From Silent Spring to Silent Christmas: Humanity in the face of atrocity

December 29, 2023

Sitting on my tiny rooftop garden, how much I cherish the early morning tea with the sweet sounds of a bird family, who has graciously made my roof their home since the day I settled here.

How thankful I am for this precious gift of sound, offered by my birdy friends despite the city noise that they have to compete with. How unbearable it would be, imagine one day, I find no birdy singing on my roof nor in any other corner of this Earth.

In the quiet corners of our world, where nature once thrived and rang its melody, Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring” warned us about a future where the symphony of Nature would be no bird chirping, no insect buzzing, not even leaf rustling, but replaced by creepy hush, only. And that scary destructive silence was caused by the pesticide and herbicide.

These days, we find ourselves in a different strike of silence, one that haunts the holiday season in Gaza, Palestine – a Silent Christmas, where the laughters of children and the voices of joyous carols are muted by the horrors of war and genocide.

This is not a Christmas story from a distant land; this haunting silence deeply matters to our conscience. For this silence echoes the death of humanity. For this silence is the death of the voice in our heart.

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Rửa tiền, án phạt và rủi ro màu xám

HỒ QUỐC TUẤN – 04/12/2023 06:58 GMT+7

TTCT Binance bị phạt 4 tỉ đô la và chuyện quy định mới Ngân hàng Nhà nước Việt Nam phải giám sát giao dịch từ 400 triệu đồng trở lên có liên quan gì với nhau?

Ảnh: Axios

Tháng 11 vừa rồi, Binance, sàn giao dịch tiền mã hóa lớn nhất thế giới với quy mô giao dịch mỗi ngày gần 80 tỉ đô la Mỹ (theo Coinmarketcap), đã thừa nhận tội hình sự liên quan đến rửa tiền và vi phạm các lệnh trừng phạt tài chính quốc tế, đồng thời đồng ý trả hơn 4,3 tỉ USD tiền phạt.

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Vietnam’s forests have been cleared to supply the world’s timber industry (2 parts)

pulitzercenter.org – APRIL 4, 2023

Vietnam’s Forests Have Been Cleared To Supply the World’s Timber Industry

author image

In Central Vietnam’s factory, wood chips are accumulated in the rear of a three-wheel vehicle used to transport acacia wood to the processing machine. Image by Thanh Nguyen.

Vietnam is ranked the fifth-largest country in the world, second in Asia, and the largest in Southeast Asia in furniture exports. Vietnamese furniture has been directly exported to 120 countries and territories.

However, behind this impressive figure is that series of natural forests that have been cut down and quickly. These forest land areas have been occupied for growing short-term timber trees.

Deforestation makes natural disasters in Vietnam more severe, local people suffer the most from the consequences.

An investigation will be published on Mekong Eye.

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Malaysia’s Immigration Dept busts prostitution syndicate in KL, detains 48 foreign women


thestar.com Sunday, 07 Jan 202410:34 AM MYT

“We detained 48 foreign women – 32 Indonesians, 13 Thais and three Vietnamese – along with a man from Afghanistan.” he said.

KUALA LUMPUR: The Immigration Department detained 48 foreign women in raids on three suspected prostitution dens in the city.

Immigration deputy director-general (Operation) Jafri Embok Taha said the raids on Friday (Jan 5) night also busted the activities of a syndicate.

“We detained 48 foreign women – 32 Indonesians, 13 Thais and three Vietnamese – along with a man from Afghanistan.” he said.

Jafri added in a statement on Sunday (Jan 7) that three local men were detained, saying that two were caretakers of the premises while a third was a transporter.

He said that eight of the Thai women detained had valid social visit passes while the remaining female foreigners did not have any travel documents or passes.

“We seized various items, including condoms, eight Thai passports, RM300 cash, towels, CCTV equipment and a car,” he added.

Jafri said the syndicate would promote the services of the women by uploading their photos on Telegram and WhatsApp and added that the women would be sent to a specific hotel or location based on the preference of the customers.

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The price of peace and development: Paying for the UN

In 2023, the UN responded to crises across the world including floods in Somalia.

© UNOCHA/Ayub Ahmed In 2023, the UN responded to crises across the world including floods in Somalia.

