Thursday, December 29, 2011

Brazilian economy 'overtakes Britain'
Brazil has overtaken Britain as the world's sixth largest economy, a London-based research group said Monday.

 
 Brazil has overtaken Britain as the world's sixth largest economy, a London-based research group said Monday.

In its latest World Economic League Table, the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) said Asian countries were moving up while European countries were slipping down. CEBR chief executive Douglas McWilliams told BBC radio that Brazil's advance was part of a wider trend.
"I think it's part of the big economic change, where not only are we seeing a shift from the west to the east, but we're also seeing that countries that produce vital commodities -- food and energy and things like that -- are doing very well and they're gradually climbing up the economic league table," he said.
Brazil's population of about 200 million is more than three times that of Britain.
The Brazilian economy grew 7.5 percent in 2010, but the government has cut its growth projections to 3.5 percent for this year after the economy slowed in the third quarter.
The CEBR also predicted that the British economy would overtake France -- ranked fifth this year -- by 2016 and it said India, the world's 10th biggest economy in 2011,

Monday, December 26, 2011

Climate response lacks resources
Insufficient human resources was a major challenge for Vietnam in responding to climate change, said head of the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry's Personnel and Organisation Department Ta Dinh Thi.
Thi said that although Vietnam launched its first National Target Programme to respond to climate change in 2008, the biggest difficulty in its implementation lied in a shortage of staff specialising in the climate change-related sector at all levels.
Most staff working in the sector had been trained in other fields and were assigned to do other tasks at the same time.
At present, there are nearly 50,000 people working in administrative and research institutions belonging to the natural resources and environment sector, but more than half of them work in the land management sub-sector, with only 1 per cent focused on tackling climate change.
"Preparing human resources in the climate change sector is an urgent task, especially at local levels," said the deputy director of Vietnam's Institute of Meteorology, Hydrology and Environment, Tran Hong Thai.
On average, each province needed at least 10 trained personnel, he said, adding that there was an absence of people who specialised in climate change management at the provincial level.
Thai said that roughly 700 districts and 9,000 communes also required staff that specialised in climate change.
He said that it took about 15 years to train an expert in climate change, including conducting research and accumulating experience. Meanwhile, developing human resources was a basic foundation to implementing tasks
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg on holiday in Vietnam
>>  Facebook boss visits Vietnam
Mark Zuckerberg, founder of the world’s number one social network, Facebook, has been in Vietnam since December 22 for his holiday.
 
Zuckerberg and his girlfriend in Ha Long
After arriving in Hanoi at 11am on December 22, Zuckerberg and his friends, including his girlfriend, Priscilla Chan, visited Hoa Lo, a historical site in the capital city.
Tran Ngoc Bich, the tour guide for a US group in Hoa Lo, said, “He seemed easy going and casual, just wearing a T-shirt, jeans and tennis shoes. He was very friendly.”
At 3pm on December 23, Zuckerberg and his friends went to a Vertu mobile showroom on Ngo Quyen

Friday, December 23, 2011

Long Bien Bridge: past and present
Lively images of the historic Long Bien Bridge, dating from past to present, have been put on display at an on-going exhibition near Hoan Kiem Lake.
 
 Tranquil: Cau Long Bien Mot Thoi Binh Yen (Long Bien Bridge in Peace), oil on canvas by Pham Kim Binh.
 
