Russian beauties grace Ho Chi Minh City

A photo session of three gorgeous Russian women, Irina Antonenko, Evgeniya Guseva and Tamara Zhukova gracing famous spots in Ho Chi Minh City impressed all involved. Such sites as the Opera House, the Notre Dame Church, and even a Post-Office building under the strong sun light of this tropical city was made even hotter with the beauties.

This stylish photo session was planned by the three women as part of their scheduled visit to Vietnam.

On June 4th, the stunning women appeared bright and attractive on Ho Chi Minh City's streets, flashing their professional nature, activeness and cooperation with stylist Heni Hubert’s ideas during the shoot.

Tamara Zhukova, looked surprising and joyful when she was invited to eat some rambutan which, suddenly, was used as a prop for her stylish creation in the photo session. “It’s so nice and lovely,” she expressed as she seductively ate the rambutan.

Photographs from behind the shoot:




Irina Antonenko, the Current Miss Russia, and stylist Henri Hubert



From left to right: Miss Russia Irina Antonenko, Top Ten Tamara Zhukova and Evgeniya Guseva



Tamara Zhukova and Evgeniya Guseva look so bright under the sun light


Three beautiful ladies show their professional style



Tamara Zhukova with her personal beauty



Irina Antonenko looks elegant and sweet



Tamara Zhukova and Irina Antonenko



Evgeniya Guseva being courteous and refined in white dress



The New Miss Russia, being outstanding in her yellow dress



Miss Russia, a bright beauty



Tamara Zhukova: “the rambutan is so nice”



Evgeniya Guseva is styling herself with a passion.


Source:dtinews

Business sentiment runs high in Vietnam


(L-R) Dragon Capital CEO Dominic Scriven, REE Corp. chairperson and CEO Nguyen Thi Mai Thanh, HSBC CEO Tom Tobin and PricewaterhouseCoopers senior partner and general director Ian Lydall in a Q&A session of the business luncheon in HCMC last Friday - Photo: Mong Binh

(L-R) Dragon Capital CEO Dominic Scriven, REE Corp. chairperson and CEO Nguyen Thi Mai Thanh, HSBC CEO Tom Tobin and PricewaterhouseCoopers senior partner and general director Ian Lydall in a Q&A session of the business luncheon in HCMC last Friday - Photo: Mong Binh

HCMC – Chief executives of domestic and foreign companies in Vietnam exuded an air of optimism last week when they discussed Vietnam’s future economic outlook.

At a business luncheon organized in HCMC last Friday by the British Business Group Vietnam (BBGV) and the European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (EuroCham), guest speakers conceded there remained woes but said growth momentum had emerged again.

Speaking to more than 150 business executives, Tom Tobin, CEO of HSBC Bank (Vietnam) Ltd., said growth drivers were in place now as reform and stimulus measures taken by the Government were starting to take effect.

Tobin said HSBC was expecting the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) to grow 7.2% this year, higher than projected by the Vietnamese Government. “So, we are quite optimistic.”

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung told the 19th World Economic Forum on East Asia 2010 in HCMC earlier this month that the nation was looking to an economic expansion of 6.5% or above this year and an average of 7-8% in 2011-2020.

Ian Lydall, senior partner and general director of PricewaterhouseCoopers, said the narrow difference of GDP growth forecasts by the Government and HSBC indicated more confidence in the country’s steady growth.

The Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU) in March 2009 put Vietnam’s economic growth for last year at a mere 0.3% while others had more positive projections. In the end, the country posted growth of over 5.3% last year though the global economy was still reeling from the crisis.

Projections for Vietnam’s GDP growth have changed this year. “The difference has been down in a range of from 0.5% to 1%. So, I think we got more confidence,” Lydall told the Daily after the luncheon.

Despite caution about forecasts given the remaining challenges, particularly in the Eurozone, Lydall said there were high hopes for Vietnam. “There are reasons to believe that something slightly above 7% is possible.”

On the same side, Tobin of HSBC said notwithstanding tough global conditions, Vietnam was now a middle-income country and continued growth was backed by the construction and stable services sectors, growing productivity and strong consumption demand.

