Samsung Vietnam’s 2021 revenue tops 74 billion USD

 

 Samsung Vietnam earned 74.2 billion USD in revenue last year, up 14% annually despite pandemic woes.  The company’s export value hit 65.5 billion USD, up 16% year on year, according to its 2021 business report released on Thursday.

Their accomplishments are attributed to following COVID-19 safety measures and the all-round support of the governments and authorities where their factories are located.

Over 50% of Samsung mobiles are made in Vietnam and exported to 128 countries and territories all over the world.

Director General of Samsung Vietnam Choi Joo-ho said an additional investment of hundreds of million USD are poured into Vietnam every year to keep their production going as well as improve productivity and quality.

By the end of 2021, Samsung Vietnam’s total accumulated investment capital hit 18 billion USD. It is running six factories in Bac Ninh and Thai Nguyen province and Ho Chi Minh City.

 

 

Source: VOV5

 

Vietnam Airlines resumes regular flights to Europe from January 24

 National flag carrier Vietnam Airlines announced on Friday its plan to resume regular flights between Vietnam and the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Russia, starting next Monday. Vietnam Airlines plans to make the first regular flight from Hanoi to London on Monday, which will transit through Paris and then fly back to Hanoi.

Three days later, on Thursday, the airline will continue to operate the first regular flight between Hanoi and Frankfurt.

The carrier plans to operate one flight a week connecting Hanoi and Moscow, beginning next Saturday.

Wide-body Boeing 787 and Airbus A350 aircrafts will be used for these flights.

The final operation plan will depend on the approval by authorities and be updated by Vietnam Airlines to passengers in case of any changes.

 

 

Source: VOV5

 

Homeland Spring Program 2022: Overseas Vietnamese visit Tay Thien relic site

 Overseas Vietnamese returning to Vietnam to attend the Homeland Spring Program 2022, began their activities in Vinh Phuc province on Friday. 

They visited Tay Thien relic site and met with local leaders and businesspeople. Tay Thien is a famous natural scenic spot, a landmark where the Vietnamese descended to settle in the Delta, and one of Buddhist cradles of Vietnam.

On Saturday the delegation will visit President Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum, offer incense at the Thang Long Imperial Citadel, meet with leaders of the Vietnam Fatherland Front, and attend a reception hosted by the Prime Minister. A special art show will give them the full spring experience in the homeland.

 

 

Source: VOV5

 

Vice President receives First Officer of Hungarian National Assembly

 

 Vice President Vo Thi Anh Xuan said on Friday that Vietnam respects and wishes to strengthen cooperation with Hungary. At a reception for First Officer of the Hungarian National Assembly Márta Mátrai in Hanoi on Friday, Mrs. Xuan hailed Hungary’s success in handling the COVID-19 pandemic, reopening tourism, and developing their economy.

She said both countries have a lot of opportunities to enhance economic cooperation, including the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA) and EU-Vietnam Investment Protection Agreement (EVIPA).

Mrs. Mátrai expressed her satisfaction with the results of meetings with Vietnamese leaders. Both sides agreed to strengthen cooperation between the two National Assemblies, maintain meetings between Committees and Parliamentary Groups, and share experiences in legislative work.

 

 

Source: VOV5

 

Tet gifts offered to poor workers, people affected by COVID-19

 

Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam presented 200 gifts to poor workrers and those with serious illnesses, or affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in Thua Thien-Hue province as the Lunar New Year (Tet) holiday approaches. At the Tuberculosis and Lung Hospital of Thua Thien-Hue province, Deputy Prime Minister Dam said, “Dozens of families in the province have suffered the grief of losing their loved ones. Almost all of you have been troubled by disruptions to your livelihood. On behalf of the Party and State, I would like to offer the best New Year wishes to all of you. I’m sincerely grateful for all the hard work that people and authorities of Thua Thien-Hue province have done during such a really difficult year in 2021. Let’s try together to boost production after the Tet holiday to seize back what we lost over the past two years.”

The same day, in Tay Ninh province, Nguyen Trong Nghia, Secretary of the Party Central Committee and Head of the Party Central Committee’s Commission for Communications and Education, visited a local martyrs’ cemetery and the 5th Infantry Division. He presented gifts to policy families and poor households in Chau Thanh district and also to poor workers at an industrial park in Go Dau district.

