The occasion is expected to provide visitors with greater insights into the past, present, and future of the Vietnamese agriculture and rice industry. Currently, farmers in the locality are urgently completing the Vietnam Rice Road.
The rice plants are put on display at the event. There are many rice varieties showcased on the road, including IR50404, OM 5454, Dai Thom 8, and ST 25.
Various types of specialty fruit trees of Hau Giang are also showcased throughout the road.
Ancient houses are made of bamboo, thatched with leaves and tools related to rice.
Images of threshers and straw pillars are recreated on the rice road.
.Canals and ditches in the Mekong Delta with water hyacinths, water lilies, and boats also appear on the rice road.
After manual rice harvesting, the development step in the rice production process of local residents in the Mekong Delta is to have threshers and plows. Hau Giang province has also launched the Xa No tourist boat which can promptly serve people, especially tourists visiting Hau Giang province as part of the occasion.
Information on the plans was released on February 9 by Lam Ngo Hoang Anh, chief of office of the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Culture and Sports. The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism is scheduled to send the document to the Ministry of National Defense, the National Commission for UNESCO, and the National Council of Cultural Heritage, asking for opinions on a summary report of the scientific dossier of the Cu Chi Tunnels. The dossier is expected to be submitted to UNESCO in order to introduce the relic site into the list of proposed World Heritage records. As part of the next phase, Ho Chi Minh City will co-ordinate with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism to report to the Prime Minister for permission to work alongside the National Committee of UNESCO to register with the UNESCO World Heritage Center, aiming to put the historical site into the list moving forward. Cu Chi Tunnels is a network of underground defense tunnels built by locals and resista...
with even large travel companies finding it tough to survive. Cruise ships are docked at Saigon Port in HCMC. Vietnam has effectively contained the Covid-19 pandemic but its tourism industry is recovering at a slow pace – PHOTO: DAO LOAN After several months of trying to sustain its staff and preparing for a rebound, a travel group has changed its plan as the tourism market is only worsening. Last week, the group’s CEO decided to lay off 200 employees at its hotel in the Mekong Delta. “I know it will be hard for them to find a new job but this is the last resort because we will have no work for them in the next six months,” he explained. Many travel companies, hotels and restaurants have been shut since the Covid-19 pandemic broke out in late January 2020, while companies that are still operating are struggling because the domestic travel demand is recovering modestly and the country is still closed to international tourists. “We have tapped our reserve fund to sup...
The event was held by the Vietnam Association of Photographic Artists (VAPA) and the Department of Fine Arts, Photography and Exhibition under the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism. Congratulating VAPA and photographers on their significant achievements over the last 70 years, Nguyen Trong Nghia, Chairman of the Party Central Committee’s Commission for Information and Education, said the country’s revolutionary photography has shown impressive development and made important contributions to the national reunification, construction, and defence. It has created a treasure of extremely valuable photos about the land and people of Vietnam, helping popularise the country’s fine values to the society and the world. He particularly highlighted the role of photographers during resistance wars, describing them as witnesses to history who were present on battlefields to capture glorious images of the Vietnamese army and people in the struggles for national independen...
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