Showing posts with label Giang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Giang. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2011

$3,500 compensation for lightning-hit footballer

Former Second Division footballer Tran Thanh Truong, who was struck by lightning while playing a match in 2008 and has become partially paralyzed, will get a compensation of just VND69 million (US$3,450), authorities announced yesterday.

The 29-year-old has been paid $2,000 by the Kien Giang Province Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, and the remaining $1,450 will be paid by the football association, the Department’s vice director Vo Dong Lap said Wednesday.

However, Truong did not get his salary for the period left in his contract or insurance after the accident that took place in May 2008 when his team, Nguyen Hoang Kien Giang, were playing Vinh Long.

After being hit by a bolt, he became unconscious and his heart stopped briefly. Doctors diagnosed him with brain damage and partial paralysis and loss of speech.

Circular 34/2007 stipulates that the government should cover treatment costs through social and medical insurance if a sportsperson is injured during training or competition.

Besides, the victim should also be paid full salary during the period of treatment.

 set danh

Tran Thanh Truong of Nguyen Hoang Kien Giang and Du Thien Chuong of Vinh Long FC are given medical support on Vinh Long Stadium on May 2, 2008 after being struck by lightning

His labor contract with Nguyen Hoang Kien Giang had five months to run after the accident but he did not get his wages.

His mother had to feed him for almost two years until he got better but he continues to live off his family’s savings and donations from colleagues and sponsors.

Now, he can walk by himself but has almost lost his memory that he is again learning from text books meant for six-year-old children.

Du Thien Chuong of Vinh Long FC was also injured in the lightning strike but he has fully recovered.

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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

An Giang, Nam Dinh book final round spots in U21 tourney

An Giang and Nam Dinh topped their respective groups, F and A, to win final round berths at the U.21 National Football champion to be held in Gia Lai in October.

An Giang beat Kien Giang 3-1 on Sunday in the Mekong Delta while Nam Dinh fought to a 0-0 tie with Hanoi ACB on Monday in the northern province of Nam Dinh.

Lam Hai Dang, Le Chi Thanh and Tuan Anh scored the goals for An Giang while Danh Phen pulled a consolation goal for Kien Giang.

The qualifying round matches of the Thanh Nien-sponsored football tournament were exciting all the way to the final minutes.

With two byes for hosts Hoang Anh Gia Lai and reigning champs Da Nang to the final round, the 30 other teams had to compete very hard in six groups from September 5 to 20.

The qualifying rounds presented such tough competition that Group D hosts Khanh Hoa, Group E hosts Ho Chi Minh City and Group F hosts Kien Giang failed to advance.

Eight qualified teams will compete in Pleiku Town, capital of the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai, from October 7-17, and the best four teams will qualify for the international U.21 football tournament.

The international event will take place at Ho Chi Minh City’s Thong Nhat Stadium from October 23-31. It is co-organized by the Vietnam Football Federation and Thanh Nien, and sponsored by the newspaper.

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Thursday, September 23, 2010

Japanese TV highlights VN’s ancient Oc Eo culture

The Japanese TV channel BS, is filming a documentary on the ancient Oc
Eo culture in the Mekong Delta province of An Giang to highlight its
unique cultural characteristics, according to the Ministry of Culture,
Sports and Tourism (MoCST).


As part of the project, from September 19-29, the film group will shoot
scenes in Ho Chi Minh City, Quang Nam and An Giang provinces where the
Oc Eo culture is found. The Japanese funded film will be approved by the
MoCST before it is shown in Japan.


Discovered by a
French scholar Louis Malleret and made public in 1944, the Oc Eo culture
grew and developed in the southern delta, largely in An Giang, from the
first to the sixth century AD.


In addition to An
Giang, the scientists have discovered over 100 sites belonging to Oc Eo
culture across the Mekong Delta provinces and parts of the south-eastern
region with more than 50,000 artefacts made from various materials such
as terra-cotta, stone, agate and metal.


The most common is ceramics, reflecting the cultural identity and origin of the culture.


Vietnam is currently proposing UNESCO recognise the ancient Oc Eo culture as a cultural heritage./.

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