European Food and Film Festival 2022 launched

The European Union Delegation to the Lao PDR together with European Member States and European partner countries launched the annual European Food and Film Festival 2022 in Vientiane on Dec 9.
Scheduled for Dec 9-11, the festival brings a taste of European culture to the city, while promoting the cultural cooperation between Europe and Laos.
At the launching ceremony, Ms. Ina Marčiulionytė, EU Ambassador to the Lao PDR, emphasised the crucial importance of the festival for the mutually beneficial partnership between Europe and Laos.
“I am delighted that we are able to celebrate the comeback of the European Food and Film Festival. We hope the festival will help to promote people-to-people connectivity between the Lao PDR and Europe and gives the visitors the opportunity to learn more about Europe’s cinematic and culinary culture,” said EU Ambassador.
The official launching ceremony was attended by Vice Minister of Information, Culture and Tourism, Mr Vansy Kuamua along with Ambassadors and representatives from European Member States and Switzerland as well as representatives from UN agencies and INGOs.
Under the theme of ‘Youth & Environment’, 10 European countries contributed their movies to the Film Festival (Austria, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Lithuania, Poland, Spain, Switzerland and Ukraine).
Screened in Cineplex at Vientiane Centre, a dozen long and short movies across a variety of genres reflected the diversity of perspectives, histories and national cultures of Europe.
In combination with the Film Festival, the ninth edition of the European Food Festival took place in front of Vientiane Centre.
Offering a selection of their food, 11 international restaurants/bars based in Vientiane gave the audience the opportunity to enjoy a journey through the amazing culinary world of Europe.
With the festival being such a success and attracting many visitors who took part in the cultural exchange, the EU Delegation and its partners are already looking forward to the next European Food and Film Festival, which will take place in 2023.

Source: Lao News Agency

Esmod Night Fashion showcased

Lao Fashion Week on last Sunday organized ESMOD Night fashions show to celebrate the diplomatic relation between Laos and France 2022.
“This evening we are celebrating the 69th anniversary of Diplomatic Relations between Laos-France and Lao Fashion Week is part of France-Laos Festival, which Lao Fashion Week -ESMOD Night showcased collection of five Lao young designers who received scholarship to study in ESMOD Fashion Institute in Paris, France,” said Ms. Pany Saignavong, Founder & CEO of Lao Fashion Week and Lao Young Designers Project.
The ESMOD Night showcased special collection under theme on “The Lao with French Essence” in front of high-ranking officials, ambassadors, orgnisations and societies attended the event.
The five Lao young designers was included Mr Si-amphan Chanthavichit (Winner in 2015), Mr Viseth Sittilath (Winner in 2016), Nanthaveth Bubpha (Winner in 2017), Livana Koo (Winner in 2018), and Sunnantha Phanthapanya (Winner in 2019).
Since 2015, Lao Fashion week organized the fashion design contest to seek the top five of young talents to provide each of them scholarship to study in various fashion academies in abroad. The firstwinner of each year attends six-month intensive fashion design course in ESMOD Fashion Institute in Paris, France.

Source: Lao News Agency

A fundraising fashion show to relieve cool weather for children in Laos held

A fundraising fashion show to relieve cool weather for children living in rural and remote areas was held in Vientiane on 18 Oct.
The event was attended by President’s spouse Naly Sisoulith, Minister of Information, Culture and Tourism, Mrs. Suansavanh Viyaket, ambassadors to Laos, international organizations in Laos and businessmen.
President of the Lao Handicraft’s Association Souvita Phaseuth said that the charity fundraising expressed a unity and sent a warm love to Lao people living in rural and remote areas aiming to relieve cool weather during the winter.
Leading companies including the CSC Company, Lao Development Bank, Agricultural Promotion Bank, Vientiane Automation and Solution Engineering Company, The Duangduean Construction Company, Kingkeo Oudom Company, Sisaket Construction Company, Phou Pha Development Construction Company, PSL Service Limited, Best Telecom Company, ST Bank, Joint Development Bank, Dara Chaleun Import-Export Fuel Company Limited, Space Techno Company, Lao Petro Trade Company each donated 100 million kip.
The Indo China Holding Company donated US$7,000 in cash, the Philippine Embassy in Laos donated US$2,000, GURU Company donated over 70 million kip, Blue Glass company donated over 50 million kip, Mrs. Channapha Vongsanoraphoum donated 50 million kip, GOUNGDONG Company donated 50 million kip and other local companies also donated ranging from 15 million kip to 30 million kip.

