The Vietnam Fatherland Front (VFF) on March 29 started a project to enhance communications and educational activities within the Anti-Crime National Target Programme for 2012-15.
The project is crucial to the battle against crime and will be implemented from central to local levels to raise public awareness of and compliance with the law, said Lieutenant General Tran Viet Tan, Deputy Minister of Public Security.
The project aims to strengthen the supervision and management capacities of the VFF’s staff and help police fight crime.
The new communications activities are intended to increase cooperation between the anti-crime State agencies and the Fatherland Front, improve public security and reduce crime.
Over the past years, the VFF and its member organisations have gotten more people involved in anti-crime activities and helped rehabilitate criminals.
During the 2006-10 period, they successfully encouraged many people to become whistle-blowers and rehabilitated over 208,000 criminals.-VNA
The project is crucial to the battle against crime and will be implemented from central to local levels to raise public awareness of and compliance with the law, said Lieutenant General Tran Viet Tan, Deputy Minister of Public Security.
The project aims to strengthen the supervision and management capacities of the VFF’s staff and help police fight crime.
The new communications activities are intended to increase cooperation between the anti-crime State agencies and the Fatherland Front, improve public security and reduce crime.
Over the past years, the VFF and its member organisations have gotten more people involved in anti-crime activities and helped rehabilitate criminals.
During the 2006-10 period, they successfully encouraged many people to become whistle-blowers and rehabilitated over 208,000 criminals.-VNA