Vietnamese, US veteran pilots gather in Hanoi

Vietnamese and American veteran pilots, who were once enemies of each other in the air during the anti-US war, reunited in Hanoi on October 3 for the third time.

Vietnamese, US veteran pilots gather in Hanoi, social news, vietnamnet bridge, english news, Vietnam news, news Vietnam, vietnamnet news, Vietnam net news, Vietnam latest news, vn news, Vietnam breaking news
Vietnamese and American veteran pilots, who were once enemies of each other in the air during the anti-US war, gather in Hanoi on October 3 for the third time.

Present at the gathering were Lt. Gen. Nguyen Duc Soat, hero of the People’s Armed Forces and head of the Vietnamese veteran pilot delegation, Charlie Tutt, head of the US veteran pilot delegation, representatives from the Air Defence – Air Force Service under the Vietnam Defence Ministry, and veteran pilots of the two countries. Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnamese, US veteran pilots gather in Hanoi”

Sự thật ‘đau lòng’ về ‘Đô thành Sài Gòn’ xưa – 2 kỳ

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Sự thật ‘đau lòng’ về ‘Đô thành Sài Gòn’ xưa (kỳ 1)

datviet – Thứ Sáu, 01/04/2011

Sau khi loại Bảo Đại khỏi vũ đài chính trị Nam Việt Nam, Ngô Đình Diệm ký sắc lệnh 143-NV ngày 22/10/1956 đổi “đô thành Sài Gòn – Chợ Lớn” thành “Đô thành Sài Gòn”. Diệm tiếp tục ra sắc lệnh số 74-TTP ngày 23-3-1959 ấn định quy chế quản trị Sài Gòn: Tổng thống trực tiếp bổ nhiệm Đô trưởng và các quận trưởng trong đô thành. Bốn ngày sau, Diệm lại ra nghị định số 110-NV chia lại các quận. Từ sáu quận, Sài Gòn được chia thành tám quận: các quận 1, 2, 3 giữ như cũ, song quận 4 (cũ) chia đôi thành quận 5 và quận 8; quận 5 (cũ) chia thành quận 6 và quận 7; quận 6 (cũ) đổi tên thành quận 4. Toàn đô thành có 41 phường..

Kết quả hình ảnh cho Chợ Bến Thành xưa. Ảnh tư liệuChợ Bến Thành xưa. Ảnh tư liệu Tiếp tục đọc “Sự thật ‘đau lòng’ về ‘Đô thành Sài Gòn’ xưa – 2 kỳ”

The Future Cries Beneath Our Soil – Phim Mùa Cát Vọng

The future cries beneath our soil. Trailer from Pham Thu Hang on Vimeo.

Film Mùa Cát Vọng / THE FUTURE CRIES BENEATH OUR SOIL directed by Pham Thu Hang and produced by Jewel Maranan will have its premiere tomorrow at DMZ 국제다큐영화제 DMZ International Documentary Film Festival in South Korea! We’re at the Asian Competition together with other beautiful documentaries. Wish us luck!

Surrounded by the surreal landscape of Quang Tri province, four men live their lives inseparably from each other. Their rhythm is defined by moments of togetherness in a house with no doors where they all come to drink, smoke, play guitar and sing songs about love and the revolution of the past. Feelings of hatred interweave with compassion, swelling amidst the stagnation of time and space, seemingly awaiting for an unknown. One day, the unknown comes and takes one of them away, leaving the others to go on slipping through an undesired life. Meanwhile, the landscape, located in the border between North and South Vietnam, is what lives on, revealing traces of a war that has outlived its conclusion.

Tiếp tục đọc “The Future Cries Beneath Our Soil – Phim Mùa Cát Vọng”

Landmines and Explosive Remnants of War

UN.org

International statistical resources

Monsanto ordered to pay $289 million in world’s first Roundup cancer trial – Vụ kiện đầu tiên trên thế giới về thuốc diệt cỏ Round-up gây ung thư, Monsanto buộc phải bồi thường 289 triệu Đô

(Reuters) – A California jury on Friday found Monsanto liable in a lawsuit filed by a man who alleged the company’s glyphosate-based weed-killers, including Roundup, caused his cancer and ordered the company to pay $289 million in damages.

