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Pha Lê
Pha Lê là MC chương trình "Lựa chọn thông minh" của Đài truyền hình Hà Nội.
Pha Lê
Người đẹp đất Cảng từng dự thi Hoa hậu Du lịch 2008.
Pha Lê
Cô đã lọt vào top 20 Vietnam Idol 2008 và đang chuẩn bị ra album đầu tay.
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CD của cô có tên "Hoa thuỷ tinh" gồm 9 ca khúc của những nhạc sĩ trẻ.
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Tên tuổi của Pha Lê được nhắc đến nhiều khi có thông tin về chuyện tình cảm của cô và cầu thủ bóng đá nổi tiếng Công Vinh.
Pha Lê
Tuy nhiên, Pha Lê khẳng định, giữa hai người không có chuyện gì sâu sắc.
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Mới đây, cầu thủ Việt kiều Lee Nguyễn, khi thi đấu tại Hà Nội tình cờ xem Pha Lê hát đã bị ấn tượng bởi sắc đẹp lạnh lùng của cô.
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Anh đã chủ động làm quen và xin số điện thoại của Pha Lê.
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Người đẹp tiết lộ, mối quan hệ này hiện dừng ở mức tình bạn do hai người ở quá xa nhau và mới chỉ gặp nhau có một lần.
Pha Lê
Nhiều người đùa gọi cô là "Người đẹp sát cầu thủ".
Pha Lê
Pha Lê luôn tự tin khoe những đường cong nóng bỏng.
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Phong cách người đẹp hướng tới trên sân khấu là sự gợi cảm.
Pha Lê
Cô vừa hoàn thành luận văn tốt nghiệp Đại học Ngoại ngữ.
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Giờ đây, Pha Lê hướng hoàn toàn thời gian, tâm sức của mình vào việc phát triển con đường nghệ thuật.
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Sức hút khó cưỡng từ sự khiêu khích gợi cảm của Pha Lê.
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German economy 'to shrink by 6%'


German car production line
Germany's exports have been hit hard by the global slowdown

Germany's economy will shrink by 6% this year and continue to contract in 2010 according to a forecast from the country's leading economic think tanks.

The estimates, compiled by eight institutes for the German Economy Ministry, also predicts that the rate of unemployment will hit 10% next year.

The gloomy forecast chimes with that of the IMF, which shows the German economy contracting by 5.6% this year.

This is faster than any other major economy apart from Japan, says the IMF.

"The joint forecast of the institutes paints a very dark picture of German economic prospects in the foreseeable future," said Timo Klein at IHS Global Insight.

Severe contraction

The latest twice-yearly forecast shows just how rapidly the outlook for the German economy has deteriorated.

Through 2009 we anticipate a loss of more than 1 million jobs
Joint report from German economic think tanks

The think tank's previous forecast predicted economic growth of 0.2% for this year.

The deepening global downturn now means the group sees a severe economic contraction this year and a further shrinkage of 0.5% next year.

"For 2010 the institutes expect no drastic rebound," the report said.

The IMF is forecasting a contraction in the German economy of 1% in 2010.

Comments by some of Germany's largest companies confirmed the bleak outlook for the country's economy.

"It will probably take five years before demand is back to its pre-crisis level in 2007," said Karl-Thomas Neumann, boss of car parts firm Continental.

The chief of rival Robert Bosch, Franz Fehrenbach, said: "We expect to see a deep recession until well into 2009."

Job losses

The report for the Economy Ministry also forecasts a fall in exports of 22.6%, compared with its prediction of a rise of 0.1% made just six months ago.

Germany is world's largest exporter.

Unemployment, the report says, will hit 10.8% in 2010.

"Through 2009 we anticipate a loss of more than 1 million jobs... and in the [autumn] unemployment will be well over the 4 million mark," the think tanks said.

The IMF forecast sees the Japanese economy contracting by 6.2% this year before growing by 0.2% next year.

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Jet fuel supplier fined VND3 billion for monopoly abuse





Monopoly fuel supplier Vietnam Air Petrol Company has been fined VND3 billion (US$168,300) for cutting off supplies to Jetstar Pacific Airlines without justification on April 1 last year.

The Vietnam Competition Council said at a public hearing Tuesday the petrol company, known better as Vinapco, had abused its monopoly position and flouted the Law of Competition.

A senior official of the council, who wished to be unnamed, told Thanh Nien that Vinapco had imposed unfavorable business conditions on its customer since it is aware that commercial airlines cannot turn to another source of supply in the country.

The penalty was only cautionary, not punitive, because this was its first violation, another council member said.

Vinapco, an affiliate of state-owned Vietnam Airlines, stopped supplying fuel to the Jetstar Pacific fleet on April 1, 2008 as the two sides were arguing over a price increase.

