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VIETNAM BUSINESS NEWS MAY 15 Chia sẻ | FaceBookTwitter Email Copy Link Copy link bài viết thành công
15/05/2021 14:55 GMT+7
Pork imports from Russia soar ten-fold
Pork imports from Russia surged over 1,000% in the first quarter of this year, making Russia the biggest supplier of pork to Vietnam, according to the General Department of Vietnam Customs.
Data of the department showed that in the first three months of 2021, Vietnam imported 16,550 tons of pork worth US$44.85 million from Russia, soaring 1,116% in volume and 1,002% in value compared with the same period last year.
In total, the country imported 169,290 tons of meat of all kinds worth US$337.18 million in the first quarter, rising 0.5% in volume and 22.4% in value year-on-year.
Friday, May 14, 2021, 11:33 GMT+7
Passengers perform check-in procedures at an airport in Vietnam. Photo: C.Trung / Tuoi Tre
The Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV) has mandated that airlines refund airport service fees to passengers who cancel tickets.
The CAAV issued the mandate on Thursday following
Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper reports on numerous cases in which various airlines refused to refund passenger service charges (PSCs) and passenger security service charges (PSSCs) to those who had canceled their flights.
The order was directed at Vietnam Airlines, Vietjet Air, Bamboo Airways, Pacific Airlines, and Vietravel Airlines.
PSCs and PSSCs are collected from passengers alongside the air transportation service fees charged by airlines before they are transferred to enterprises which provide passenger terminal services, passenger security services, and bagage services, according to the CAAV.
Vietnamese-French citizen
Hanoi (VNA) - The
Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/dioxin (VAVA) on May 12 issued a statement regarding the Crown Court of Evry City in France’s
May 10 ruling on
Vietnamese-French citizen Tran To Nga’s lawsuit against US firms
that manufactured the toxic AO defoliant used by US forces during the war in Vietnam.
The court said it did not have jurisdiction to judge
a case involving the US Government’s wartime actions, ruling that the US firms were
acting on orders from the US Government which was engaged in a “sovereign act”.
VAVA’s statement emphasised that the court made