FILE PHOTO: Monsanto Co's Roundup shown for sale in California

FILE PHOTO: Monsanto Co’s Roundup is shown for sale in Encinitas, California, U.S., June 26, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo

The case of school groundskeeper Dewayne Johnson was the first lawsuit to go to trial alleging glyphosate causes cancer. Monsanto, a unit of Bayer AG following a $62.5 billion acquisition by the German conglomerate, faces more than 5,000 similar lawsuits across the United States.

The jury at San Francisco’s Superior Court of California deliberated for three days before finding that Monsanto had failed to warn Johnson and other consumers of the cancer risks posed by its weed killers.

SPONSORED

It awarded $39 million in compensatory and $250 million in punitive damages.

Monsanto in a statement said it would appeal the verdict. “Today’s decision does not change the fact that more than 800 scientific studies and reviews…support the fact that glyphosate does not cause cancer, and did not cause Mr. Johnson’s cancer,” the company said.

Monsanto denies that glyphosate, the world’s most widely used herbicide, causes cancer and says decades of scientific studies have shown the chemical to be safe for human use.
Tiếp tục đọc “Monsanto ordered to pay $289 million in world’s first Roundup cancer trial – Vụ kiện đầu tiên trên thế giới về thuốc diệt cỏ Round-up gây ung thư, Monsanto buộc phải bồi thường 289 triệu Đô”

Remembering Đinh Tôn: 50 years later

Update: June, 16/2018 – 09:00 vietnamnews

Đinh Tôn.

Viet Nam News By Thomas Eugene Wilber

It began in Thọ Xuân District, Thanh Hóa Province, Việt Nam

At about 4pm local time on Sunday, the sixteenth day of June 1968, air force Captain Đinh Tôn and his wingman, Captain Nguyễn Tiến Sâm, taxied their MiG-21single seat fighter jets to the northwest end of Thọ Xuân airbase and lined up to take off. Completing final checks and accelerating to a normal launch transition, they climbed to about 300 metres altitude, banking to the right and heading south at a speed of 800 kilometres per hour. Tiếp tục đọc “Remembering Đinh Tôn: 50 years later”

Nữ du kích Bảy Mô

TĐH: Tình cờ hôm nay mình mới biết câu chuyện của nữ du kích Bảy Mô trên mạng. Có lẽ nhiều bạn đã biết rồi. Mình vốn đã khâm phục các nữ chiến binh. Câu chuyện đậm tình người lại làm mình thêm cảm động. Thêm vào đó nữ anh hùng này sau khi ra khỏi quân đội thì về sống cực khổ ở Tây Ninh, quê vợ của mình. Và Củ Chi là huyện rìa của Sài Gòn, cách nhà mình không xa. Mọi địa danh đều rất quen thuộc. Cuốn sách “The Tunnel of Cu Chi” nhắc đến người nữ du kích này là một cuốn sách về Chiến tranh Việt Mỹ rất nổi tiếng ở Mỹ.

Câu chuyện này còn nói lên một điểm lịch sử và chiến lược quan trọng: Những chiến binh du kích ở Miền Nam, sinh ra, lớn lên và chiến đấu như là cuộc sống tự nhiên – đời cha chiến đấu chống Pháp, đời con chiến đấu chống Mỹ. Chẳng ai bắt vào lính, chẳng ai tuyển mộ, chẳng ai bắt làm gì cả. Lớn lên là tự động chiến đấu như hít thở. Đây chính là điều các chiến lược gia Mỹ và VNCH chẳng hề biết. Đi lính như một nghĩa vụ phải làm là một chuyện. Tự nhiên mà chiến đấu, là chiến binh mà không “đi lính”, là một chuyện khác — chiến đấu tự nhiên như hít thở của cuộc sống, đó là nguồn sức mạnh vượt trên cả phi thường, đứng trên phương diện chiến lược mà nói.

Dưới đây là một clip về câu chuyện Bảy Mô, một series 3 clips nói chuyện với Bảy Mô, một clip về các nữ du kích Củ Chi (bây giờ đã là bà nội bà ngoại), và một bài báo.

