc.) moet ik vaak denken aan het gezegde: “als ze hersenen zouden hebben, zouden het apen zijn”.

Dit artikel toont het gelijk van het gezegde aan.

Inmiddels zijn er een aantal met behulp van een verdovingspistool gevangen en naar het Cu Chi Wildlife Rescue Station gebracht. Zie Ho Chi Minh City tranquilizes rampaging monkeys

Goh, zou dat ook voor de aso’s hier de oplossing zijn? Ik bied me onmiddellijk als schutter aan. :+

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Monkeys vandalize neighborhood in Ho Chi Minh City

Bekijk bijlage 1588610
Three monkeys climb on the roofs of houses in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City in this supplied photo.


A troop of monkeys has been causing trouble in a neighborhood in Ho Chi Minh City, and local authorities have yet to come up with a proper way to deal with the issue.

The situation has been taking place in a neighborhood in Thanh Xuan Ward, District 12. According to the observation of Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper reporters on Tuesday, multiple monkeys were seen on the roofs, fences, electric wires, and trees within the residential area.

The monkeys have long tails, with the fully grown ones weighing about 15 kilograms.



*** Voor de video zie de bron ***


Residents said that several monkeys raised by a local household had escaped about 10 years ago. The primates then inhabited an area on a nearby riverbank with dense vegetation, and the troop eventually grew bigger. Their habitat was recently narrowed down after many trees in the area were chopped down, forcing the monkeys to head back to the residential area to find food.

Bekijk bijlage 1588611
Monkeys are seen in a neighborhood in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City in this supplied photo.


The troop has about 15 to 16 monkeys, Le Thi My Lien, a 56-year-old resident, said, adding that they often come in groups of five or six and eat fruits from trees grown by locals. The primates sometimes sneak into Lien’s grocery store and steal snacks. They also make loud noises as they jump on the roofs. “A monkey once attacked a dog and bit the dog’s ear. Many people are worried that the monkeys may also harm their children,” Lien stated.


Bekijk bijlage 1588612
A monkey climbs on the fence of a house in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City in this supplied photo.


Trinh Thi Ngan, 62, said she had set up a trap on her house roof but has been unable to catch any monkeys so far. “Other residents are also trying to capture these monkeys so that they no longer vandalize our neighborhood,” Ngan elaborated.

Nguyen Xuan Dat, chairman of the People’s Committee in Thanh Xuan Ward, told Tuoi Tre that the administration had received reports from local residents and is seeking assistance from the municipal forest protection department to deal with the situation.


Bekijk bijlage 1588613
A monkey trap is set up at a house in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City, January 12, 2021. Photo: Ngoc Khai / Tuoi Tre


According to a representative of the city’s forest protection department, the troop of monkeys has the characteristics of the macaque species, which is listed in Appendix 2 of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

Residents should not handle the animals themselves and should instead contact competent authorities, he added.



Bron: Monkeys vandalize neighborhood in Ho Chi Minh City


Bij het horen van de karaoke-aso’s hier met hun grote bek (met o.a. het bedreigen van dorpsgenoten etc.) moet ik vaak denken aan het gezegde: “als ze hersenen zouden hebben, zouden het apen zijn”.

Dit artikel toont het gelijk van het gezegde aan.

Inmiddels zijn er een aantal met behulp van een verdovingspistool gevangen en naar het Cu Chi Wildlife Rescue Station gebracht. Zie Ho Chi Minh City tranquilizes rampaging monkeys

Goh, zou dat ook voor de aso’s hier de oplossing zijn? Ik bied me onmiddellijk als schutter aan. :+

Bekijk bijlage 1588614
We hebben er hier sinds de avondklok ook last van hoor.
 
“Panda”

Deze dame was met dat stuk hout bezig om een soort sluisdeurtje in de sloot omhoog te draaien. Galant als dat ik altijd ben heb ik dat maar even overgenomen. O-)

Mede daardoor kon ze het poseren voor een foto en het naar beneden doen van het mondkapje natuurlijk niet meer weigeren. :+

Let ook op de “panda-ogen” door het mondkapje.

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Heb ik niet echt op gelet maar zou best kunnen. Voor zover ik mij kan herinneren zat er aan beide kanten zo'n uitsteeksel. Je ziet ze wel vaker dus ik zal eens bij andere kijken hoe die er uit zien.
 