The delay grounded 30 flights supposed to carry some 5,000 passengers. The government ordered Vinapco to resume supply, ending the impasse.

The carrier said at the time that Vinapco had contracted to charge VND593,000 for a ton of aviation fuel for the whole year. But less than three months after the deal, Vinapco demanded VND750,000.

Vinapco said it needed to increase fuel costs to cover the skyrocketing world oil prices, which went past $100 a barrel at that time.

When the dispute broke out, Jetstar Pacific was known as Pacific Airlines. The domestic carrier later transformed into the low-cost Jetstar Pacific in May 2008 under an agreement with Australia’s Jetstar Airways.

At the hearing on Tuesday the budget airline called for separating Vinapco from its rival Vietnam Airlines.

The Vietnam Competition Council said it would forward the proposal to official agencies and tighten control over monopoly services.

Vinapco has 30 days to appeal Tuesday’s ruling, which is also the first anticompetitive ruling the Vietnam Competition Council has made.

Reported by Xuan Danh

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HCMC to crack down on unclean food purveyors



Food stalls at a market in downtown Ho Chi Minh City.
Ho Chi Minh City has set up teams of health inspectors to check as many food producers, merchants and vendors as possible in the monthlong national food safety campaign that started Wednesday.

HCMC People’s Committee Vice Chairman Nguyen Thanh Tai warned that stiff penalties awaited any producer caught breaching the food hygiene regulations.

The health department’s inspections will cover the production and trading of bottled water, ice, soy sauce and milk as well as the kitchens at schools, hospitals, industrial parks and export processing zones in the city’s 300 wards.

Nguyen Thanh Phong, deputy head of the Health Ministry’s Bureau of Food Hygiene and Safety, said it was an urgent issue in HCMC as the city’s population was increasing rapidly.

“It’s not only the matter of food poisoning, but also the threat of epidemics,” Phong said.

HCMC has more than 46,800 food producers and vendors, or ten percent of the national total, according to Phong.

He said only half of the city’s residents were aware of the issue.

Phong said the city should set up a food safety agency, conduct more inspections, and offer to train people in food safety awareness.

The health department said it would inspect and issue food safety certificates to food producers and traders, with a target of 75 percent of food traders and 100 percent of the food caterers and kitchens at schools and industrial parks.

They would also encourage awareness of food safety from enterprises in the field.

Le Truong Giang, the health department’s deputy director, ordered that the kitchens of schools, restaurants and industrial parks be inspected and warned that these establishments were responsible for the ingredients they used and the food they served.

Food poisoning

Last year, there were 22 reported cases of mass food poisoning in HCMC. The 1,618 adults and children who became violently ill were mostly from schools and industrial zones, the health department said.

Health inspectors found violations by more than half of the 16 licensed alcoholic beverage producers and merchants they checked in 2008.

A pilot project to present certificates to street vendors, carried out in Hoc Mon and District 6, has so far certified only 12 percent of them.

Recent inspections also found dozens of bottled water producers violating the safety regulations, with some products found to be contaminated by dangerous bacteria.

Many small food traders in District 5’s Kim Bien Market have no safety certificate, while some of them display food and industrial chemicals side-byside.

Most of them have not been trained properly and given the appropriate knowledge, so they only deal with problems as they arise rather than take preventive action, Giang said.

He said the department had detected and confiscated a large number of cakes infected with bacteria that were ready for sale last Christmas that could have caused mass poisoning.

However, Giang said the management of food safety had improved recently thanks to the establishment of several wholesale markets.

Around 90 percent of aquatic products, 75 percent of vegetables and 80 percent of meat consumed in the city now come from three major wholesale markets – Tam Binh in Thu Duc District, Tan Xuan in Hoc Mon District and Binh Dien in District 8.

“We have managed about 80 percent of the food in the marketplace,” Giang said.

However, he said the department was yet to issue any safety certificate to food chains which have emerged recently to build systems of breeding/cultivating, harvesting/slaughtering and selling.

Taking the message nationwide

Hanoi’s Steering Committee for Food Hygiene and Safety said they would set up six teams to inspect food hygiene regulations in production, trading and advertising.

Each team will inspect five districts and violators could be named in the media, as well as fined.

In Quang Ngai Province, health inspectors will check farms, factories, markets and shops while the provincial government will run a publicity campaign to make people more aware of food safety.

Khanh Hoa Province authorities also boasted of better food safety management and encouraged all government offices, food producers and residents to participate in the campaign.

As part of the campaign, cars bearing banners are doing the rounds of Nha Trang to publicize the campaign and its message.

Between 2004 and 2008, there were 43 cases of mass food poisoning in Khanh Hoa. Four of the 515 victims died. Since then, four cases have put 50 people in the sickbed.

In Nam Dinh Province, the authorities have ordered thorough inspections, held several conferences on the issue, and publicized the campaign widely in the media.