“We’re looking at a kind of almost full recovering to where it was before… The Vietnam story I think is picking up again,” Tobin said. He added foreign direct investment (FDI) was still flowing into the country and new investors were arriving.

Lydall, who is also board member of BBGV, showed positive factors. “You can see this in terms of investment, additional investment made by the companies already here and new investments come again plus the attitude of business leaders.”

Lydall said many British firms were interested in the Vietnamese market and looking to expand their business. Retail is one of the sectors attractive to British companies and a number of retailers want to have their presence here.

Lydall, Tobin and other guest speakers named inflation and trade deficit as the major concerns for Vietnam. But, Chairperson and CEO of REE Corp. Nguyen Thi Mai Thanh said the Government had made serious efforts to control inflation while maintaining the momentum for economic growth.

Dominic Scriven, CEO of Dragon Capital, sent out a positive message about Vietnam in a statement released before he presented his view on the economic events, outlook and the stock market in Vietnam at the luncheon.

“Vietnam’s macro-economic concerns have eased so far this year; yet again pointing out the merits of non-correlation. Clearly this won’t be the case for ever, but for now, policymakers should be encouraged, and businesses motivated,” Scriven said.

Lydall noted many Vietnamese companies had been resilient through the economic downturn, turning in sound financial performances. “Whilst this varies between industry sectors there is every reason to believe that the outlook for the rest of 2010 is good.”

Mong Binh - The Saigon Times Daily

Vietnamese food: Lively, lighthearted, lovely

Last fall, I was in Hong Kong, Vietnam and Cambodia, but my heart belonged to Vietnam, especially its food. (Hong Kong’s food is pretty well represented in Vancouver and as for Cambodia ... well, it’s not known for its gustatory delights.)

Inflated rice balls make a big impression.
A market in Hanoi.
Vietnam’s Can Tho market offers an amazing array of fruits and vegetables.
A woman in Hanoi hawks pho from gigantic cooking pots.

I’ve always yearned for more exciting Vietnamese food in Vancouver, but knew I’d have to follow it to its source for the thrills.

Vietnam confirmed my belief that Vietnamese food is a lot like its people — lively, light-hearted, lovely. And good-humoured. (How else would you describe a giant, golden, inflated rice balloon with a rice pattycake hiding inside?) Somehow, that buoyant nature has survived in the people and the food through the bloodiest of wars. A grandmother toothily laughs. A translator tells us she’s asking if we understand her babbling baby grandson in English because he’s sure not speaking Vietnamese.

I was smitten. Even the city traffic, which seems more like a national suicide pact (motorbikes, bicycles, cars, people, tuk-tuks darting in every conceivable direction without the logic of lanes, traffic lights, or rules of the road) won’t deter me from going back.

Going from Hanoi in the north to Central Vietnam and down to Ho Chi Minh City (still referred to as Saigon by most locals) and the Mekong Delta, the food changed with the geography and climate which morphs from temperate to tropical.

Vancouver’s Vietnamese restaurants only skim the surface of regional variations of food in that country. We don’t see the amazing produce or taste the intensity of herbs or variations of the nuoc nam , the fermented fish sauce, a signature taste in so many Vietnamese dishes.

In Hanoi, we had to try the one-dish restaurant, Cha Cha La Vong. The dish? It’s called cha cha — monkfish fried with dill, turmeric, rice noodles and peanuts. They bring a charcoal hibachi to the table and you cook the fish and a pile o’ greens yourself. The restaurant has been there for several generations and the staff is said to be gruff (unusual in Vietnam, but the matriarch took a shine to us and came and cooked ours for us in between counting out dongs (Vietnamese currency) at the next table, their evening’s take. It’s grungy (Molly Maids would have heart attacks), but it’s so famous that copycat restaurants have sprung up, messing with your mind. The cha cha was delicious.

It would be unforgivable to wimp out on trying street food for fear of gut-wrenching illness. We searched for ones that came recommended (my neighbour, who’d been to Vietnam a year earlier, recommended a pho seller, for instance).

