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+4 +1
Police confiscate 345,000 recycled condoms in Vietnam
Used contraceptives found in warehouse in Binh Duong province were boiled, dried and resold
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+2 +1
Police raid in Vietnam finds more than 300,000 used condoms being packed for resale
The factory's owner, a 34-year-old woman, reportedly confessed they bought the used condoms from someone else.
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+20 +1
Agent Orange’s devastating effects on Vietnam
The Vietnam War ended almost 50 years ago, but it’s still killing Vietnamese people. Children are born with severe birth defects due to Agent Orange, a defoliant sprayed by the Americans during the war. While some 5 million in Vietnam live with incurable or chronic diseases caused by Agent Orange, thousands are killed by unexploded ordnance.
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+23 +1
Apple ramps up iPhone and iPad output shift to India and Vietnam
Apple is ramping up the production of iPhones, iPads, Macs and other products outside of China, Nikkei Asia has learned, in a sign that the tech giant is continuing to accelerate its production diversification despite hopes that U.S.-China tensions will ease under President Joe Biden.
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+4 +1
The History of Pho in 10 Facts
The history of pho touches on colonialism and intercultural exchange, culinary ingenuity and the influence of immigration.
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+4 +1
A Vietnamese refugee served as one of California's inmate firefighters. Then the state gave him to ICE
Despite California’s landmark sanctuary laws, state prisons are still cooperating with...
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+17 +1
As disruptions in China continue, Apple will start making iPads in Vietnam
In the face of COVID lockdown-related supply disruptions, Apple is moving some iPad production from China to Vietnam, according to Nikkei Asia. The company is also taking other measures with its suppliers to soften the blow of supply issues in China. This is not Apple's first attempt to move some production out of China. Some iPhones have been made in India, a small number of Macs have been assembled in the United States, and Vietnam is already a major factor in AirPods production.
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+25 +1
Vietnam to require 24-hour take-down for "false" social media content
Vietnam's information minister said on Friday authorities had tightened regulations to deal with "false" content on social media platforms so that it must be taken down within 24 hours instead of 48 hours previously.
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