Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Miss Vietnam contestants shine in bikini — TalkVietnam

Miss Vietnam contestants shine in bikini — TalkVietnam



Miss Vietnam contestants shine in bikini

 

(VOV) -The 38 contestants qualifying for the 2014 Miss Vietnam pageant showed off their beauty in their sexy bikinis at Tranh stream on Phu Quoc island.

During their picnic to Tranh stream, which is a perfect backdrop for them to show beauty in swimsuits, the Miss Vietnam contestants posed for photos and participated in video clips to disseminate information on environment, sea and island protection.

After their photo shoots in Tranh stream, the 38 contestants will move to Doi Moi (turtle) island for more video clips.



Some images of Miss Vietnam contestants at Tranh stream:

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Saturday, May 3, 2014

Vietnam Women's Museum

Vietnam Women’s Museum, an exciting place in Hanoi
"Top destination", "A museum to see", "This is also interesting for men", "An honest museum".... These are comments foreign visitors made after visiting the Vietnam Women’s Museum in Hanoi. It is a beautiful museum that highlights Vietnamese women’s image. Radio the Voice of Vietnam reports.




Vietnam Women’s Museum


The Vietnam Women’s Museum is located on Ly Thuong Kiet street, 500m from Hanoi’s Old Quarters. Founded in 1987, the museum is known as the Gender Museum, which researches, preserves and displays tangible and intangible cultural heritages of Vietnamese women as well as the Vietnam Women’s Union.
It is also a cultural center for Vietnamese and foreign women to exchange cultural activities for equality, development and peace of women.
Covering 2000 square meters, the museum has nearly 25,000 documents and objects reflecting Vietnamese women’s contributions to history and contemporary life.
The museum in a 4-storey building is arranged like a history book, where visitors can enjoy the exhibits like turning pages of a history book.
Tran Thu Huyen, a guide of the museum said: “Each floor is a chapter of the book with vivid images, documents, and diverse objects, through which visitors can better understand Vietnamese women."
In the museum’s lobby on the first floor, visitors are memorised by the statue called "Vietnamese mother ". This statue won the first prize in a sculpture competition organised by the Museum and the Fine Arts Association of Ho Chi Minh City in 1995.
Huyen said: "The statue represents a Vietnamese mother carrying her son on her shoulders. The mother seems to be trying to protect her child from difficulties and dangers. Sculpted by Nguyen Phu Cuong, the statue shows the beauty and strength of Vietnamese women."
The second floor is devoted to permanent exhibitions featuring different topics: marriage, child birth, and family life, and female figures in history, fashion, cosmetics and jewelry.
Huyen says:“The first theme of the permanent exhibit here is women in the family. The exhibits are arranged in a story-telling way, which is about a Vietnamese woman’s life from her adulthood to marriage, becoming a wife and a mother. This part is divided into three main themes: marriage, child birth and family life”.
The 3rd floor reflects Vietnamese women’s contributions to and sacrifices for national independence. Moving images depicting the torture, interrogation and imprisonment that Vietnamese women suffered during the war show us their courage and indomitable spirit.
Huyen says that this is the most popular part of the museum, especially for foreigners. The visitors are also interested in the exhibition of activities of the Vietnam Women's Union, memories and gifts from our friends around the world.
On the top floor is an exhibit of traditional Vietnamese costumes throughout history. Tom Watt, an Austrian visitor said that he was captivated by the beauty of the traditional clothes presented, which are old and different from those of today.
There are also clothes of women from different ethnic minority groups in Vietnam. These costumes reflect the skill and sophistication of Vietnamese women in dressing.
To better entertain visitors, the museum has modern facilities allowing visitors to learn more about the lives of Vietnamese women. Audio guides are also available in some exhibit rooms.
Elected by the travel website TripAdvisor as the most exciting place in Hanoi from over 80 attractions in Hanoi for two consecutive years, 2012 and 2013, the Vietnam Women’s Museum is a good place for those who want to learn more about Vietnam, its culture and people.
Source: VNA
 
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Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Ngo Thanh Vietnamese Model one of Top 50 beautiful women in the World

Actress Ngo Thanh Van among top most beautiful women
VietNamNet Bridge - Vietnamese model, actress and singer Ngo Thanh Van has been selected as one of the top 50 beautiful women in the world by website World Actuality.


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Information about Ngo Thanh Van in World Actuality.


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Ngo Thanh Van.