One night, we went to a place that sold great pork patties and shrimp spring rolls. Gratefully, we sat at a table, not on the plastic toddler stools that Westerners look ridiculous on, at some of these places. The food was good and my stomach inflated like that rice balloon.

My husband, however, didn’t want to miss out one chance to try the street pho that our neighbour, Karen, had recommended. I watched in amazement as he went in search of it, sat down with the locals and slurped back a heaping bowl of pho. Mom and son threw enormous cuts of meat to each other, sliced off thin slices and threw slices into steaming bowls. Locals looked astonished when they thought a stranger reached out for my husband’s pho (it was me) and took a big, noisy slurp. It was, despite the optics, delicious.

Wild Lotus, in Hanoi, is in a gorgeous French colonial building. (The French left behind beautiful buildings and A something of their food culture, unlike the Americans, who left bomb craters.) We followed a marble staircase and passed by a fountain en route to the second-floor restaurant with a modern tropical feel. Slender female servers (they’re all small and pretty) wore ao dai (those silky, side-slit tops) and males wore suits. Astonishingly, main dishes were an average $6 Cdn. Deep-fried prawns bundled in vermicelli, served with plum sauce; grilled sea bass; morning glory leaves, sauteed in garlic; pork loin with cashews, mushrooms, dried chili, spring rolls in shredded rice noodles — and the bill came to about $60 with wine.

You should use a guidebook because you’ll run into horrid food just like anywhere. We ducked into a nice-looking place for breakfast one morning and “shirred eggs” turned out to be an eggy sauce with a lid of goopy cheese and bits of ham. Yech!

In Central Vietnam, at Hoi An (where my husband had the equivalent of a Zegna suit tailored for $350), we ate at a string of food stalls along the Thu Bon River, returning to “Mr. Dong’s” a few times for the “white rose,” a regional specialty of shrimp dumplings in clear rice dough. But the banana pancakes and noodles were just as good. (Dong is also the word for Vietnamese currency, a challenge to say for an inhibited North American.) Breakfast was included at the hotels we stayed in and at Hoi An, we could have had a sumptuous Vietnamese buffet every morning with dim sum-like dishes that changed daily.

Cafe des Amis came recommended in guide books and was a heck of a deal with seven courses for about $12, but it was most memorable for the owner, a Mr. Kim, decked out in black leather pants and jacket, a smoking bon vivant, strutting among guests, telling stories he must have told a thousand times.

A young couple we met from London led us through the dark alleys of Hoi An and to their discovery, a restaurant called Secret Garden, not in guide books. We ended up taking group photos with the friendly staff after a meal of star anise soup, pork and fish tamarind hotpot and pork skewers.

In Ho Chi Minh City, I’d stand, each morning, at the fourth-floor window of our hotel, looking down at a woman who made rounds on her bicycle, draped with bags and bags of produce, eggs, fish, meat. Women from shops would saunter out, leisurely check out the fare and buy a little bit of this and a little bit of that. (And no, it wasn’t refrigerated.) Then she’d move on, plastic bags rustling.

Vietnamese supermarkets don’t exist. Food is bought at markets or vendors on the street. The floating markets are very cool. We put-put-putted around the boats early one morning before taking off down the Mekong on a “Heart of Darkness” journey to an eco-lodge.

At Ho Chi Minh City, my all-time favourite spot was Quan An Ng, a brilliant idea. Cooking stations circle the perimeter of an elegant French colonial-style restaurant; each one is a stall with cooks making street foods from all over Vietnam. You can walk around, check out all the regional specialties at the stations and point and order or order off the menu. Can they please open one in Vancouver?

The most modern Vietnamese meal was at the sleekly modern Xu restaurant in Ho Chi Minh City. A four-course tasting menu was about $27; an eight-course went for $44. The menu features dishes like tuna spring roll and black sesame seared tuna; steamed rice flour roll with fish, bean shoots and roasted shallots; tamarind-braised beef cheeks with pumpkin mash and pumpkin flower; crab soup with boiled quail egg, peanut and chili; scallops with green mango noodle salad and lemongrass dressing. Desserts? Durian cream puff and chocolate caramel tart.