UN Affairs

The UN is tasked with tackling many urgent issues of global importance, from humanitarian crises to peacekeeping operations and the climate crisis. This all comes at a cost, but not as much as you might think. With the 2024 budget recently approved, we crunch the numbers.

Just before Christmas, the 193 Member States that make up the UN General Assembly signed off a $3.59 billion budget to cover the expenses of the UN Secretariat in 2024. That’s a lot of money but, as UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq explained to UN News, there’s plenty of bang for each buck spent.

Farhan Haq: When you add up the regular UN Secretariat and peacekeeping budgets, the annual average cost of the UN for each person on the planet is about $1.25; that’s about the cost of a bag of chips in New York.

Aside from the U.N. Secretariat, the United Nations also comprises a vast range of agencies, funds, programmes and peacekeeping missions to deal with all kinds of issues, which are funded separately, and which are not included in the $3.59 billion budget. 

At the high end you have agencies such as the World Food Programme, the refugee agency (UNHCR) and the children’s fund (UNICEF), which have budgets in the billions of dollars. Smaller agencies deal with, for example, maritime affairs, world tourism or civil aviation, and have budgets set accordingly. Member States join and pay dues for these agencies on a voluntary basis.

Farhan Haq, Deputy Spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General.

United Nations.

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Palestinian Dec. 11, 2023 Letter to UN – Palestinian Ambassador to UN Addresses UN General Asembly (Oct. 26, 2023)

Lettersdated 11 December 2023 from the Permanent Observer of the State of Palestine to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General, the President of the General Assembly and the President of the Security Council

Read and download >>

_______

Palestinian ambassador to the UN Riyad Mansour addresses General Assembly (Oct. 26, 2023)

Quote:

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The Unexpected Twist in Vietnam’s Renewable Energy Saga

fulcrumm.sg PUBLISHED 4 JAN 2024 LE HONG HIEP

Punishment awaits the senior officials who allowed Vietnam’s renewable energy quest to go off the rails, despite its apparent initial success. This policy crisis has the potential to affect other economic sectors if no clear end is in sight.

In late 2023, the Inspection Commission of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) found that Tran Tuan Anh, head of CPV’s Central Economic Commission, and Trinh Dinh Dung, former deputy prime minister, were among the senior government officials responsible for “shortcomings in the advisory and policy-making processes for the development of solar and wind power projects, as well as in the implementation of the amended Power Development Plan VII” (PDP7). The Commission therefore recommended disciplinary actions be taken against Anh, Dung and some other senior officials involved.

Anh served as the minister of industry and trade while Dung was deputy prime minister overseeing economic affairs, including the energy sector, from 2016 to 2021. During their tenure, Vietnam experienced a remarkable surge in renewable energy, with numerous solar and wind power projects completed in just three years. According to Vietnam Electricity (EVN), the state-owned utility company, this led to a significant increase in Vietnam’s renewable energy output, rising from a mere 997 GWh in 2018 to an impressive 37,865 GWh in 2022. Vietnam therefore emerged as Southeast Asia’s renewable energy leader, accounting for 69 per cent of the region’s solar and wind power generation by 2022.

Such successes, however, did not come without problems. Last April, an inspection by the Government Inspectorate revealed numerous violations in the licensing and certification of renewable energy projects. For example, the amended PDP7 outlined a goal of installing 850MW of solar power by 2020, increasing to 4,000MW by 2025. Similarly, the plan projected 800MW of wind power by 2020, with a target of 2,000MW by 2025. However, as of May 2023, the total installed capacity of wind, solar, and rooftop solar projects in Vietnam had already reached a staggering 21,839MW, greatly surpassing targets set in PDP7.

This sudden surge in renewable energy has caused a strain on the national power grid, particularly in the central region where most renewable energy projects are located. Moreover, during the same period, there was a lack of new traditional power plants constructed, which are necessary to provide a stable baseload for renewable energy sources that are more weather-dependent and thus less reliable. This has created significant safety concerns for the national power system. Consequently, EVN had to curtail the amount of power it purchased from renewable sources, resulting in substantial financial losses for project owners.

A main driver behind Vietnam’s rapid growth in renewable energy has been the implementation of high feed-in tariffs (FITs) for certified projects that began commercial operation before specific deadlines. For instance, solar farms that became operational by 30 June 2019 were eligible for a FIT of 9.35 US cents/kWh, while onshore and offshore wind farms that began commercial operation by 1 November 2021 received FITs of 8.5 US cents/kWh and 9.8 US cents/kWh, respectively. Meanwhile, the FIT for rooftop solar projects operated before 31 December 2020 is 8.38 US cents/kWh. These FITs are locked in for 20 years.