Ngo Thanh Van was honored at the 10th position. She overcame many world-famous names to enter the top 10 together with Adriana Lima, Candice Swanepoel, Eva Mendes ...
Ngo Thanh Van is the sole representative of Vietnam named in the rankings. The website described Veronica Ngo Thanh Van, aka NTV virus, as a stunning Vietnamese model/actress/singer, successful in everything she does with outstanding natural beauty.
The top ten includes model Idda Van Munster (Aid Dapo) from Bosnia, followed by super model Irina Shayk – the girlfriend of world’s famous footballer Christiano Ronaldo, model and actress Madaline Ghenea from Romania, Priyanka Chopra – the king of beauty from India, Jin Mei Xi – Chinese hot girl, US actress Megan Fox, Ada Aimee De La Cruz – Miss Dominica, model Rim Saidi from Tunisia, and model Sara Sampaio from Portugal.
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Idda Van Munster from Bosnia.
World Actuality is a website specializing in international news aggregated from multiple sources. This site organizes poles on the most beautiful women in the world, the world's best photos, and the most attractive places... They did not announce the criteria of the poll.
Ngo Thanh Van said she is extremely happy and proud to hear the news...
Ngo Thanh Van was just awarded the "Best style of the year" by a famous magazine in Vietnam.
In June 2013, singer Ho Quynh Huong won the title "The Sexiest Vegetarian Celebrity" of Asia 2013 of PETA Asia - Pacific (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals).
T. Van

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Women to have six-month maternity leave | Look At Vietnam

Women to have six-month maternity leave

June 19, 2012
LookAtVietnam – The National Assembly (NA) on June 8 ratified five laws. The approval of the amended Labor Code is highly appreciated for its progressive regulations on retirement age, minimum salary and maternity leave.

From May 1,
2013, women will have a six-month maternity leave instead of only four
months.
According to the amended Labor Code, which will take effect from May 1, 2013, women will have a six-month maternity leave instead of only four months. In case of having twins or more, the mother will have one month more for each baby.
Relating to the number of overtime hours, workers are allowed to work overtime up to 200 hours a year, but the number of overtime hours cannot exceed half of the official working hours in one day.
Annually, workers have ten days off for holidays, including five days for the lunar New Year holiday.
The NA still votes to keep the same retirement age for women at 55 and men at 60. However, the NA Standing Committee said it was still looking at the possibility of equalizing the retirement age between men and women and study other factors related to managing the national security fund.
Also yesterday, the NA passed the Law on Anti-Money Laundering, Law on Higher Education, and the Law on Tobacco Prevention and Control.
Accordingly, the Law on Higher Education will increase the level of autonomy given to higher education institutions, especially national universities, in regards to training, scientific research, finance and international relations.
The Law on Tobacco Prevention and Control strictly prohibits people under age 18 from using, selling or buying tobacco. The law also states that a tobacco prevention fund would be raised by mandatory contributions from tobacco producers, importers would pay a percentage of cigarette prices before VAT and special use taxes, and it would not affect the national budget.
PV

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Tobacco firms take aim at Asian women

Bangladeshi chest doctor Kazi Saifuddin Bennoor has seen many misleading cigarette advertisements, but the one that suggested smoking could make childbirth easier plumbed new depths.


Advertisements telling smokers they are smarter, more energetic and better lovers than their non-smoking counterparts are a familiar sight across Bangladesh -- something unimaginable in most other countries.

One in a rural area, Bennoor remembers, said that "if a lady smokes, her baby will be smaller and it will be easier to deliver, the labour will be less painful".

"These are very ruthless advertisements," said Saifuddin, an associate professor at Bangladesh's National Hospital for Chest Diseases.
The promotion is being linked to an alarming rise in tobacco use in the impoverished South Asian country, particularly among women and the young -- a trend repeated across many developing countries, anti-tobacco groups say.
The World Health Organisation warns that tobacco companies are targeting women in developing countries as a new growth market and Dhaka-based doctors treating lung diseases report they are seeing more female patients.

Around 28 percent of adult Bangladeshi women now use tobacco, according to the latest WHO survey, and 43 percent of the adult population -- or 41 million people -- use tobacco in some form, up from 37 percent in 2004.

"(Tobacco use) has become an epidemic among rural women. It's a very serious health issue," a government adviser on health, Syed Mudasser Ali, told AFP, adding that anti-smoking laws were poorly enforced.

Tobacco advertising was banned in Bangladesh in 2005, so the advertisements are usually fly-posters that do not specify the company behind the message.

"Only a negligible number of people have been fined for breaching tobacco laws over the last few years," Ali said.

Officially 57,000 people die in Bangladesh of tobacco use annually, but that figure was likely a "huge underestimate".

The country fits a pattern emerging across the region of rising rates of female tobacco use, particularly in Southeast Asian countries such as Indonesia, the Philippines and Cambodia.
This rise is largely because more Asian women are entering the workforce, have disposable income and see smoking as "modern and liberated," said doctor Mary Assunta, director of the International Tobacco Control Project.
"I've seen tobacco companies' marketing campaigns on my university campus and in residential dormitories," said one 25-year-old Bangladeshi female smoker who used to smoke a pack a day but is trying to quit on her doctor's advice.
"They approach students with a questionnaire and ask them to fill it in to win T-shirts or lighters," she said, adding that she started smoking as her friends in class at Dhaka University all smoked.
 