I had a dramatically memorable dish from along the Mekong Delta. On a bike trip, we had a lunch of elephant ear fish which was deep-fried whole and mounted like a trophy on a wooden stand, dramatic as heck.

What I won’t dwell on here is the part of Vietnamese cuisine I can’t bear. Even the thought of a snake farm at one of the towns we biked was enough to send me on a detour. At an outdoor coconut candy factory, I bought some of the taffy-like confections, trying not to look into the eyes of the coiled vipers, trapped in bottles of rice wine, said to invigourate libidos.

In the same shop, lots of alligator purses, perhaps siblings of the ones we saw in a muddy pond?

But getting back to the good stuff, another unforgettable Vietnamese culinary tradition is their insanely good coffee. It’s intense and delicious, dripped slowly into condensed milk if you don’t want it neat. We brought a few bags home, but I think you have to be Vietnamese to make it so good.

And dare I say, I think that to be true of the food, too.

Source:dtinews


DHL Express volumes grow strongly in Vietnam


John Pearson (R) and Tim Baxter of DHL at the press conference in HCMC on Thursday to review the company’s business plans and the market - Photo: Mong Binh

John Pearson (R) and Tim Baxter of DHL at the press conference in HCMC on Thursday to review the company’s business plans and the market - Photo: Mong Binh

HCMC – DHL Express has confirmed increasing business optimism in Vietnam when the world’s leading international express company announces a year-on-year rise of over 30% in volume in the year to date.

The company released the good business result at its joint venture with the local partner, VNPT Express, on Thursday when DHL-VNPT Express Ltd. introduced its HCMC gateway at Tan Son Nhat International Airport to clients.

John Pearson, CEO of DHL Express for Asia Pacific, Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa, told reporters in HCMC after joining the introduction function that the company saw potential in Vietnam, a country he described as attractive to investors because of fast recovery.

Pearson credited the recovery for Vietnam and DHL to trade in the intra-Asia region on the right track to strong growth.

“Sixteen of Vietnam’s top 20 trade lanes are intra-Asia, all of which have rebounded strongly in 2010, especially those in Southeast Asia,” he said.

He said after shrinking in the first quarter of 2009, the U.S. had also recovered but Asia-Pacific trade lanes dominated Vietnam’s imports and exports.

The company quoted sources as saying that Vietnam’s export earnings (excluding precious metals) in the January-April period soared 26% year-on-year and industrial output grew 13.5% over the same period last year.

Exports of tools and spare parts were among the best performing sectors, registering a whopping rise of 75% to US$910 million in the first four months. The outbound sales of electronics and computers jumped 39% to US$985 million in the period.

Tim Baxter, general director of DHL-VNPT Express Ltd., said at the news briefing that garments, textiles, footwear, technology and energy were among the important sectors to the joint venture’s future growth.

DHL invests ahead of key growth forecasts for Vietnam, Baxter said. He told the Daily after the press conference that US$14 million had been invested in depots and service centers across Vietnam, and the largest vehicle fleet of any express company in the country.

Pearson said Vietnam’s positive attitude to foreign direct investment had attracted more than 100 of the company’s global customers to the country and more were either establishing shop and/or increasing their investment in the country.

The company said Vietnam’s excellence in logistics was a key factor of growth. The World Bank’s Logistics Performance Index (LPI) puts Vietnam as the top logistics performer in its income class. Strong performance helped the country jump 18 spots to rank 71st in the World Economic Forum’s Enabling Trade Index this year.

Vietnam’s strong recovery is also reflected in DHL’s performance indicators. “Our top 50 customers in Vietnam have registered a combined year-to-date growth of more than 40% in revenue over the same period in 2009,” Baxter said.

Baxter named top performers as those in the telecommunications, garments, textiles and footwear industries.

Mong Binh – The Saigon Times Daily

 
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