Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Mango Bay Cup 2011 calling all expat football stars

Mango Bay Phu Quoc, an eco-luxe resort recently featured on the prestigious British Condé Nast Traveller 2011, is set to organize the fourth annual football tournament for the expat community in Vietnam, on May 7, 2011.

This Mango Bay Vietnam's 'Champions League' will take place at Cua Can Stadium on the secluded Phu Quoc island. This year, it will hosts eight expat teams, competing for the title on brand new pitch for a bigger cup (in size only as it is meant to be a fun and relaxing weekend).

US$150 would be the registration fee per team of 10, including 1 goal keeper, 6 starting players and 3 substitutes.

Each player can enjoy a reduced rate of $12 per person for special BBQ night to either celebrate football expertise or drown your sorrow. Each non-player accompanying the team pays $15 for BBQ.

Ronan Le Bihan, Mango Bay's General Manager, is very excited about the event and enthuses, "we expect that this year, our football tournament will attract not only 'the usual suspects' from previous years but also newcomers from the expat community in Vietnam.

"I see it as one of the best ways to socialize and get to know each other better".

After the whole day of playing football, Mango Bay's spa overlooking the beach is a welcoming break for full body massage at $20.

To celebrate this event, Mango Bay is offering a special promotion of stay 3 nights, pay 2, with rooms and bungalows starting from $40 to $75.

Mango Bay, www.mangobayphuquoc.com, has 37 rooms and bungalows constructed using natural materials from the island.

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Opera House to host pianist's homecoming concert

HA NOI – Young pianist Trinh Mai Trang has returned after eight years abroad and will celebrate the occasion with a concert at Ha Noi Opera House on February 23.

"When I came back, I was told that my music might be difficult for audiences to understand," said Trang. "The thought of that scared me. So, I wanted to put together a concert to show people that piano and classical music are not alien."

The programme she selected will include pieces by Mendelssohn, Chopin, Mozart, Beethoven, Schumann and Debussy, each chosen to express the emotions of different stages in a man's life.

For an artist, Trang said, the most painful thing was not finding the sympathy of her audience, so she thought of new ways to make her music accessible. There, her concert will be accompanied by elements from other media, including film and photographs that Trang hopes would help bring her music closer to the audience.

"I will perform with my heart and I expect that the audience will open their minds and hearts," she said.

Trang is also celebrating her recovery from an injury in 2009 that temporarily prevented her from playing piano. She wasn't allowed to touch the piano keys and felt a door had closed in front of her eyes. But, with an unstoppable passion for music, she placed a mirror beside her piano and played on the imaginary keys reflected in the mirror.

As her hands recovered, she had to resume practicing as if she were a beginner.

Trang was born in 1986 and began her musical training at the age of four. She received a scholarship to study at the prestigious Royal Academy of Music in London in 2004. As a soloist, Trang has won many awards, including the top prize at the Paganini Festival, second prize in the Beethoven Competition in London, and the Jacque Samuel Competition's Mozart Prize. She has also performed in festivals in Austria, Italy, the UK, Hungary and Spain. – VNS

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Annual festivities celebrate heritage

Bearing gifts: A procession of offerings at last year's Tran Temple Festival in Nam Dinh City. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Tung

Bearing gifts: A procession of offerings at last year's Tran Temple Festival in Nam Dinh City. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Tung

HA NOI — Countless numbers of people are expected to attend two big ceremonies in Nam Dinh and Ha Nam provinces tonight and early tomorrow morning.

A seal opening ceremony to welcome the new year is being held at the Tran Temple, Loc Vuong Ward in the northern city of Nam Dinh, the cradle of the Tran dynasty in the 13-14th centuries.

The country's leaders, the provincial chairman, the provincial Party committee secretary and the 14 oldest people from Loc Vuong Ward have been invited to attend the ceremony to be held in Thien Truong (upper temple).

This year, replica good luck seals will be issued to the public from 75 spots to prevent disorder. About 10,000-12,000 people are expected to receive seals from the organisation board.

The ceremony is held annually to preserve and bring into play cultural and moral values and traditions of the Vietnamese ancestors, especially the national heroes under the Tran dynasty.

Covering over 10ha in Loc Vuong Ward, 80km south of Ha Noi, the Tran Temple comprises Thien Truong where the 14 Tran kings are worshipped, Co Trach (lower temple) dedicated to General Tran Hung Dao (1228-1300), and Bao Loc Temple, home to the General's tomb and statue.

Tran Hung Dao was famous for his triumphs over the mighty Mongol Yuan dynasty. In Ha Nam Province, six stores of food were set up in the Tran Thuong Temple by the General in 1285 to serve in his second fight against the Mongol Yuan.

Since then, a food ceremony has been held by local people in his honour. The ceremony will be held at 15 spots around the temple and about 50,000 people are expected to attend from 11.05pm tonight.