Tobacco companies are encouraging the trend, viewing women in developing countries as their "largest unexploited market", according to the WHO -- which has chosen the theme of tobacco marketing to women for 2010 No Tobacco Day on May 31.

"We see clear marketing strategies targeting women in Asia such as lipstick-type cigarette packs in Indonesia, Malaysia and Laos," said Assunta.
The pretty, small packets of ultra-thin cigarettes are designed to be something a woman would like to carry around with her at all times, just like her favourite lipstick.

"These fit easily into women's purses. Cigarette packs are coloured pink and there are even fruit flavoured cigarettes," Assunta said

Tobacco companies in Bangladesh contacted by AFP all denied using illegal fly-posters or point of sales marketing, which the ministry of health hoped to stop with an amended version of the 2005 law.

The market is dominated by volume leader Dhaka Tobacco, which has a 40-percent share and monopolises low-end sales.

British American Tobacco, which makes the popular Pall Mall and John Player Gold Leaf cigarettes, dominates the 140 million dollar premium tobacco market with its Benson and Hedges brand.

"BAT Bangladesh markets cigarettes in Bangladesh in full compliance of all applicable laws, rules, and regulations," company spokesman Shamim Zahedy told AFP, adding that their marketing only targeted existing smokers.
In February, WHO chief Margaret Chan said that developing countries were the "new frontier" for tobacco marketing.
"If Big Tobacco is in retreat in some parts of the world, it is on the march in others," she said in a speech on the fifth anniversary of an international convention on tobacco control.

"In these countries as elsewhere, girls and women are a market with attractive and lucrative growth potential, and they are likewise being targeted," Chan said.

In developed countries, tobacco companies have seen their marketing restricted or banned and sales are falling as public health campaigns and tight rules on smoking in public places hit profits.

As a result, developing markets are becoming "increasingly important" for transnational companies such as BAT and Philip Morris International -- which is aggressively expanding in the Philippines and Indonesia, said Assunta.

"Tobacco companies are definitely putting effort into consolidating their positions in low income countries," she said.
Even Bangladesh, where nearly 40 percent of the population of 144 million lives on less than a dollar a day, is a lucrative tobacco market, with annual sales estimated at around one billion dollars.
In Bangladesh's remote, rural areas, the health risks of tobacco use are not always well known, Bennoor said, making poor farmers -- particularly women who are generally less well educated -- an easy target.


"It is a vicious cycle: people who are poor are more vulnerable to tobacco addiction, and then they are smoking, and it makes them poorer," he said.
For Bangladesh's rural poor, approximately 4.5 percent of household expenditure goes on tobacco, according to WHO estimates.

In some areas, there have been signs of a fightback against the advertising, however.

At Dhaka University, one fly-poster claiming "smoking makes you smarter and more manly" prompted a student-run counter-campaign

"We are smart and we don't smoke," said handmade posters plastered over the original adverts on the university's city-centre campus.

Friday, June 20, 2008

‘Why aren’t more Indian women empowered?’

Indian women have reached the highest office, yet why isn’t this empowerment trickling down to all levels, asked Syria’s first lady at an interaction with women journalists here Thursday. A former investment banker, Asma Akhras al-Assad, 33, arrived nearly an hour late at the Indian Women’s Press Corps, but stayed on longer than the scheduled period. She is accompanying her husband, President Bashar al-Assad, on a five-day state visit to India commencing Tuesday evening.
Dressed in black blouse, brown leather belt and a calf-length pink skirt with brown trimmings, she began with a query of her own about the status of Indian women.
“I have a question which has been on my mind,” said fresh-faced Asma.
“Women in India have reached the highest office and there is a long story of struggle, but when I interacted with activists yesterday, I realised that not all sections of women are able to reach their potential”.
She expressed her interest in understanding this dichotomy in the status of women. “You have achieved what the United States have not been able to do till now, so why is this disparity,” inquired Asma.
The assembled women journalists then fired off questions at her, asking about the exceptional status of Syrian women in the Arab world and the forces that threaten their freedom.
The first lady answered that the high status of Syrian women was due to the “secular nature of the state”. She clarified that there were “pressures” which rendered maintaining this status “increasingly difficult” due to the sectarian forces that are in Syria’s neighbourhood.
To a question whether Syrian women were increasingly taking up the ‘hijab’, Asma said: “The important thing is not how we dress, but if they are active in the community”.
After all, she pointed out that several women parliamentarians, businesswomen and social activists did wear a ‘hijab’, but that was only incidental to their public identity.
While there were demands for quota for women in decision-making bodies in Syria, Asma expressed that she was “personally not in favour of quota”.
“I believe that quota can bring in complacency… the need to excel, compete or struggle may be diminished among woman,” she said.
Towards the end, she expressed her appreciation for the welcome that she got in India on her maiden visit. “I thought that Syrian hospitality was very good, but the hospitality and warmth that we got here was very nice”.