Bui Thi Minh Hoai, Head of the Party Central Committee’s Commission for Mass Mobilization, presented Tet gifts to heroic mothers, beneficiary families, and the poor in Dak Lak province. Earlier, at an art program in Buon Don border district, she presented gift sets, bicycles, scholarships, and 22,000 USD in cash to local people.

 

 

Source: VOV5

 

UK, Australia oppose actions that escalate tensions in East Sea

 

 The UK and Australia on Friday underlined the importance of countries being able to exercise their maritime rights and freedoms in the South China Sea (called the East Sea in Vietnam) consistent with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), including freedom of navigation and overflight. The annual Foreign and Defense Ministerial Dialogue of UK and Australia on Friday released a joint statement, reiterating their strong opposition to actions that raise tensions, including the militarization of disputed features, the dangerous use of coast guard and maritime militia and efforts to disrupt other countries’ utilization of their offshore resources.

In the joint statement, the British and Australian ministers affirmed their continued support for an open, inclusive and resilient Indo-Pacific region, in which the sovereign rights of all countries are respected. The two sides also pledged to continue working with their partners to ensure that the region is underpinned by rules and norms, without coercion, and that disputes are resolved peacefully and in accordance with international law.

 

 

Source: VOV5

Thich Nhat Hanh, Poetic Peace Activist, Master of Mindfulness, Dies at 95

Thich Nhat Hanh, the Buddhist monk, poet and peace activist who in the 1960s came to prominence as an opponent of the Vietnam War, died Saturday at 95 surrounded by his followers in the temple where his spiritual journey began.

“The International Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism announces that our beloved teacher Thich Nhat Hanh passed away peacefully at Tu Hieu Temple in Hue, Vietnam, at 00:00hrs on 22nd January, 2022, at the age of 95,” said his official Twitter account.

In a majestic body of works and public appearances spanning decades, Thich Nhat Hanh spoke in gentle yet powerful tones of the need to “walk as if you are kissing the earth with your feet.”

He suffered a stroke in 2014 that left him unable to speak and returned to Vietnam to live out his final days in the central city of Hue, the ancient capital and his place of birth, after spending much of his adult life in exile.

As a pioneer of Buddhism in the West, he formed the “Plum Village” monastery in France and spoke regularly on the practice of mindfulness – identifying and distancing oneself from certain thoughts without judgment – to the corporate world and his international followers.

“You learn how to suffer. If you know how to suffer, you suffer much, much less. And then you know how to make good use of suffering to create joy and happiness,” he said in a 2013 lecture.

“The art of happiness and the art of suffering always go together.”

Born Nguyen Xuan Bao in 1926, Thich Nhat Hanh was ordained as a monk as modern Vietnam’s founding revolutionary Ho Chi Minh led efforts to liberate the Southeast Asian country from its French colonial rulers.

Thich Nhat Hanh, who spoke seven languages, lectured at Princeton and Columbia universities in the United States in the early 1960s. He returned to Vietnam in 1963 to join a growing Buddhist opposition to the U.S.-Vietnam War, demonstrated by self-immolation protests by several monks.

“I saw communists and anti-communists killing and destroying each other because each side believed they had a monopoly on the truth,” he wrote in 1975.

“My voice was drowned out by the bombs, mortars and shouting.”

Like a pine tree

Toward the height of the Vietnam War in the 1960s he met civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., whom he persuaded to speak out against the conflict.

King called Thich Nhat Hanh “an apostle of peace and non-violence” and nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize.

“I do not personally know of anyone more worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize than this gentle Buddhist monk from Vietnam,” King wrote in his nomination letter.

While Thich Nhat Hanh was in the United States to meet King a year earlier, the South Vietnamese government banned him from returning home.

Fellow monk Haenim Sunim, who once acted as Thich Nhat Hanh’s translator during a trip to South Korea, said the Zen master was calm, attentive and loving.

“He was like a large pine tree, allowing many people to rest under his branches with his wonderful teaching of mindfulness and compassion,” Haemin Sunim told Reuters.

“He was one of the most amazing people I have ever met.”

Thich Nhat Hanh’s works and promotion of the idea of mindfulness and meditation have enjoyed a renewed popularity as the world reels from the effects of a coronavirus pandemic that has killed over a million people and upended daily life.

“Hope is important, because it can make the present moment less difficult to bear,” Thich Nhat Hanh wrote. “If we believe that tomorrow will be better, we can bear a hardship today.

“If you can refrain from hoping, you can bring yourself entirely into the present moment and discover the joy that is already here.”

 

Source: Voice of America