Thursday, December 9, 2010

Toyota awards HCMC scholarships

Japanese businesses grant 90 scholarships in HCMC

Toyota Vietnam Foundation (TVF) with founding members Toyota Motor Vietnam (TMV), Ministry of Education and Training, and Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism awarded 37 scholarships at a ceremony in HCMC on Wednesday.

TVF will award over 140 scholarships worth a total of VND544 million at 16 universities around the country till Dec.17 for mechanical engineering, environment disciplines and scientific study groups. Last week TVF held handed out scholarships in Hanoi.

Individual students will receive VND3 million each, while study groups from each university will get VND10 million.

TMV will donate two Toyota Innova engines, 12 chassies and one transmission to 12 universities to be used to train students in mechanical engineering. The Toyota Scholarship program will also provides internships at the TMV plant and will send some businessmen and students to a Toyota course on manufacturing and business.

Since 1997, Toyota Scholarship Program has encouraged research and study in Vietnam universities by providing nearly 1,400 scholarships.

*The Japanese Business Association of HCMC and Japan Business Federation on Wednesday granted 90 scholarships to students from HCMC-based University of Social Sciences and Humanity and University of Technology.

Each scholarship from the Japan-Vietnam human resources development program is worth VND2 million. Since it started in 2002, the program has donated 914 scholarships in the two universities.

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The home of Uncle Ho’s father

Life size models of carpenters in Hoa An ancient village at the new Nguyen Sinh Sac Tourist Area
To mark 81 years since the death of Nguyen Sinh Sac (1862-1929), the father of the late Vietnamese President, Ho chi Minh, the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap has inaugurated the Nguyen Sinh Sac Tourist Area in Cao Lanh City.

The area, which was expanded to 9.3 hectares from 3.6 hectares at a cost of VND5 billion, has Vietnamese culture and history displays and an ancient village.

When completed the replica village will comprise nine wooden houses built in traditional southern style. Displays will include palm leaf weaving, metal forge and carpentry, all jobs that Nguyen Sinh Sac did in Dong Thap.

The village will also feature canals, rows of coconut trees, vegetable farms, cornfield and sugarcane.

Dang Van Hoang, director of the Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism in Dong Thap Province, said the village will open for tourists in mid-2011 adding that visitors would be able to participate in traditional farming and learn about southern culture.

In 1917, Nguyen Sinh Sac came to Hoa An Village to teach and give medical treatment to local residents. He joined the revolutionary activities till he died in 1929.

A canal along wooden houses in the tourist area - Photos: Uyen Vien
A corner of the Hoa An ancient village
Young men join a chicken fight

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The home of Uncle Ho’s father

Life size models of carpenters in Hoa An ancient village at the new Nguyen Sinh Sac Tourist Area
To mark 81 years since the death of Nguyen Sinh Sac (1862-1929), the father of the late Vietnamese President, Ho chi Minh, the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap has inaugurated the Nguyen Sinh Sac Tourist Area in Cao Lanh City.

The area, which was expanded to 9.3 hectares from 3.6 hectares at a cost of VND5 billion, has Vietnamese culture and history displays and an ancient village.

When completed the replica village will comprise nine wooden houses built in traditional southern style. Displays will include palm leaf weaving, metal forge and carpentry, all jobs that Nguyen Sinh Sac did in Dong Thap.

The village will also feature canals, rows of coconut trees, vegetable farms, cornfield and sugarcane.

Dang Van Hoang, director of the Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism in Dong Thap Province, said the village will open for tourists in mid-2011 adding that visitors would be able to participate in traditional farming and learn about southern culture.

In 1917, Nguyen Sinh Sac came to Hoa An Village to teach and give medical treatment to local residents. He joined the revolutionary activities till he died in 1929.

A canal along wooden houses in the tourist area - Photos: Uyen Vien
A corner of the Hoa An ancient village
Young men join a chicken fight

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Legend Metropole Hanoi ranked in top four

International travel journalists and tourism experts have voted the 109-year-old Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi in the top four urban hotels in the world in the Fifth Annual Hotel and Resort Survey of Cigar Aficionado.

The 364-room hotel was ranked after Four Seasons George V in Paris but on par with the Peninsula in Hong Kong and the Oriental in Bangkok by the jury of people from Virtuoso, CBS News, Forbes Life, National Geographic, travel agents and operators.

It is one of 21 awards that the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi has won in 2010, a record for the luxury hotel on Ngo Quyen Street, Hoan Kiem District in the capital city.

“Really, in the hotel’s long history, this year has been unprecedented,” said Kai Speth, general manager of the hotel. “With recent accolades from such prestigious publications as Conde Nast Traveler, Travel + Leisure and from organizations like PATA, we’ve been moved to a new echelon entirely.”

Besides being honored as one of the world’s top four city hotels, the prestigious North American lifestyle magazine also trumpeted the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi as one of Southeast Asia’s top three hotels, together with the Peninsula in Hong Kong and Oriental in Bangkok.