Source: Lao News Agency

Investing in Ethnic midwives to protect maternal health in special cultural contexts in Laos

Vida is a 28-year-old midwife from the Akha community who is proud of her role in ensuring women in the Lao PDR realize positive maternal health outcomes. Based at Long District hospital in Luang Namtha province, this Akha midwife graduated from the Oudomxay UNFPA-MOH supported midwifery programme in 2017.

In the Lao PDR, supporting the training and deployment of midwives from ethnic groups is a key component of UNFPA’s wide-ranging engagement in midwifery programmes that recognizes the significant role of midwives in saving lives and changing harmful norms, they are even more critical due to impact of COVID-19 on health services.

“In the past, Akha women gave birth without assistance and they did not come to the health centre. As most of the pregnancies and births were unattended among Akha women, there was a high risk of complications” said Vida. “But since we have Akha midwives, Akha clients are comfortable to come and seek support”.

This positive trend is a result of newly-trained ethnic midwives returning to their home villages to support their communities. Their cultural insights combined with newly-learnt skills adhering to international standards means they are trusted and well placed to deliver essential maternal health care to ethnic mothers who traditionally would face health risks, especially during delivery. Such UNFPA and MOH backed interventions have played a significant role in reducing maternal mortality as well as ensuring safe pregnancies, childbirth and family planning in the Lao PDR during the past decade.

Together with district teams, Vida conducts health education outreach in villages surrounding Long District hospital to provide information and mobilize women to visit health facilities. Now, many women come to seek healthcare at such facilities and are less reluctant to seek guidance on birth spacing and contraceptives.

“For example, every time I provide health education, I also encourage them [Akha ethnic women] to exclusively breastfeed for at least six months,” said Vida, who reported that many ethnic mothers in the past were reluctant to breastfeed as they juggle motherhood with cultivating crops in the field, and didn’t know about the health benefits of breastfeeding for the infant and the mother.

Raising awareness on the importance of antenatal care to ensure health and safety of mothers and babies is a key task for Vida and other ethnic midwives.

“I encourage women to make at least four antenatal care visits international standards are 8 ANC visits per pregnancy and give birth at health facilities to keep mothers and babies safe. The proudest moment for me is to see women giving birth at a health facility assisted by qualified health personnel, so they don’t suffer any complications,” said Vida.

To provide a full spectrum of care, counseling for youth and adolescents is delivered as part of family planning services. Vida encourages women to learn more about long-acting reversible contraceptives. More couples are seeking long-acting methods such as injectables and implants so that women do not need to travel to the health facility often.

Midwives like Vida are being gradually deployed all over the Lao PDR for community awareness raising. Their role is crucial in applying skills acquired through the midwifery courses adapted to international standards through MOH and UNFPA collaboration.

While development of midwifery capacity has benefited women and children in the Lao PDR in the past decade, midwives such as Vida still face challenges in countering harmful cultural practices for childbirth and child care, such as dietary restrictions, roasting (lying on a bed above a fire) for 15 days after giving birth and the belief that giving birth to twins is bad luck. Following training, Vida and other midwives are connected to a midwifery helpline where they can access peer support, to discuss difficult cases and develop response strategies.

UNFPA is supporting the Lao PDR to realize its commitment to the 25th anniversary of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD25) to have at least one midwife per health facility. The support includes training, curricula development and equipping health facilities. Thanks to the Maternal Health Trust Fund, KOFIH and Luxembourg, the midwifery program is accelerating the role of midwives in saving lives and changing harmful norms and practices.