Is it cold enough for you in Vietnam?

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This supplied photo shows Stivi Cooke enjoying coffee at a joint in Hoi An, Quang Nam Province, central Vietnam.


There’s nothing worse than a smug so-and-so telling me jokes about how cold it is. I hope they get murdered by a snowman.

I hate it when foreigners say, ‘Oh, I’m used to it! I’m from (somewhere unspeakably cold and remote).’ Well! Good for you! Go stand up outside for an hour or so and let me know when to put the snow chains on the motorbike.

Among my Western friends in Hoi An, the Irish think this is as cold as back home. The Canadians can’t see what all the fuss is about. The Australians are shocked twice over; once because they can’t get home and twice because they believe they are freezing to death as well. The Europeans are laughing and calling us all snowflakes and wimps.

While the weather lately hasn’t been quite like that of Siberia, it has been chilly enough to break local weather records going back nearly forty years here in Vietnam. Sure, it’s winter and all but this is supposed to be the tropics.

Fashionwise, natives have reacted by dressing for tea parties at the North Pole, just two eyes staring out of parkas, scarves, and beanies but that can be misleading. It scares the heck out of me when I’m on the road. Even in the summertime, a street vendor or local housewife will wear a hoodie when it’s thirty degrees Celsius so it becomes rather hard to judge the personal discomfort they might be feeling during this remarkable cold snap.

Other deceptively dressed folks, generally the blokes, wear Arctic jackets and shorts with flip-flops; again, it’s hard to tell if they are genuinely freezing or can’t afford trousers. Hanoi residents seem to be well-padded for the conditions, which makes it hard to tell if they are harder, tough citizens during the harsh northern wintry months. My coffee shop manager wears a business jacket but his staff are festooned for the winter Olympics; a very odd sight as they pass me my morning cappuccino.

The real indication that it’s colder than the devils’ beer fridge are the expats and visiting foreigners, most of us being furbished in expensive clothes but still shivering more than the locals. The tell-tale presence of really warm gloves gives the game away that you are not local. Not that many Vietnamese do gloves either; I don’t know why, maybe it looks ugly on a motorbike?

The one common dominator in all this is the hoodies; where are all the sparkly ones? The dullest colors I’ve ever encountered and I’m not better attired myself! I went around the place searching for another hoodie as the big freeze started but it seems fashion here only consists of black, red, gray and green. Come to think of it, have you ever noticed how the locals never really wear clothes that stand out? In Ho Chi Minh City maybe, but that’s the trendy university crowd or local schoolchildren wearing unrepeatable slogans on their rigs.

Mind you, I’m a fine one to talk. I’m bundled up in two jackets (and that’s inside the house), and all the other paraphernalia. Fortunately, I have big boots and lovely warm long outdoor socks for these ridiculous occasions. But I have figured out the lack of sock wearing around the place – it’s because the darn things get stretched out every time you take off the shoes to enter a house. I just guess floppy socks are a social no-no in Vietnam.

As much as I’m enjoying moaning about all this while sipping an ice-cold beer, this really does have a sad downside for the locals. There are still thousands trying to recover from the damage of our record-breaking storm season during last November and it’s still bitterly inhospitable chilly north of Hoi An. With smashed crops, houses still awaiting repairs, people living with just a tarpaulin, and warm clothing a scarcity, the tragedy of it is nothing will ever be fixed fast enough. So please, if you’re feeling generous, donate some dough to an organization that’s working on this.

The strangest thing will be forgetting about this lousy climate by March or May. Everything will be swapped for summer togs and sunglasses and complaining that the beer is not cold enough. But in the meantime, me and the dogs are huddled around the electric heater with a nice blanket to avoid the frigid floor tiles. Yeah, great, I live in a country where houses are built for summer.

Still, the trade-off is easy enough to accept; three months of winter and then nine months of summer. And the best part for us in Vietnam is COVID-19 is not locking us down. You can still shake to death at a local bar, munch though chattering teeth at the pizza joint and shudder while shopping in the open markets.



Bron: Is it cold enough for you in Vietnam?