Nữ Anh Hùng VN Siêu Đẳng Có Tấm Lòng Bồ Tát Tha Mạng Cho Lính Mỹ Vì Họ Khóc Khoe Ảnh Vợ Con
https://youtu.be/7E0GLXlPq3w
Tiếp tục đọc “Nữ du kích Bảy Mô”

Remembering Agent Orange this Earth Day

The legacy of Agent Orange/dioxin continues to impact our veterans and the Vietnamese.  Since 1991, scientists at the United States Institute of Medicine have shown dioxin to be a risk factor in a growing number of illnesses and birth defects, and their research is corroborated by the work of Vietnamese scientists. Tiếp tục đọc “Remembering Agent Orange this Earth Day”

War-ravaged Vietnamese province receives $10 mil from Norway for mine clearance

VNExpress By Vu Minh   April 18, 2018 | 05:02 pm GMT+7

War-ravaged Vietnamese province receives $10 mil from Norway for mine clearance

Unexploded ordnance are found in Vietnam’s central province of Quang Tri. Photo by VnExpress/Quang Ha

The Norwegian People’s Aid has already helped remove 70,000 tons of unexploded ordnance from Quang Tri Province.

Vietnam’s central province of Quang Tri has received $10 million from a Norwegian organization to help clear unexploded ordnance.

The deal with Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) was signed on Wednesday and will sponsor a project expected to run until 2022, Vietnam News Agency reported.

Vietnam is one of the most heavily contaminated countries in the world when it comes to explosives. Between 1945 and 1975, during two wars with French and American invaders, more than 15 million tons of explosives were dropped on Vietnam; four times higher than the amount unleashed during World War II.

Tiếp tục đọc “War-ravaged Vietnamese province receives $10 mil from Norway for mine clearance”

Rev. James Swarts: Remarks at Spring Action 2018

Rev. James Swarts, President of the Rochester chapter of Veterans For Peace, was a member of the VFP tour group which traveled Viet Nam for 18 days recently, with stops in Ha Noi, the former DMZ and Khe Sanh, Da Nang, My Lai (on the 50th anniversary of the massacre there), and Sai Gon.

Statements by Pres. Donald Trump and U.S. government (and British and French) officials to justify American military actions in Syria are painful reminders not only of lies we were told about Viet Nam a half century ago. We heard echoes of those same lies regarding Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, and many other places in the world that are now much worse off after our military actions — actions that were illegal, no matter how we try to parse the meanings of the documents and international agreements that we signed. Tiếp tục đọc “Rev. James Swarts: Remarks at Spring Action 2018”

U.S. seeks to deport thousands of Vietnamese protected by treaty: former ambassador

April 12, 2018 / 2:28 AM / Updated 11 hours ago

HO CHI MINH CITY (Reuters) – The United States is seeking to send thousands of immigrants from Vietnam back to the communist-ruled country despite a bilateral agreement that should protect most from deportation, according to Washington’s former ambassador to Hanoi.

U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam, Ted Osius, speaks during a news conference in Hanoi, Vietnam November 2, 2017. Picture taken November 2,2017. REUTERS/Kham

A “small number” of people protected by the agreement have already been sent back, the former ambassador, Ted Osius, told Reuters in an interview.

Osius said that many of the targeted immigrants were supporters of the now defunct U.S.-backed state of South Vietnam, and Hanoi would see them as destabilizing elements. Tiếp tục đọc “U.S. seeks to deport thousands of Vietnamese protected by treaty: former ambassador”

Why American soldiers were on front lines of anti-Vietnam-war movement

scmp
Ho Chi Minh City exhibition recalls how American GIs organised protests, published underground newspapers and served jail time in their efforts to bring peace to Southeast Asia

By Gary Jones

The stereotypical image of the Vietnam war veteran, returning to the United States after an arduous tour of duty, only to be spat upon and cursed as a murderer by sneering, long-haired peace protesters, is seared into the American psyche like a scar from a white-hot burst of napalm. The accepted belief is that weary veterans trudged home to be condemned, cold-shouldered, even physically assaulted – simply for doing their duty to their country. Tiếp tục đọc “Why American soldiers were on front lines of anti-Vietnam-war movement”

Re-education in Unliberated Vietnam: Loneliness, Suffering and Death

Re-education in Unliberated Vietnam: Loneliness, Suffering and Death – by Ginetta Sagan and Stephen Denney [1982]