The main ceremony will take place officially from 10pm-11pm today. — VNS

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Viet Nam donates books to Norway

HA NOI — The Ambassador to Norway Ta Van Thong presented 54 books focusing on traditional Vietnamese culture, cuisine, festivals as well as music videos and films to the Deichmanske library in the Norwegian capital city of Oslo.
This is to help the Vietnamese community in Norway gain a better understand of their homeland.
On the occasion, Ambassador Thong thanked the library for co-operating closely with the Vietnamese Embassy in Norway to provide books for Vietnamese readers living in the Scandinavian country.
He also said he hoped that this will boost co-operation between the library and publishers in Viet Nam.
Deichmanske, which was originally set up in 1785, is the largest public library in Norway and has 16 branches in Oslo.

HSBC funds NGO projects

HCM CITY — HSBC Bank (Viet Nam) yesterday began receiving applications for financial support from international and local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) under its Future First programme.

The applicants should be providers of education and life skills for street children, orphans and children-in-care, as well as vocational training for underprivileged young women in Viet Nam, the banks said in press release.

HSBC Viet Nam last year decided to select and fund more projects using its local Corporate Sustainability budget. In the first year of this local scheme, four projects were funded to the tune of VND710 million.

The total budget estimated for 2011 is VND700 million.

The key areas of focus for Future First projects are formal education; basic early childhood, primary and secondary education; informal education; and vocational training to give individuals the capability, resources and opportunity to pursue their personal and household economic goals. The projects will also offer access to need-based counselling, the release said.

Educational projects will benefit children below 18 years, and life skills and vocational training projects will target youths aged from 15 to 24 years.

The application deadline is February 28. Successful applicants will be announced by the end of March.

Heinz launches ketchup iPad app

HCM City – The Heinz Company has a new ketchup cooking application for the iPad, a programme developed by multi media company Caplan.

Now available at Apple iStores, the application features 57 easy to prepare recipes using ketchup which include original meat, fish and vegetarian dishes.

The recipes also include cooking instructions as well as tips and tricks on how to spice up your favourite recipes.

Application updates for the Ketchup Cookbook will be available each month free of charge. Though currently only available in English, other language versions are likely to follow.

For a preview of the application, cooking enthusiasts can check out www.ketchupcookingapp.com or visit the nearest Apple iStore.

Online drinking contest launched

HA NOI – An online contest entitled The Cheers Challenge at drink-savvy.com has been launched as part of the Good Choices and Good Cheers programme by Asia Pacific Breweries.

The objective of the game is to make fun by getting as high a score as possible in 60 seconds for each game level. There are bonus levels after Level 2 and Level 4 with bonus trivia questions, which allow players to score more points.

In both English and Vietnamese, the contest will continue through May, with top regional scorers each week winning a Sony Cybershot camera and the top regional scorer each month an Apple iPad.

The top three country scorers from each participating country at the end of the contest will compete in The Cheers Challenge Championship, a regional face-off in Singapore. — VNS

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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Saigon Rugby Football Club joins Cambodian League

Saigon Gecko’s play in the last tournament, the Ankor 10s - Photo: The Saigon Rugby Football Club
The Saigon Rugby Football Club will play their first game in the Cambodian Federation of Rugby in Phnom Penh on Feb. 19 after joining the league recently.

“This has been spoken about for some time and it has taken a while to finalise details,” said club president Chris Paget.

“But now it is happening and as it is a massive step forward for the club we also have to step up and commit to all of the games in the League,” Paget said.

Joining the league means that the Geckos will make three trips to Phnom Penh between now and April 9, and host three games in Saigon, plus a final at the end.

There are four teams in the league including the Saigon Geckos and three Cambodian teams: Stade Khmer, Garudas and Sisowath Knights. The games are 15 per side with two 40 minute halves.

One of the Gecko’s players Tom Percasky said, “We are definitely confident of making the final as we are taking over a strong squad.”

The CFR (Cambodian Federation of Rugby) was created in 2000 to unify the rugby efforts in Cambodia and gain recognition and membership in the ARFU (Asian Rugby Football Union). The Federation has played a huge part in developing the sport in Asia and has over 3000 members since it began.

The Saigon Rugby Football club was formed in 1992 and trains regularly at RMIT in District 7 in both touch and contact formats.

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Couple to bike the globe for environmental protection

Starting on Valentine’s Day this year, Thuy Anh and her Spanish husband Guim Valls Teruel will cycle to the UK to spread the message: “Let’s protect the environment!”

Choosing Vietnam’s capital Hanoi as the starting point, the couple will cross an array of Asian and European countries, such as India, Turkey, Greece, Italy, France and Spain, before ending up in London (UK).

The two met in 2009 when she was a reporter for the national youth channel VTV6 and he was a bicyclist on his trip from Beijing (China) to Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

After they first met, Guim was reluctant to leave Vietnam to continue on his journey, but Thuy Anh urged him not to delay his departure. “You have to finish what you’ve started,” she told him.

The two remained in touch and, despite being separated by the distance, their love blossomed. A year later, they got married.

And now, the two are going on a long journey by bicycle together.

“We chose February 14 as the departure date because our [marital] journey started with love,” said Thuy Anh in a press conference yesterday.