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Blik op de weg

Deze kwam ik tegen toen ik net wegreed bij de dame van eergisteren. Hij was zo vriendelijk om op mijn zwaaien en “photo” roepen even te stoppen. Mijn fiets ook nog even buiten beeld zetten ging teveel tijd kosten vreesde ik dus…

En bij de nabewerking vond ik dat er toch wel veel landschap weggesneden moest worden. Dus de fiets maar laten staan.

Op foto 3 is de dame van eergisteren ook nog te zien.

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Aan de ene kant wel jammer dat we hier in het neederlandsche niet van die creatieve mensen hebben, dat zou het straatbeeld toch wel weer wat leuker maken. Ik zeg leuker, ik heb het niet over veiliger.... ;-)
 
Sluizen

De opmerking van Jaap43 in Vietnam Deel 2 maakte me toch wel nieuwsgierig. Dus heb ik tijdens een fietstochtje gisteren wat meer op dit soort sluisjes gelet.

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Ik ben er ruwweg een stuk of 20 tegengekomen. Geen enkele met ook maar iets van een hendel.

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Wel enkele zonder sluisdeur. :+

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Eigenlijk verwonderde me dat ook helemaal niet.

Ik bedoel dat bv. alle stenen hokjes om afval te dumpen in zeer korte tijd tot tuinpad o.i.d. gepromoveerd waren. Zie o.a.. Vietnam Deel 2

Toen in mijn halfjaar in HCM de straat werd geasfalteerd en die mensen op mijn verzoek netjes van asfalt een opritje maakten om de motor het huis in te duwen stond de overbuurman in no-time dat weg te scheppen en tegen zijn eigen huis te storten. Zie Vietnam voor de foto’s.

Dus de hendels kunnen zijn afgebroken omdat het als bij zoveel objecten gewoon Vietnamees pisbakkenstaal is of men had er “een betere bestemming” voor. Kies zelf maar.

Tja, zoals Paul de Leeuw al zei: “Immens botte domheid”. En als je zijn opmerking beperkt tot het kleine stukje omgeving waar ik woon, is hij nog mild (als ik ook even mijn sluis mag open zetten O-) ).
 
Toen in mijn halfjaar in HCM de straat werd geasfalteerd en die mensen op mijn verzoek netjes van asfalt een opritje maakten om de motor het huis in te duwen stond de overbuurman in no-time dat weg te scheppen en tegen zijn eigen huis te storten. Zie Vietnam voor de foto’s.
Het asfalt van de straat of van jouw opritje? In het laatste geval had ik 'm toch graag even kennis willen laten maken met de platte kant van z'n schep........
 
Mijn opritje.
En zoals zo vaak hier begreep de man echt niet waarom Minh daar wat over opmerkte. Ze was blijkbaar wel scherp genoeg want met dezelfde uitgestreken smoel als waarmee hij het weghaalde bracht hij het ook weer terug.
 
Netherlands promises to help Thu Duc City handle urban flooding

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People helps motorbike drivers through a flooded street under the rain on Vo Van Ngan Street of Thu Duc District, HCMC, June 2020. Photo by VnExpress/Quynh Tran.


The Dutch government will support HCMC and its newly created Thu Duc City with urban development, including flood mitigation.

At a meeting with Dutch diplomats in Vietnam, deputy chairman of Ho Chi Minh City, Le Hoa Binh, said he hoped "the Netherlands will help Thu Duc City deal with urban flooding and make it a new city that is sustainable and adapts well to climate change."

Thu Duc City, created by merging districts 2, 9 and Thu Duc, comes into being in March this year. It is expected to function as an "innovative urban area" encompassing the hi-tech park in District 9, the university precinct in Thu Duc District and the new urban area and financial center on the Thu Thiem Peninsula in District 2, helping fulfill HCMC’s plans to become a smart city.

Elizabeth Akkerman, the Dutch ambassador to Vietnam, said the Netherlands would help HCMC and Thu Duc City become smart cities and prevent flooding and provide them with advanced construction technologies. HCMC and the Dutch government have so far signed several memorandums of understanding in areas like flood protection and water supply.

In May 2019 HCMC sent a delegation of officials and experts to the Netherlands to study its urban development and flood management methods. Recently the city Department of Foreign Affairs announced that the Dutch government and businesses seek to carry out an anti-flooding project in Thu Duc City in the form of a public-private partnership at a cost of more than $1 billion. To carry it out, the Dutch government requires the city’s guarantee, support and preferential conditions, Tran Phuoc Anh, acting director of the department, said. The department has called for completing the formalities for the project, he said.