 Abstract: Song Song Hong (The Hong River Waves) by Nguyen Thu Thuy.
Through 169 watercolours, oil paintings, pastel drawings, lacquer and wood carvings and sculptures, the city's young and senior artists have depicted the 100-year-old bridge, particularly through wartime. Their works tell of heroic deeds carried out in the struggle against foreign invaders alongside tales of daily life, as connected to the bridge that spans the Hong (Red) River. Mat Dat Bau Troi Thang Chap (The Earth and Sky in December), a large-scale oil painting by Nguyen The Huu, depicts the bridge with American aircraft gliding in the sky and soldiers keeping their adversaries on the back foot.
Artist Trinh Quoc Thu uses the image of a dragon hovering in the sky, breathing fire on the enemy warplanes to protect the bridge and people on the ground through his oil-on-canvas Cau Long Bien –
Cay Cau Chung Nhan Lich Su (Long Bien Bridge – Historical Witness). Truong Trung also symbolises the bridge with an image of a flying dragon, holding a fire ball in its mouth with his Vuot Song Song Hong (Crossing the Red River Waves) on acrylic.
The bridge is presented mostly in hot colours such as red brown, yellow, orange and deep blue to describe a life full of energy of not only the bridge itself, but also of the people by its river banks.
Images of a peaceful life appear through one painting after another, illustrating a banana market, farming in rice fields, fishing boats in the early morning, traffic, a parade of cyclos involved in an engagement party and images of children with kites.
"Through these paintings, I got to understand a little more about the history of the bridge," said a 10th grader from the Ly Thuong Kiet High School while viewing Song Song Hong (The Hong River Waves) by painter-journalist Nguyen Thu Thuy.
Creator of the Hanoi mosaic mural, Thuy utilised tiny, square ceramic pieces of red brown, orange and turquoise on a base of lacquer to give her work life.

Powerful quake rocks New Zealand's Christchurch
The earthquake-devastated New Zealand city of Christchurch was rocked by a powerful 5.8 magnitude tremor Friday forcing evacuations from buildings, residents said.
 
 Earthquake damage to Christchurch Cathedral in the New Zealand South Island city is seen in September 2011.  

New Zealand's second largest city was hit by a 6.3-magnitude quake in February, killing 181 people and destroying much of the downtown area.
Government seismologists measured the latest quake at magnitude 5.8 and said it struck at 1:58pm (0058 GMT) eight kilometres (five miles) deep.

Local news media reported people fleeing into the streets in fear as the quake, followed by four strong aftershocks, rattled the city.

Shopping malls were vacated and Television New Zealand said the international airport was shut down.

Telephone services and electricity supplies were disrupted but police said there were no immediate reports of structural damage.

Christchurch resident Jo Davis told Fairfax News her neighbours were screaming.

"I was terrified, I guess just because it's been so long since we've had a decent one. We've had a TV and glasses fall over

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

North Korea 'building' new missile launch site

Satellite images appear to reveal a 100ft launch tower meaning Pyongyang is close to completing a new launch site
North Korea missile launch site
A missile on the launchpad at Musudan-ri, North Korea's older missile launch site Photograph: AP
North Korea appears close to finishing a new missile launch site, according to analysis of satellite images taken in the last month, which show an almost completed 100ft tall launch tower, suggesting a step forward
A minibus catches fire in Hanoi
>>  Motorbike fires stir up public concern
 >>  Producers to review safety after motorbikes catch fire
A small bus caught fire while driving along a road in Dai Nghia Town, My Duc District, Hanoi, on December 18.
The bus on fire
The driver and passengers escaped from the 29 seat minibus without injury. The vehicle was destroyed, leaving only the steel frame. 
A representative from Ha Tay Coach Joint Stock Company said, the bus was being driven by Nguyen Ha Thanh, and had been in operation since 2007.

North Korea leader lies in state

 
Mourners including Kim Jong-il's son and heir, Kim Jong-un, paid their respects
Kim Jong-il's son and heir, Kim Jong-un, and senior officials have been paying their last respects to the late North Korean leader whose body lies in state ahead of his funeral next week.
Propaganda Poster Art Centre
Head to Shanghai’s Propaganda Poster Art Centre to see mass-produced posters from the 1950s and ’60s. (Richard I'Anson/LPI)
A time-lapse movie of the Shanghai skyline would be a fascinating study in urban development, but how do you come to grips with a city that swaps faces faster than a Sichuanese opera performer? Head to these five museums to help gain a foothold in a place where the only constant is constant change.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Barcelona beat Santos to win Club World Cup 
Last updated: 12/19/2011 8:00 
 