According to the State of the World Midwifery Report 2021, investing in midwives is cost-effective as a fully educated and trained midwife can provide about 90 percent of essential reproductive maternal neonatal child adolescent health care.

Source: Lao News Agency

WWI Chinese Labourers Museum, a must see of Weihai, China’s Shandong

Opened in 2020, the World War I Chinese Labourers Museum, Weihai, China’s Shandong province receives more than 200,000 visitors every year.

It houses a collection of remains that can show how the contribution of over 140,000 Chinese labourers to settling the world conflict truly deserves recognition.

The World War I Chinese Labourers Museum is located in the coastal area, at the former site of Chinese workers’ training and boarding in Weihai Haiyuan Park, Weihai district, Shandong province.

Most of the museum’s space is underground which comprises an exhibition hall, a projection room, a café, a cultural product shop, an office, and so on.

Around five to six metres from the entry, you will see a narrow alley with a width of around three metres, sloping toward the sea. This alley was used by the Chinese workers to board for a journey to Europe over 100 years ago.

Inside the museum, there are exhibited more than 200 objects including copper bracelets, hat badges, documents, diaries, commemorative medals, tools, including shovels, saws, and wrenches, among others.

In 1914, World War I broke out. More than 140,000 Chinese men were recruited for physical work in European allies, both in frontline and rear. Of them, over 44,000 were from Weihai Port.

They were recruited through CLC – Chinese Labour Corps – which was established under the Sino-British agreement to do supporting work and manual work for allied forces after France and Britain realized that the war against Nazi would prolong than expected and was taking a toll on their armies.

As it was hard to deploy ships during the war, Chinese labourers had to wait for a period of time, or even more than 20 days, at the recruitment place. Depending on the ship type, the number of each batch of Chinese labourers going to sea ranged from several hundreds to several thousands.

Chinese labourers had to board a ship via a barge to start a multi-month voyage across the ocean because Koryo Dock wasn’t deep enough for large ships. Many of them died of diseases or hardships and were buried in the sea.

During World War I, living conditions in China were hard. Many Chinese people decided to register for doing supporting work for allied forces in Europe because they wanted to escape from hardship and poverty in their homeland.

They did heavy and arduous works including digging trenches, building fortifications, battlefield rescue, communications, burying dead bodies, demining, building bridges and roads, transporting food, medicines, loading and unloading supplies, manufacturing ammunitions, logging, and mining. Whenever there was hard and arduous work in the battlefield, there were Chinese labourers.

Their employers paid wages in two equal amounts with the first one paid directly to them and the second one to their relatives back in China.

After World War I, about 20,000 Chinese labourers were repatriated quickly and the rest stayed in the Europe to participate in the post-war reconstruction, clean the battlefields and bury the skeletons. Some of them even lost their lives. About 3,000 Chinese labourers continued to stay in France due to various reasons, becoming the first generation of immigrants.

“Chinese Labourers were the best labourers in the world and had the potential to become good soldiers. They can endure any hardship to accomplish various tasks with quality and quantity under the fire of modern weapons,” Foch, Commander in Chief, Entente Powers, said in 1917.

The Chinese labourers’ contribution to World War I helped raise China’s role in international arena and made China realised as a winner of World War I along with England, France, Soviet, America, Japan, Greece, Serbia, among others.

“We have been celebrating the lives of all the soldiers who lost their lives but the Chinese labourers were not remembered and were not talked about until three or four years ago,” John de Lucy, a retired property manager who inherited valuable photos of the CLC from his grandfather William James Hawkings, a British officer at the time, was quoted as saying by Xinhua.

For decades, countries like Britain, France and Belgium attached little importance to the CLC. Few war memorials mentioned China, and history books erased the Chinese labourers from the war, said a Hong Kong-based British writer Mark O’Neil, whose grandfather served as a British officer in the CLC.