District 2, home to a large expat community, suffers regular flooding after heavy rains. Thu Duc District is the most elevated area in HCMC, but that has not helped it escape seasonal flooding, and its residents suffer from inundation of streets and even houses every time there is heavy rain or a high tide.

Vo Kim Cuong, the city’s former deputy chief architect, said last September that HCMC’s flood control efforts have been too tardy, and as a result even high places like Thu Duc have seen worsening floods in recent years.

While the existing drainage system is outdated and yet to be upgraded, more buildings have come up across the city, reducing the drainage capacity, Cuong said.



Bron: Netherlands promises to help Thu Duc City handle urban flooding - VnExpress International
 
Thanh

Dit is Thanh, één van Minh’s leerlingen van de Engelse les. Ze zit in groep 4 en is 10 jaar.

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Haar grote hobby is tekenen. Ze begint met het plakken van een frame en gaat daarbinnen tekenen. Alles gaat uit het hoofd. Niks natekenen. Niks overtrekken.

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Daarna kleurt ze de tekeningen in met waterverf en verwijdert de tape. Een paar scans uit haar schetsboek.

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Klopt, de bekende manga-strips. Ik heb het meteen even door Minh laten vragen (ze is hier zowel zaterdag als zondagmiddag).
Haar antwoord was dat ze op internet heeft gezocht wat haar aanspreekt, maar niet specifiek manga heeft getekend.
 
Carve the waves off Nha Trang

Apart from the charms of a beautiful beach, visitors to Bai Dai in Nha Trang can learn the age-old art of surfing, as taught by a young local professional. With surfing as a sport fairly new to Vietnam, Nguyen Thanh Phu, 24, used up his two-year savings some years ago to become a certified surf instructor in Indonesia's Bali island.

Now, his surfing lectures add to the allure of Bai Dai.

Bai Dai is one of Nha Trang's most beautiful beaches, but less crowded than those at the town's center, 20 kilometers distant. Boasting fairly consistent waves all year round, it tempts the adventurous at heart.

Phu's little Bai Dai business consists of a simple cottage with a surfboard that reads "Local Surf" out front. However, starting out proved no smooth sailing at first.


*** Voor video zie de bron


Born and raised in Nha Trang, Phu developed a passion for surfing at age 16. Quitting school due to his family's financial woes, Phu found work at a local school that taught aquatic sports like board surfing, kite surfing and sailing. When it closed down after three years, he had to work in clubs to save up for his dream of opening a surfing class.

To materialize his dream, Phu used his hard earned money to fly to Bali to join an International Surfing Association (ISA) training course and become an ISA certified surf coach. It cost him VND40 million ($1,700), which includes plane tickets, accommodation and one-month course fee.

In 2016, encouraged by his friends and mother, Phu finally managed to open a class of his own, heavily reliant on social media and word-of-mouth to draw patrons. Although his aquatic adventures came at a price, Phu feels content since surfing has brought him freedom, calm and the ability to face challenges. "Surfing is life. You don't give in in front of a great wave. If you fall, you swim back to brave another," he said.


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Nguyen Thanh Phu has managed to carve out his own path in life. Photo courtesy of Phu.


What Phu loves best about his job is seeing students catch their first waves. The feeling of joy, according to him, is ineffable. He said despite being a new sport in Vietnam, surfing is easy to approach. "It's not too difficult for first-timers. Even kids can surf. It only takes two hours to get familiarized with and stand on the board," he said.


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Nguyen Thanh Phu teaches a group of South Koreans in Bai Dai. Photo courtesy of Phu.


According to the young instructor, the ideal time for surfing is from the end of September to April, when wave and wind conditions are at their finest.

Via his classes, Phu wants to spread the love of surfing locally and help tourists enjoy the ocean to the fullest. "Surfing will make the journey on the coast more interesting," he said.



Bron: Carve the waves off Nha Trang - VnExpress International


De naam Bai Dai zei mij niets, maar volgens Google maps ligt het ca. 10 km. ten noorden van het vliegveld. Dat betekent vrij dicht bij de serie hotels etc. die daar worden gebouwd. Niet te hopen dat zijn hele businessplan daarop gericht is. O-)
 
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