Showing posts with label women's Union. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women's Union. Show all posts

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Women’s rights advance with co-operation


Women’s rights advance with co-operation

The Central Committee of the Women’s Union held a meeting in Hanoi on April 10 with international sponsors in a bid to further boost co-operation for the advancement of Vietnamese women.
Speaking at the event, Union Chairwoman Nguyen Thi Thanh Hoa underlined the union’s pivotal role over the past years and its achievements in encouraging and supporting women, exercising their legitimate rights and supporting their material and spiritual lives.
However, many challenges still lie ahead. Women and children under its care have a variety of different social and education backgrounds, and reside across the country. Social awareness of gender equality and women’s progress has improved, but it is still lacking in some localities, while the union is short of qualified staff.
To address the issue, the chairwoman hopes to receive greater support from organisations and agencies inside and outside the country in the coming time to help the union improve the capacity of its staff.
At the event, international partners showed their determination to strengthen co-operation with the union for the advancement of Vietnamese women and gender equality.
(VNA)

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Vietnam Sets Up Speaking Library For Blind

Vietnam sets up speaking library has made the world a brighter place for many blind and visually impaired children, its news agency VNA reported.Run by the Ho Chi Minh City Women's Union, the library is the brainchild of Nguyen Huong Duong, a member of the union's volunteer staff.Duong set up the library in 1998 after a visit to the city's Nguyen Dinh Chieu Blind Children School where she was taken aback by the lack of stimulation and entertainment available for the children.All they had for fun were a few Braille books and a single radio, which broadcast children's entertainment programmes for just 15 minutes a day, Duong recalls,"I thinks I'll involve myself in the job of developing the 'speaking library' for the rest of my life," said the 37-year-old Duong, who lost her legs in a horrific traffic accident.Duong's project and dream has been hugely successful thanks to the sponsorship of the HCM City Women's Union and the supply of many other benefactors, both organisations and individuals.The library now offers over 820 recorded books, including Vietnamese and foreign novels, short stories, poems and collection of legends, giving visually impaired children access to a wonderful world of dreams, hopes and smiles.It has also recorded and presented nearly 150,000 cassette books for schools and cultural centres in poor and remote areas across the country, where the blind community endures the hardship of inadequate reading materials."Blind children are unable to see the world, but they can get a feel for it from our library's speaking books," said Duong.Duong and her staff do every thing by themselves such as borrowing books from local libraries and publishing houses, reading and recording and dubbing music into cassette tapes.It takes the special librarians at least a month to record a novel on 20 tapes.Now Duong and her colleagues have further widened the reach of their work with part-time jobs at local radio stations where they read books and host entertainment programmes for children.-- BERNAMA