“Chinese Labourers museum gave me insight about how China’s Laborers had written history in WW-I with their blood and sweat. It also shows that China in every testing time has made all efforts to maintain peace in the world. Museum shows how Chinese Labourers at that time helped Europeans in their difficult times,” said Rahul Basharat, a journalist from Pakistan.

“It was an amazing and a life changing experience for me. It changes how I view people especially my elders who have sacrificed their lives for me. Visiting the museum, I can see how the Chinese have maintained the sacrifices that their hardworking forefathers have invested to the person they are today. The great developments that China is known throughout the world today begin from the hardworking labourers who once dedicated their lives for the benefit of their future generation. In that museum, I see courage, dedication, sacrifice, commitment, hard work of the Chinese labourers during their period of time,” said Mereleki Nai, Senior Journalist, Fiji Sun Newspaper.

Source: Lao News Agency

Xi Taking Part in Hong Kong Anniversary, No Word on Visit

BEIJING — President Xi Jinping will participate in next week’s celebrations of the 25th anniversary of the return of Hong Kong to China, the government said Saturday, but it left unclear whether he will visit the former British colony for the highly symbolic event after a crackdown on a pro-democracy movement.

Xi, who also is general secretary of the ruling Communist Party, will attend a meeting for the anniversary and the inauguration of Hong Kong’s government led by newly appointed Chief Executive John Lee, the official Xinhua News Agency said. The announcement gave no other details.

The anniversary is one of the highest-profile political events in a year when Xi is widely believed to be trying to break with tradition and award himself a third five-year term as party leader. He already is the most powerful Chinese leader since at least the 1980s and wants to be seen as leading a “national rejuvenation” amid a military buildup and more assertive policy abroad.

Xi hasn’t made a trip outside the Chinese mainland since the start of the coronavirus pandemic 2 1/2 years ago. Hong Kong faces a renewed rise in infections after a flood of cases earlier this year threatened to overwhelm its hospitals.

Lee and his predecessor, Carrie Lam, both issued statements thanking Xi for participating in anniversary celebrations but didn’t clarify whether he would visit Hong Kong.

The anniversary follows a crackdown led in part by Lee, a former Hong Kong security chief. Activists have been sentenced to prison, scores of others arrested, and Hong Kong’s most prominent pro-democracy newspaper was shut down.

The tighter controls under a national security law imposed in 2020 have prompted some people to leave for Taiwan, Britain and other countries. That has led to concerns the ruling party is ruining Hong Kong’s status as a global business and financial center.

Hong Kong, one of Asia’s richest cities and a global business center with thriving film, publishing and other creative industries, returned to China on July 1, 1997, under an agreement that promised a “high degree of autonomy” for 50 years.

Activists and foreign governments say Beijing has reneged on that. The United States suspended agreements that treated Hong Kong as a separate territory for trade, saying the city no longer had enough autonomy from Beijing.

Two years after Hong Kong, the neighboring Portuguese territory of Macao also returned to China in 1999, allowing the ruling party to say it had ended foreign colonialism.

Since the Hong Kong handover, ordinary people in the territory have struggled with soaring living costs that inflamed political tension.

Beijing imposed the sweeping national security legislation in 2020 following protests that erupted over a proposed extradition law and spread to include demands for more democracy. The territory has banned commemorations of the ruling party’s violent 1989 crackdown on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square pro-democracy movement.

Those sentenced to prison include Jimmy Lai, former publisher of the defunct pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily. Hong Kong’s 90-year-old former Roman Catholic bishop, Joseph Zen, was among those arrested.

The crackdown adds to tension between Beijing and the United States, Europe, Japan and other Asian governments over human rights, Taiwan and conflicts with its neighbors over Chinese territorial claims in the South China and East China seas.

Hong Kong’s final British colonial governor, Chris Patten, expressed heartbreak this month over the crackdown.

“I thought there was a prospect that (China) would keep its word, and I’m sorry that it hasn’t,” Patten told The Associated Press on June 20 in London. “I just find it intensely difficult. I do believe that Hong Kong is a great city, I hope it will be a great city again.”

Source: Voice of America