This sudden surge in renewable energy has caused a strain on the national power grid, particularly in the central region where most renewable energy projects are located.

These attractive FITs sparked fierce competition among local investors to build solar and wind projects but most of them had no track record in the energy sector. They mainly leveraged connections, often involving under-the-table payments, to secure project licenses, then relied heavily on bank financing or corporate bonds to fund project development. Due to the pandemic and cut-throat competition for equipment and contractors, 62 wind projects failed to start operation before the FIT deadlines. Unable to sell their output to EVN, these projects faced severe financial difficulties. Even projects that qualified for the FITs faced mounting issues. Aside from the curtailment imposed by EVN, the Government Inspectorate found violations in the certification of many projects, putting them at risk of disqualification from the FITs. Foreign investors acquiring projects from local investors may face potential losses if similar violations are found.

The situation also negatively impacts the state and the broader economy. Most FIT rates are higher than average electricity retail prices, meaning that the state and end-users are essentially subsidising renewable energy projects. These high FITs have contributed to EVN’s mounting accumulative losses over the past two years, reaching VND55 trillion (US$2.3 billion) by September 2023. The government therefore has had no choice but to allow EVN to raise electricity retail prices, putting upward pressure on inflation and undermining Vietnam’s competitiveness.

In light of these grave consequences, the government has been trying to contain the damage. For example, EVN stopped buying power from rooftop solar projects completed after 31 December 2020, leaving thousands of investors in limbo. Authorities have also conducted thorough inspections into most renewable energy projects. Projects found to have committed serious violations, such as lacking construction permits or failing to secure proper land usage purpose conversion and commercial operation certification, may have their power purchase agreements with EVN terminated.

Last month, EVN even proposed lowering the FITs for 38 projects but quickly withdrew the proposal after just one day. This sudden reversal may reflect the government’s struggle in finding a satisfactory solution. Being lenient will perpetuate losses for the state budget but a heavy-handed approach could cause extensive financial losses for investors, potentially affecting the banking system, given investors’ heavy reliance on bank financing. This could also negatively impact investors’ confidence in Vietnam’s investment climate and raise doubts about the country’s commitment to energy transition.

At present, there seems to be no straightforward solution. It is not clear yet how Vietnam will effectively address and learn from this situation for future policy decisions. However, it is inevitable that those responsible for this predicament will soon face serious consequences for what could potentially become one of the most significant policy mishaps in Vietnam’s recent history.

2024/2

Le Hong Hiep is a Senior Fellow and Coordinator of the Vietnam Studies Programme at ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute.

Gia đình bé trai ‘bại não sau ca mổ bẹn’ thắng kiện bệnh viện

VNE – Thứ sáu, 5/1/2024, 10:26 (GMT+7)

BẾN TRE – Tòa phúc thẩm xác định có đủ căn cứ cho thấy Bệnh viện Nguyễn Đình Chiểu sai sót khi mổ, khiến bé trai bại não (thiệt hại 95% sức khỏe) nên phải bồi thường.

TAND tỉnh Bến Tre xử phúc thẩm vụ án tranh chấp bồi thường thiệt hại do sức khỏe bị xâm phạm, giữa nguyên đơn là vợ chồng anh Mai Văn Thắng, 49 tuổi, và bị đơn là Bệnh viện Nguyễn Đình Chiểu (TP Bến Tre), chiều 4/1.

Vợ chồng anh Thắng cùng con trai Mai Trọng Nghĩa, 13 tuổi, đi nhờ xe người quen đến dự phiên tòa để đỡ tốn kém. Trước giờ xét xử, vợ anh nhiều lần phải thay bỉm cho con vì cậu bé bại não nhiều năm nay không thể tự chủ việc vệ sinh. Thỉnh thoảng Nghĩa lại cười lớn, quơ chân tay loạn xạ khiến cha mẹ phải dỗ dành, trấn an.

