Coastal localities make efforts to remove EC’s yellow card

The south-central province of Binh Dinh is determined to have no local fishing boats violating foreign waters in the next six months before the European Commission (EC) review the “yellow card” against Vietnamese fisheries sector, according to Secretary of the provincial Party Committee Ho Quoc Dung.
Coastal localities make efforts to remove EC’s yellow card ảnh 1Illustrative image (Source: VNA)
Binh Dinh (VNA) – The south-central province ofBinh Dinh is determined to have no local fishing boats violating foreign watersin the next six months before the European Commission (EC) reviews the “yellowcard” against Vietnamese fisheries sector, according to Secretary of the provincialParty Committee Ho Quoc Dung.

Dung said that the province will strictly handle leaders oflocalities that see fishing vessels violating foreign waters, while notallowing boats with a length of less than 15m to conduct fishing activities.

He underlined the need to build a coordination regulations on illegal,unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing prevention and combat between BinhDinh and southern localities, along with the sending of a working team tolocalities where Binh Dinh fishing vessels are operating to give legaleducation for ship owners.

The provincial leader said that the locality will also focus on strengthening communications,increasing patrols and strictly handling violations.

Since 2020, Binh Dinh has seen 37 vessels violating foreign waters, mostlythose going offshore from nearby localities.

Tran Van Phuc, Director of the provincial Department ofAgriculture and Rural Development, said one of the reasons behind the situationis that some fishermen have been confused about the border at sea and theunclear demarcation of maritime border between countries in the region,especially in the southern waters of Vietnam, leading to violations in theoverlapping areas.

Meanwhile, as part of the efforts to join hands in removing the EC’s yellow card, the south-central province of Binh Thuan has rolled out various measures to prevent IUU fishing.

Binh Thuan, having 192km coastline and 52,000 sq.km of seawater, has mobilised the engagement of the whole political system in theeffort.

Along with issuing a number of policies and mechanisms toenhance the efficiency of IUU combat, including supporting ship owners toinstall vessel monitoring system (VMS), the province has focused on controllingthe origin of fisheries products, and not allowed vessels without sufficientdocuments to go offshore.

In the first 11 months of this year, the province hadsupervised the handling activities of 4,951 fishing vessels, and confisticating 3,843 fishing record books.

The provincial Department of Agriculture and RuralDevelopment said that in order to put an end to the violations among the fishingvessels and fishermen, it will continue popularising fisheries law andencouraging fishermen and local residents to report suspected violations.
Alongside, it will strengthen its supervision and alertingcapacity to call vessels with risks of violating foreign waters back.

So far, almost all fishing vessels of Binh Thuan have beenequipped with VMS./.
VNA

See more

Hanoi approves 100-year master plan, with Red River as a hub. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi shapes future city with AI, TOD, 1,153km metro network

According to the new master plan, Hanoi's study area spans all 126 wards and communes within Hanoi’s administrative boundary, covering roughly 3,359.84 sq.km. Its population is projected to reach around 14–15 million by 2035, 15–16 million by 2045, and 17–19 million by 2065, with a long-term cap of no more than 20 million residents.

Vietnamese Ambassador to Russia Dang Minh Khoi, Chairman of the St. Petersburg Committee on External Relations Evgeny Grigoriev, Vice Chairman of the committee Vyacheslav Kalganov, and Deputy Chairman of the Legislative Assembly of the city Nikolay Bondarenko led a delegation in laying red carnations before the statue of President Ho Chi Minh (Photo: VNA)

President Ho Chi Minh’s 136th birthday observed in RoK, Russia

On the occasion of the 136th birthday of the late Vietnamese leader (May 19, 1890–2026), Professor Park Yeon Kwan, Head of the Department of Vietnamese Language at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, described him as a great sage whose strategic decisions carried the vision of the times.

The Red River Scenic Boulevard Axis is designated as one of nine key development corridors of Hanoi. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi details multi-billion-USD Red River scenic boulevard axis project

Under the capital’s master plan with a 100-year vision, the Red River Scenic Boulevard Axis is designated as one of nine key development corridors of Hanoi. It is envisioned as a central green spatial corridor, while also functioning as an economic, commercial, service, cultural, creative, and urban development axis along the Red River.

Defendants at the appellate trial in Hanoi on May 20 (Photo: VNA)

Appeal trial opens in food safety bribery case

The total amount of bribes received by the defendants in the case exceeded 94 billion VND, with former Director of the Vietnam Food Safety Authority (FSA) Nguyen Thanh Phong alone pocketing 43.9 billion VND.

Vietnamese Ambassador to the US Nguyen Quoc Dung and others offer incense in tribute to President Ho Chi Minh in Washington DC on May 19, 2026. (Photo: VNA)

President Ho Chi Minh’s diplomatic legacy helps strengthen Vietnam – US friendship

Vietnamese Ambassador to the US Nguyen Quoc Dung stressed that among President Ho Chi Minh’s immense contributions, his forward-looking diplomatic vision became a solid foundation for Vietnam’s foreign policy of independence, self-reliance, peace, friendship and cooperation with all countries on the basis of mutual respect and mutual benefit.

Vietnamese Ambassador to the US Nguyen Quoc Dung speaks at the seminar. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam – US partnership expands in culture preservation, promotion

The May 18 seminar, themed “Reframing Vietnam,” at the National Museum of Asian Art (NMAA) under Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., is expected to generate fresh momentum and frameworks for cooperation among cultural agencies, museums, art funds and experts from the two countries, helping bring Vietnam’s cultural image closer to American and international public in the time to come.

Visitors to an exhibition and test-drive programme for electric vehicles organised in Cau Giay ward, Hanoi, on May 16 by the municipal People's Commitee and relevant agencies. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi proposes subsidies to accelerate shift to electric vehicles

Under a draft resolution currently open for public feedback by the municipal People’s Committee, residents with permanent or temporary residence registration in Hanoi for at least two consecutive years, who own petrol-powered motorbikes registered before the resolution takes effect, will be eligible for support when purchasing electric motorbikes priced at 10 million VND or more.

The copyright crackdown is broadly viewed as an inevitable step in Vietnam’s cultural industry development. (Illustrative photo: VNA)

Healthy digital content market in the making

The sharper crackdown is rapidly redrawing how online entertainment is distributed and consumed, while gradually reshaping public awareness and responsibility toward copyright protection.