Campaign features manga character to raise children’s road sense

Doraemon, a famous Japanese manga character, is featured in a traffic safety campaign targeting Vietnamese children that was launched in Hanoi on April 20.
Campaign features manga character to raise children’s road sense ảnh 1400 helmets are presented to pupils of Tan Dinh Primary School at the launch of the UN Global Road Safety Week in May 2015 (Source: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Doraemon, a famous Japanese manga character, is featured in a traffic safety campaign targeting Vietnamese children that was launched in Hanoi on April 20. 

Doraemon is popular among children in Asia, including Vietnam, and has served as a symbol of traffic safety for decades in Japan.

The “Doraemon with traffic safety in Vietnam” programme aims to popularise effective ways Japan has conducted to educate children about traffic safety, thus reducing accidents in the country. 

As part of the drive, a slogan contest is open for students aged between six and 15 under the theme “Be careful on the way to school”. Others aged 16 and over can create slogans under the topic “For children’s safety” to vie for prizes. 

The best slogan will be used as the road safety slogan of the year and appear on posters hung at primary schools nationwide, said Lieutenant Colonel Nguyen Quang Nhat, head of the traffic law dissemination division of the Ministry of Public Security’s Department of Traffic Police. 

Traffic safety classes will be opened at three schools in Hanoi and two others in Ho Chi Minh City from September. Local traffic police officers along with the Doraemon costumed characters will come to popularise the traffic law and guide primary students how to commute safely. 

Each student at those schools and 20 others in the two cities will also be presented with a road safety handbook and a badge featuring the winning slogan and Doraemon, Nhat said. 

Tsuneda Teruo, Managing Director at Japan’s Mainichi Newspapers Co. Ltd – the campaign’s co-organiser, said about 15,000 Japanese people were killed by traffic accidents every year during the 1980s. 

To deal with this problem, his country launched a traffic safety programme featuring Doraemon 30 years ago. Japan is now one of the countries with the safest traffic network in the world, while its people have very good road sense. The number of traffic-linked deaths has shrunk to around 4,000 a year. 

Vietnam is facing the same situation that Japan experienced in the past, he said, noting that more than 9,000 people die of traffic accidents in the country annually and many of them are children. 

Tsuneda Teruo said it is adults’ responsibility to ensure traffic safety for their children, and they must educate children about this. He said he hopes that Vietnamese parents will take part in the traffic safety campaign since their children often copy what they do.-VNA

VNA

See more

A rice field in Cuba's Pinar del Rio province. Rice production is a bright spot in Vietnam-Cuba agricultural cooperation (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam supports Cuba in ensuring food security

During an inspection tour of the westernmost province of Pinar del Río on April 25, the PM visited a joint rice cultivation project with Vietnam and was briefed on the progress of a large-scale pilot model underway in Los Palacios district.

The 2024 VNA Press Awards honours the dedication, courage and sacrifice of its journalists (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam News Agency: A pioneer in multimedia journalism

The 2024 VNA Press Awards once again honour the dedication, courage and sacrifice of its journalists, those who go to great lengths, often in the most challenging environments, to deliver timely and meaningful news.

Nhat Tan bridge in Hanoi (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam makes strides in five-decade development: Expert

Vietnam is now regarded as one of the five "tiger cup economies" in the region, with bright spots in exports and international integration, said Prof. Dr. Joseph Van Vo, President of the Association of Vietnamese Scientists and Experts (AVSE Global).

A Certificate of merit by the State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese presented to the family representative of Dr. Nguyen Tri Dung, a Vietnamese in Japan. (Photo: VNA)

Outstanding overseas Vietnamese honoured for contributing to HCM City’s development

HCM City hopes that the OV community, through the State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese, will continue to accompany and collaborate with the Party, government, and people of Ho Chi Minh City to successfully achieve the set goals, aiming to make the city a centre for economy, finance, services, culture, education and training, science-technology, and innovation in the region by 2045.

Dr. Ruvislei González Saez, a senior researcher at Cuba's Centre for International Policy Studies. (Photo: VNA)

April 30, 1975 marks triumph of Vietnam’s culture, tradition, history: Cuban researcher

The April 30, 1975 triumph also had a significant impact on the international history as it completely dismantled the geopolitical framework of the US imperialism in the world. It became a great impetus for revolutionary forces globally, contributing to the advancement of humanity’s struggle for peace, national independence, democracy, and social progress.

Reporter Ahn Byung Chan (centre) is welcomed back home after leaving Sai Gon on early morning of April 30, 1975. (Photo published by VNA)

Korean reporter remembers days before April 30,1975 victory

Ahn Byung Chan, a former reporter for the Republic of Korea (RoK)’s Hankook Ilbo newspaper was the last Korean journalist to leave Sai Gon (now Ho Chi Minh City) on the early morning of April 30, 1975 on the flight that he believed the last one from the US Embassy's building rooftop on April 30.