Guim has experience travelling by bicycle but Thuy Anh does not. She said she had to refer to similar trips by overseas travelers to pack the luggage and learn how to interact with locals during the trip.

“Born in Hanoi, I cannot imagine how I can cycle around the world, how to eat and sleep with the minimal luggage,” confessed Thuy Anh.

Thuy Anh and Guim will travel on their solar-powered bikes as much as possible and only use other means of transportation when they cannot travel by land.

Apart from the two bikes provided by the sponsors, the couple has to pay all expenses by themselves.

“We are counting on finding some sponsors for the return trip from England through Africa, America and back to Vietnam,” said Thuy Anh.

Currently, VTV6 is the media sponsor for the couples. Thuy Anh and Guim will take pictures and shoot documentaries during their trip to broadcast on VTV6 and sell online.

“This is the trip of a lifetime. We support Thuy Anh and Guim for their pioneering ‘can-do’ spirits. VTV6 will broadcast news about Thuy Anh and Guim so the audience can keep up with their trip and the couple will not feel so lonely as they pedal their way through strange lands. We’re one dynamic reporter short at the station but in return, we gain the exclusive rights to their movies,” said Diem Quynh, deputy head of the Youth Program department, Vietnam National TV.

She also expects the journey to raise the viewers’ awareness of the environment and inspire more people to use public transportation or ride bicycles to reduce human ecological footprint.

For more information on the couple’s journey and sponsorship, visit www.ebwt.org.

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Poignant Chinese AIDS film moves Berlin festival

A heart-wrenching documentary about AIDS sufferers in China and the discrimination they face in their daily lives has won a rapturous reception at the Berlin film festival.

Based on interviews and emails with a wide range of HIV positive people, director Zhao Liang said he hoped the film, Zai Yi Qi ("Together"), could change attitudes in China, where at least 740,000 suffer from the AIDS virus.

Zhao used Internet chat groups to track down many of his subjects, the vast majority of whom refused to show their face for fear of "letting their family down". Several declined to appear on camera at all.

The stories moved many in the audience to tears.

One 30-year-old drug user, known only as "Duckweed", explained how when she found out she had the virus, she planned to kill herself and her four-year-old son, also infected.

"I couldn't see the point of living any more, so I bought some rat poison and put it in our rice. My boy wanted to eat the rice straightaway," she said sobbing.

"But then I thought, 'how can I let him leave the world after only a few years of life?' I changed my mind, I threw the rice away."

Another interviewee plays a recording of his mother's reaction when he tells her he plans to appear in the documentary.

"How can you do this to the family? You're such a disappointment," she tells him. "This should not be exposed."

The three main characters are Hu Zetao, an 11-year-old boy, Liu Luping, his carer and Xia, a stand-in actor. All three worked on the set of a previous Chinese film about AIDS, "'Til Death Do Us Part," by director Gu Changwei.

In this "film-within-a-film", Zhao shows how the discrimination against the HIV positive people on the set turns over time into compassion and affection.

At first, one elderly crew member, unaware there were HIV positive people on set, says: "Anyone with this sickness knows he should never say anything because otherwise people will keep their distance. I would keep my distance."

Another set member, upon learning his friend is HIV positive, suddenly cannot bring himself to look at him, prompting the jibe: "Don't worry, you can't get it from being stared at."

Zhao also takes the audience to Hu's home, where he lives with his father and stepmother after his mother died of AIDS.

His family, unaware of how the virus can be transmitted, will not allow him to put his chopsticks in the dinner pot like everyone else and he has his own washing utensils.

"The film tries to counter the discrimination and stigma that many AIDS sufferers still face in China," Zhao told the audience after receiving a tumultuous reception.

"Before making this film, I knew very little about this disease and the goal is to make more Chinese people understand better how AIDS is transmitted and how it affects sufferers," he added.

aids 2

Experts say there is still a major gap in public knowledge about the virus in China, where it has overtaken rabies and tuberculosis as the country's leading cause of death among infectious diseases.

According to a recent poll of 6,000 people, nearly half thought it could be transmitted by mosquito and almost one in five believed they could catch it if an infected person sneezed on them.

The poll also suggested that the stigma attached to AIDS was still rife, with around one-third saying that infected people "deserved" their condition because of drug use or their "promiscuous" sexual activities.

In one of the film's lighter moments, Hu explains his own unique way of dealing with discrimination.

"The neighbors in the village are scared of me. They keep their distance. So what I do is to seek out the ones that keep their distance most and run after them shouting 'I'm going to catch you and infect you'.

"Then they run really fast."

Though emotional in parts, the film is ultimately about the hope the sufferers have in a brighter future and their bravery in struggling against a wave of discrimination, on top of their debilitating condition.

Zhao said three of his subjects had decided to show their faces after all, in the hope it could boost understanding.

Xia, one of these, said: "If my face can help promote tolerance, then there is no need to cover it."

The film is screening out of competition at the Berlin film festival, which runs until February 20.

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