Cigar Aficionado, which is popular in the United States and claims a readership of 1.9 million, commented that “If you’re going to stay in a colonial grand hotel, you have to pull out all the stops. The Metropole does that and has a perfectly central location.”

Speth named two deciding factors behind the hotel’s international recognition as the owners recently concluded a US$25 million refurbishment that balanced the hotel’s storied heritage with room enhancements, an avant-garde new restaurant, Angelina, and a spa, the first in its history.

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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Legend Metropole Hanoi ranked in top four

International travel journalists and tourism experts have voted the 109-year-old Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi in the top four urban hotels in the world in the Fifth Annual Hotel and Resort Survey of Cigar Aficionado.

The 364-room hotel was ranked after Four Seasons George V in Paris but on par with the Peninsula in Hong Kong and the Oriental in Bangkok by the jury of people from Virtuoso, CBS News, Forbes Life, National Geographic, travel agents and operators.

It is one of 21 awards that the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi has won in 2010, a record for the luxury hotel on Ngo Quyen Street, Hoan Kiem District in the capital city.

“Really, in the hotel’s long history, this year has been unprecedented,” said Kai Speth, general manager of the hotel. “With recent accolades from such prestigious publications as Conde Nast Traveler, Travel + Leisure and from organizations like PATA, we’ve been moved to a new echelon entirely.”

Besides being honored as one of the world’s top four city hotels, the prestigious North American lifestyle magazine also trumpeted the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi as one of Southeast Asia’s top three hotels, together with the Peninsula in Hong Kong and Oriental in Bangkok.

Cigar Aficionado, which is popular in the United States and claims a readership of 1.9 million, commented that “If you’re going to stay in a colonial grand hotel, you have to pull out all the stops. The Metropole does that and has a perfectly central location.”

Speth named two deciding factors behind the hotel’s international recognition as the owners recently concluded a US$25 million refurbishment that balanced the hotel’s storied heritage with room enhancements, an avant-garde new restaurant, Angelina, and a spa, the first in its history.

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Forum To Call For Japanese Investment In Vietnam Tourism

A forum appealing for investment into the Vietnamese tourism market took place in Tokyo on November 25

Among those participants were Nguyen Phu Binh, Vietnamese ambassador to Japan, Nguyen Thi Hong, deputy chairwoman of HCM City People’s Committee, representatives of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism and businesses from HCM City. Saigontourist was the main organizer of the forum. On the Japanese side, there were a representatives from the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and around 70 businesses concerned with the Vietnamese market.

“HCM City has been and will always be the choice for investors with a strategic vision. The cooperation for investment in Vietnam’s tourism market between Vietnamese and Japanese enterprises will bring about new and successful outcomes,” Nguyen Huu Tho, general director of Saigontourist, vice chairman of the Vietnam Tourism Association and chairman of the HCM City Tourism Association, addressed the Japanese investors in his opening speech at the forum.

At the forum, Saigontourist introduced to investors 12 projects of hotels, resorts and luxury complexes. Tho said he hoped Saigontourist would become a long-term trusted partner of Japanese businesses with strong capital and management, helping to boost the number of Japanese tourists visiting Vietnam and HCM City.

In the development strategy for 2010-2015, Saigontourist will focus on investing in 4,000 additional hotel rooms, resorts, leisure and entertainment complexes, conference centers and marinas of international five-star standard. These are concentrated in HCM City and other main tourist provinces and cities with strength in sea tourism, beautiful sceneries and unique local cultures. Saigontourist receives detailed guidance and special attention from the Government, HCM City leaders as well as other local authorities.

HCM City will always provide the best conditions to attract Japanese investors in tourism and tourism real estate, Nguyen Thi Hong said.

In the 2010 estimation, there will be about three million foreign tourists coming to HCM City, the figure for 2015 is estimated to reach five million. This year Vietnamese tourism was forecast to receive over 4.5 million foreign tourists, with eight million tourists and business visitors predicted for 2015.
Founded in 1975, Saigontourist is currently the biggest tourism corporation in Vietnam, manages over 100 travel companies, hotels, resorts, convention centers, leisure and entertainment complexes. Saigontourist has always been a trusted partner by foreign investors whether they need to research or approach the Vietnamese market.
Do Thi Du Lich Can Gio Joint Stock Co. also hosted a session to introduce Saigon Sunbay project to foreign investors construction of the first phase of Saigon Sunbay on 151 hectares in HCM City’s Can Gio District is scheduled for the first quarter of 2011. This stage will focus on land leveling with infrastructure to be completed by 2013.

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New Areas Dance To The Backpacker Beat

Tourists booking tours at the backpacker area in HCM City's Dist.1
The backpacker grapevine, online and word of mouth, lands Vietnam travelers in areas where Westerners congregate such as HCM City’s Pham Ngu Lao area in District 1. One Westerner I spoke to there said he had heard about it by posting a query on the lonelyplanet.com website about where to find the backpacker social life when he arrived in HCM City.