FC Barcelona players and staff members toss their head coach Pep Guardiola as they celebrate their victory against Santos FC during the awarding ceremony after the final football match in the Club World Cup in Yokohama. Barcelona defeated Santos 4-0
Lionel Messi grabbed a classy brace as the “artists” of Barcelona out-classed the Brazilians Santos 4-0 to lift the Club World Cup Sunday and confirm their status as the best team on the planet.
The clash between the European and South American champions in Japan had been billed as a showdown between
Exclusive: Secret US, Taliban talks reach turning 
Last updated: 12/19/2011 10:00 
 
After 10 months of secret dialogue with Afghanistan’s Taliban insurgents, senior US officials say the talks have reached a critical juncture and they will soon know whether a breakthrough is possible, leading to peace talks whose ultimate goal is to end the Afghan war.
As part of the accelerating, high-stakes diplomacy, Reuters has learned, the United States is considering the transfer

Sunday, December 18, 2011

This time Mercedes car catches fire on street in VietNam

A Mercedes E300 sedan suddenly started burning and was then completely destroyed Sunday afternoon when it was carrying four people on Nguyen Xien Street in Thanh Xuan District, Hanoi.
Ngo Van Nam, one of the four, told local newswire VnExpress that they had noticed a burning smell shortly before seeing smoke rise from the front.
They immediately got out of the vehicle which was engulfed in flames 15 minutes later, Nam said.
The four-wheel drive had become a sheer mass of metal, with its front and rear windshields entirely broken, when fire-fighters were called in.
“This is a second-hand car I bought from an acquaintance in 2006, but it had been registered 5 years earlier,” Ngo Van Ninh, the owner, revealed.

Ellen moves into Brad Pitt's house

People Ellen DeGeneres
Pitt's palace: TV host Ellen DeGeneres, right, and Portia de Rossi have bought Brad Pitt's sprawling Malibu property for US$12 million. Picture: AP.

Michael Jackson's home treasures go under the hammer

ALSO
Michael Jackson
Collectors from around the world attended the auction in Beverly Hills. Picture: The Daily Telegraph Source: AFP

Saturday, December 17, 2011


Mekong Delta’s farmers prepare unique fruits for Tet
Farmers in the Mekong Delta have created many special products for the lunar New Year (Tet holiday), such as wine-gourds and gold-bar shaped pomelos and squared watermelons.


Vietnam beauty third at Mrs World 2011
  • Thu Huong, 32, crowned third place title at the Mrs World 2011 beauty pageant that wrapped up today in US. April Lufriu of the US won the title, followed by a Peru beauty.
Thu Huong and her husband at the beauty contest Mrs World 2011 in the US. Photo by Dan Tri/Dtinews

Ancient temple unearthed in central Vietnam
After many days of excavation, an old temple buried in sand in Ky Khang commune, Ky Anh district in the central province of Ha Tinh has been unveiled. Many pottery items are also excavated.
The temple is located on Con Choi sand bank, in the titan mining ground of Ky Anh Titan Mining Enterprise. Part of the work was unearthed at the depth of 5 meters on November 2, by mining workers.
The Museum of Ha Tinh Province has excavated the site since then. Archaeologists have collected

440 dead, 200 missing in Philippines storm
  • AFP | December 18, 2011 09:12 AM
 
More than 600 people were feared killed on Saturday when tropical storm Washi whipped the southern Philippines, unleashing mammoth floods across vast areas of the country.
Relief workers said that 440 people had died and nearly 200 left missing after the storm wreaked

The Luoyang gorge river water turns the blood red to ...

The Luoyang gorge river water turns the blood red to ...

Reporter gathers the river water sample under the Chinese mountain road gorge river bridge


“gorge river Huashan road section blood red blood red, is how a matter?”

“the gorge river has a good time together stronghold section glowing red one piece, what matter had?”

“gorge river Qili River Duan Zhengtiao the river resembles `the red river valley ' to be the same, probably had any problem.”