Note: The following article was published in The Indochina Newsletter, a newsletter I edited at the time, October-November 1982. Much has changed in the 16 years since this article was written. So far as is known all of the former South Vietnam government officials and officers have been released from the re-education camps and many have been allowed to emigrate to the U.S. under a special program, called Humanitarian Operation. But many of former prisoners have experienced various problems resulting from their long term incarceration under difficult conditions. I hope this article might be of historical interest in understanding what these prisoners have experienced; and also in understanding conditions of imprisonment endured by those dissidents and others still detained in Vietnam. – Steve Denney [1998]

THE INDOCHINA NEWSLETTER
October-November 1982

Re-education in Unliberated Vietnam: Loneliness, Suffering and Death

by Ginetta Sagan and Stephen Denney

(Editor’s Note: The following article is part of a preliminary draft of a report that will be issued later this year on human rights in Vietnam. The report is prepared for the Aurora Foundation, of which Ginetta Sagan is the Executive Director. Mrs. Sagan is a well-known human rights activist who interviewed over 200 former prisoners from Vietnam in preparation for this report. Details of the interviews will be brought out in fuller detail when the report is issued.)

Ten years ago, demonstrations were held around the world to protest political repression and imprisonment in South Vietnam. Seven years ago, Communist forces completed their conquest of South Vietnam. In June of 1975, the new regime ordered hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese to report to authorities for « re-education ». Many are still held in the camps today, but the world is mostly silent on their plight.

« Re-education » means different things to different people. To the Hanoi regime and its more vocal defenders abroad, re-education is seen as a very positive way to integrate the former enemy into the new society. It is, according to Communist leaders of Vietnam, an act of mercy, since those in the camps deserve the death penalty or life imprisonment.(1). The former prisoners, on the other hand, see re-education from quite a different perspective. Tiếp tục đọc “Re-education in Unliberated Vietnam: Loneliness, Suffering and Death”

The 1968 “Hue Massacre”

by D. Gareth Porter
“Indochina Chronicle,” #33, June 24, 1974

Six years after the stunning communist Tet Offensive of 1968, one of the enduring myths of the Second Indochina War remains essentially unchallenged: the communist “massacre” at Hue. The official version of what happened in Hue has been that the National Liberation Front (NLF) and the North Vietnamese deliberately and systematically murdered not only responsible officials but religious figures, the educated elite and ordinary people, and that burial sites later found yielded some 3,000 bodies, the largest portion of the total of more than 4,700 victims of communist execution.

Although there is still much that is not known about what happened in Hue, there is sufficient evidence to conclude that the story conveyed to the American public by the South Vietnamese and American propaganda agencies bore little resemblance to the truth, but was, on the contrary, the result of a political warfare campaign by the Saigon government, embellished by the U.S. government and accepted uncritically by the U.S. press. A careful study of the official story of the Hue “massacre” on the one hand, and of the evidence from independent or anti-communist sources on the other, provides a revealing glimpse into efforts by the U.S. press to keep alive fears of a massive “bloodbath.”1 It is a myth which has served the U.S. administration interests well in the past, and continues to influence public attitudes deeply today. Tiếp tục đọc “The 1968 “Hue Massacre””

17 Năm Trong Các Trại Cải Tạo – Hồi ký KALE

Giới Thiệu Về Tác Giả KALE:

  • Tên thật là Lê Anh Kiệt
  • Sinh năm 1945, đã trãi qua gần như cả tuổi trẻ trong chiến tranh và tù đày.
  • Không có tham vọng viết văn chỉ viết để diển tả những suy nghĩ, những quan sát về thân phận mình và vận mạng đất nước sau những biến đổi thăng trầm của lịch sử.
  • Tốt nghiệp trường Đại Học Khoa Học Sài Gòn, từng làm giáo sư Toán Lý Hoá đệ nhị cấp tại các trường trung học tư thục như Nguyễn Bá Tòng (Sài Gòn và Gia Định), Hoàng Gia Huệ (Trung Chánh), Khiết Tâm (Biên Hoà), Trần Hưng Đạo (Tổng Tham Mưu).
  • Phục vụ tại Phủ Đặc Ủy Trung Ương Tình Báo VNCH.
  • Sau ngày 30 tháng 4 năm 1975, đi tù cải tạo của cho đến năm 1992.
  • Sang Mỹ năm 1993 và hiện định cư ở tiểu bang Indiana.
  • Về hưu từ năm 2012

17 Năm Trong Các Trại Cải Tạo CSVN >>