Humble beginnings

In the few years since those first cheap hotels opened, hundreds more guesthouses and cheap hotels have started thriving businesses in the few blocks that the area occupies. Many of the properties that do not have rooms for rent operate as restaurants, bars, tour operators or shops selling souvenirs, cheap clothing and knock-off CDs – basically anything a backpacker might buy. “Open tour” buses, which allow travelers to hop on and off buses several times with a single ticket, start from here and arrive there, heading for all the country’s top destinations – Nha Trang, Hoi An, Hue or Hanoi. Normally these deposit passengers at a commission-paying guesthouse, and budget travelers could face a battle to head elsewhere.

However, the area’s success has caused property prices to rocket, and many guesthouses are now giving themselves a facelift, re-branding themselves as boutique hotels and charging US$50-70 a night, much higher than three to five years ago. But, in general, for the moment at least, there is enough curiosity about Saigon’s backpacker ghetto that it draws curious Vietnamese and Westerners to hang out in its quirky bars and cafes.
Just like the HCM City’s backpacker area, Ta Hien Street in downtown Hanoi is a popular destination of foreign tourists to trade travel stories and drink some of the world’s cheapest beer. On the website of The Lonely Planet, Ta Hien is dubbed as “The first street that backpackers visit when they arrive in Hanoi and the last place they see before they leave.”

The 200-meter-long strip of broken pavement and sullen houses in the heart of the old quarter plays home to hundreds of travel agencies, budget hotels, cheap eats, hawkers and any business that is likely to ply a few dollars from the price-conscientious backpacker.

But the real meet and greet spot of the city is draught beer corner, an intersection that serves up cool pints of odd tasting beer for as little as VND3,000 (16 U.S. cents) a glass. At the intersection of Ta Hien and Luong Ngoc Quyen streets, the four draught beer shops are teaming with groups of backpackers who have settled into Hanoian street life. But when sunset falls, the “international crossroad” starts to come alive. It all starts at about 8 p.m. and goes until midnight. People gather, drink beer, chat and sing.

Backpackerville expands

Besides Saigon and Hanoi, other cities across Vietnam that are making tourism a specialty are watching backpacker areas that spawned a few years ago grow and develop organically.

It is said that visitors cannot claim to have been to Can Tho City in the Mekong Delta region if they have never been to the city’s Ninh Kieu Pier.

The capital of the Mekong Delta and a few hours by bus from Saigon, Can Tho attracts backpackers who want to discover the mystique of the Mekong. Ninh Kieu Pier cannot compare with the backpacker area in HCM City for the dynamism and variety of tourist services. However, its natural scenery far outshines that of city’s area. One of the interesting things is that the pier for the boats is in the middle of the park. The boats take passengers across the river. They also take visitors to orchards on islands a few kilometers from the city, to the tourist attraction of Huong Phu Sa on another island, or to the floating markets of Cai Rang and Phong Dien.

At one end of the park, Can Tho Market bears the signs of increased tourism. The 200-year-old market has been restored to keep the original character. The central part of the market has become a large area where souvenirs are sold. When night falls, the restaurants here are full of foreign visitors. Especially, from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m., the floating restaurant keeps moving slowly along the Can Tho River, so tourists on the restaurant can enjoy looking at the scenery of the mighty river in the dark.

Traveling toward to the central region, when staying in the central coastal city of Nha Trang, budget travelers would do well to visit the “headquarters” of foreigners on Biet Thu Street. With many shops owned by foreigners, visitors there may feel as if they are walking down a street in a modern European city. While the rest of the city sleeps, the party rages all night in the haven. Most of the mini-hotels, shops, restaurants and bars are crowded with large numbers of visitors from Europe, America and other places.

Over the length of its 500 meters, there are over 20 restaurants and bars serving food from Germany, Italy, France, Japan, Korea and others. Shoppers will find a treasure trove of souvenir shops selling locally produced goods and there are plenty of travel agents offering tours and travel services.

Meanwhile, the whole ancient town of Hoi An in Quang Nam Province that is some 500km north of Nha Trang City is seen as the area for backpackers as it is so small that tourists just need to walk about two hours to discover it. The sightseeing places gather in some central streets, especially on Tran Phu Street. Tourists can see many houses built based on Chinese architecture. The night in Hoi An is very beautiful, especially the riverside road, where many restaurants have romantic decorations. On the 14th day of the lunar month, people will switch the electricity off and hang decorative multi-colored lanterns.

Traveling some 150km toward the north to visit Hue City, the former capital of Vietnam and now a tourism destination, backpackers can go to the area including Nguyen Tri Phuong and Le Loi streets to feel the social backpacker atmosphere. From the “backpacker/budget traveler” alley with a few hotels and cafes whose prices are listed for foreigners, tourists can easily go to the river, Imperial Palace and Dong Ba Market. Scooters-for-hire are available.

In general, the backpacker areas have greatly contributed to Vietnam’s tourism industry and helped popularize the country’s beauty to the world. Thus, it is necessary for tourism authorities to improve the good things of the areas and set some standards so the backpackers will pass on their recommendation to the next wave of travelers.

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