Bé Mai Trọng Nghĩa cùng cha mẹ tại tòa phúc thẩm. Ảnh: Nam An

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A widened Middle East war would be a disaster, but it can still be avoided

Stephen Collinson

Analysis by Stephen Collinson, CNN

Published 12:40 AM EST, Fri January 5, 2024

TOPSHOT - A picture taken from a position in southern Israel along the border with the Gaza Strip, shows smoke billowing over the Palestinian territory during Israeli bombardment on January 4, 2024, amid continuing battles between Israel and the militant group Hamas. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP) (Photo by JACK GUEZ/AFP via Getty Images)

A picture taken from a position in southern Israel along the border with the Gaza Strip shows smoke billowing during Israeli bombardment on January 4, 2024, amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war.Jack Guez/AFP/Getty ImagesCNN — 

Anxiety mounts every day that a full-scale Middle East war could erupt from the flames of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.

“We feel and we’re afraid of it,” Lebanese Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour this week. “We don’t want any escalation in the war. … We don’t like a regional war because it’s dangerous to everybody. Dangerous to Lebanon, dangerous to Israel and to the countries surrounding Israel,” he said, adding, “A regional war is bad for everybody.”

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Is 2024 going to be the first full year to breach 1.5C of warming?

With 2023 the warmest year on record, 2024 could see the unwelcome milestone of 1.5C of warming reached for a full year

A plane flies through the sky as the sun sets over a city
The global outlook suggests 2024 will end with average global temperatures between 1.34C and 1.58C above preindustrial levels. Photograph: Matt York/AP

Kate Ravilious @katerav TheGuardian

Thu 4 Jan 2024 06.00 GMT

The year 2023 has been confirmed as the warmest in recorded history, with average global temperatures topping 1.5C of heating above preindustrial levels for more than one third of the year. It continues the rapid warming trend, with the 10 warmest years in human history all having occurred since 2010.

So what could 2024 hold? Forecasts suggest the year ahead is likely to be another record breaker, with a strong possibility that this could be the first full year to go beyond 1.5C of warming.

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Vietnam 2023 economic growth slows to 5.05% as exports fall

By Khanh Vu

December 29, 20237:59 AM GMT Updated 7 days ago

A man paints steel structures of a new factory in Hanoi

HANOI, Dec 29 (Reuters) – Vietnam’s economic growth slowed to 5.05% this year from an expansion of 8.02% last year, official data showed on Friday, weighed by weak global demand while public investment stalled amid an intensified anti-graft crackdown.

This year’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth was below a government target of 6.5% and lower than average growth of 5.87% during the previous decade, according to data released by the government’s General Statistics Office (GSO).

Vietnam is a regional manufacturing hub that relies heavily on trade. Exports in 2023 fell 4.4% from last year to $355.5 billion, with shipments of smartphones, its largest foreign currency earner, dropping 8.3%, the GSO said in its report.

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Phản ứng của các nước Đông Nam Á trước xung đột Israel-Hamas

Nghiên cứu Quốc tế – 03/01/2024

Một cuộc chiến xa xôi lại có sức ảnh hưởng mạnh mẽ đến một khu vực thường bị chia rẽ bởi tôn giáo.

Nguồn: Joseph Rachman, “Gaza Is a Burning Topic for Southeast Asia’s Domestic Politics,” Foreign Policy, 29/12/2023

Biên dịch: Nguyễn Thị Kim Phụng

Tại Indonesia, một ứng viên tổng thống và bộ trưởng ngoại giao đã phát biểu về cuộc chiến ở Gaza trước hàng trăm nghìn người biểu tình. Tại Malaysia, thủ tướng, đội khăn keffiyeh của người Palestine, đã dẫn đầu cuộc biểu tình của riêng mình, mô tả tình hình Gaza là “điên rồ” và “đỉnh cao của sự man rợ.” Còn tại Singapore, chính phủ cấm treo cờ của hai bên tham chiến.

Tại Thái Lan và Philippines, sự cảm thông dành cho các nạn nhân dân thường người Palestine đi kèm với sự tức giận trước việc nhiều công dân Thái Lan và Philippines đã bị Hamas giết hoặc bắt làm con tin. Trong khi tại Việt Nam, Lào, và Campuchia, các chính phủ đã thận trọng đưa ra những tuyên bố trung lập về Gaza – dù ký ức về trải nghiệm bị ném bom của các quốc gia này đang dần nổi lên.

Tiếp tục đọc “Phản ứng của các nước Đông Nam Á trước xung đột Israel-Hamas”