Two
ethnic minority girls wear masks while selling flowers to tourists at Tham Ma slope, northern mountain Hà Giang province. (Photo courtesy of the MoH)
Hanoi (VNA) - The
Ministry of Health and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) have
called on people to take action to prevent
COVID-19 pandemic for sustainable
economic development through a photo series about the lives of ethnic
minority traders in the northern mountain province of Ha Giang.
The photo series is part of a project on
strengthening communication about COVID-19 prevention in the
new normal for
small businesses run by ethnic minorities in the province.
VIETNAM NEWS HEADLINES FEB. 28 Chia sẻ | FaceBookTwitter Email Copy Link Copy link bài viết thành công
28/02/2021 07:14 GMT+7
Vietnam has no COVID-19 case to report on February 28 morning
Vietnam saw no new COVID-19 case over the past 12 hours to 6am February 28, making the national tally unchanged at 2,432, according to the National Steering Committee for COVID-19 Prevention and Control.
Among the total, 1,530 were locally infected, including 837 cases since January 27.
A total 1,844 COVID-19 patients have recovered so far, and the death toll remains at 35.
Among those still under treatment, 32 have tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 once, 50 twice and 100 thrice.
By February 27 afternoon, 10 provinces and cities had gone through 14 consecutive days without new locally-infected cases of COVID-19.
Two junior tourists enjoy riding a buffalo in Tra Que Village. (Photo courtesy of Jack Tran Tours)
Quang
Nam (VNS/VNA) - Buffaloes have been considered close companions
and among the most valuable property of farmers.
For
many farmers in Hoi An in the central province of Quang Nam, buffaloes are also
the highlights of
eco-tours hosted by the
So in the Year of the Buffalo, they have more tales about the animals to tell
than ever.
Tran Van Khoa, sales manager and owner of the company, said that the idea for
the tour came to him on a field trip he took a group of foreigners to
By DA NANG Today / DA NANG Today
January 03, 2021, 11:16 [GMT+7]
In December 2020, Da Nang government granted certificates to 18 Da Nang-developed products for meeting One Commune-One Product (OCOP) standard.
Workers are seen busy at the ‘Ba Lieu Me’ manufacturing establishment in Cam Le District’s Hoa Tho Dong Ward
Of this, seven products were recognised for meeting 4-star standards under the so-called OCOP model, whilst the remainder met 3-star standards.
The OCOP model made its debut in 2008 in Viet Nam, following the model of Japan-initiated ‘One Village, One Product’ and Thailand-developed ‘One Town, One Product’.
It is an economic development programme for rural areas focusing on increasing internal power and values, which is also meant to help with Viet Nam s national target programme on upgrading rural areas.