The inspections are to be done at the provincial, district and communal level. Health Department inspectors will check kitchens at industrial parks and schools as well as the trading of milk and bottled water and the production of soft drinks.

In Quang Binh Province, the publicity for the campaign will be everywhere. Tran Cong Thuat, vice chairman of the Quang Binh People’s Committee, said this was important as the current fines did little to deter violators.

In Ninh Thuan Province, hundreds of young people and health officials attended a rally Wednesday to encourage greater awareness of food safety.

Inspections of more than 3,000 food producers and traders last year revealed violations by nearly a third of them. In Quang Binh alone, there were 223 recorded cases of mass food poisoning last year.

Source: Agencies

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Paris Hilton car

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Relative calm during the storm



The Vietnamese people remain positive during this time of economic difficulties, according to a recent survey by The Nielsen Company
While much of the world is in turmoil over the current economic and financial environment, there’s a relative calm over Vietnam.

Although it might be naïve to assume Vietnam is immune to the woes of the global economy and financial sector, some experts are presenting a rather buoyant and optimistic outlook for Vietnam and Asia in 2009 and beyond.

Growth in Southeast Asian economies has slowed dramatically as the global economy withers, but the region is by no means experiencing what the US, Europe and Japan are. The Asian Development Bank forecasts Vietnam’s GDP growth at 5 percent; the World Bank forecast is higher, at 6.5 percent – significantly lower than previous growth of around 8 percent.

Ayumi Konishi, Vietnam Country Director of Asian Development Bank (ADB) believes the situation in Asia right now is relatively good. Speaking at a luncheon hosted by Eurocham on Thursday, Konishi said that the impact of the global financial crisis is likely to be deeper and longer than expected. But he expressed some positive prospects for Vietnam and Asia in general.

The ADB expects good growth in the short-to-medium term for Asia, with the region and the economies fundamentally sound. Konishi said he doubts that there will be a repeat of the Asian financial crisis of 1997.

The global financial crisis, which started in the G3 countries in the financial sector and moved to the real economy, has now impacted businesses and bottom-lines somewhat indiscriminately, and affected both blue collar workers and executives. Konishi said that with any impact in Asia, we’re likely to see the reverse trend, with the real economy being hit first – businesses and banks’ balance sheets are likely to be hurt – followed by a weakening of the corporate and then the financial sector.

These comments come off the back of three economic agreements signed

by Southeast Asian nations on Tuesday, aimed to encourage investment and reduce tariffs. The trade agreements by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) were ratified after the enactment of a new charter in Jakarta on Monday, setting free trade and political liberalization standards for the 10 members.

The Vietnamese government this week announced it would expand a proposed US$1 billion economic stimulus package to $6 billion, in part through increasing tax breaks for importers, manufacturers and consumers. The details of that package are yet to be announced.

Konishi, who recently attended the Consultative Group Meeting in Hanoi, indicated the direct impact of the global financial crisis on Vietnam would be small. He said Vietnam’s financial sector would feel little impact since the big financial institutions that are in trouble have little investment here.

According to Vietnam’s General Statistics office and ADB’s calculations, Vietnam’s exports and imports have declined from July 2008 onwards. The country’s stock market has performed poorly and was one of the worst in Asia this year, with the benchmark index tumbling by about 67 percent. The Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange has seen dramatic fluctuations this year, and it’s now back to its 2006 level of about 300.

“As long as it stays at 300 level... I don’t think we should be too worried,” Konishi said.

There will be indirect impacts on Vietnam as well. The ADB predicts Vietnam will see slower exports, further decreases in tourist arrivals, weaker foreign direct investment (FDI) and declining remittances and labor exports.

International Market Assessment (IMA) Asia’s latest Asia Pacific Executive Brief for December 2008 states that industrial production has slowed down to 5.6 percent year-onyear in November compared to a peak of 35.7 percent year-on-year in March.

As the global economy slows down, many companies which have production based in Asia, will start to close down some manufacturing plants, but also open up others, said Konishi.

“The question is will Vietnam be attractive enough? It will depend on how Vietnam can improve the business climate,” he said.

And on Friday, grim news from the President of the World Bank, warning of a worldwide struggle in the first half of 2009.

“I am afraid that the first six months of 2009 are going to be problematic worldwide, including Asia and Southeast Asia,” Robert Zoellick told journalists during a visit to Singapore.

“Governments’ monetary and fiscal policy, as well as open trade systems, will determine whether the situation can improve later next year,” he said.

But the Vietnamese people remain positive during these uncertain times. A recent survey by The Nielsen Company shows consumer confidence in Vietnam is still relatively high, ranked 9th worldwide, although it has been declining over the past year. The Global Consumer Confidence Survey carried out in the midst of the crisis in October, found 45 percent of Vietnamese expect the recession to end within 12 months.

Reported by Asha Phillips

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