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Serious Chinkland OBOR Mega Project Full of Crap! Vietnam Full Of Regret!

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
20170920-Vietnam-Railway_article_main_image.jpg


HO CHI MINH CITY -- Hanoi's first elevated railway line has had its trial run in September cancelled without an alternative being proposed by the builders from China.

On Monday, Vietnamese authorities told reporters that further work on the project is not possible until China disburses $250 million in official development assistance (ODA) promised last year.

Construction of the Vietnamese capital's first urban railway was planned to run as a project from 2008 to 2013 at a cost of some $552 million with $419 million loaned from China.

Ground was not broken until 2011. Costs were then projected to run to $868 million by 2016 with an additional $250 million pumped in by Chinese lenders. The final disbursement is now due in March, but complicated procedures applied by China Eximbank have hindered the Chinese consortium headed by China Railways Sixth Group.

The delayed test run is the latest problem on the controversial project, which has been dogged by accidents, fatalities, and injuries to passersby.

Poor quality materials, faulty installations, and untrained workers have raised safety concerns. During his first official visit to Beijing, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said the slow pace of work and accidents have among other things contributed to congestion in Hanoi, causing public dissatisfaction. There are plans to ask the Chinese embassy to work with the consortium on ameliorating the situation.

The Hanoi metro has been seized upon by critics as a prime example of problematic China-backed projects. Surveys suggest most projects suffer from quality concerns, delays, and cost overruns. These include: the $69 million My Dinh National stadium in Hanoi; the $360 million steel complex expansion in Thai Nguyen province; the $264 million iron and steel mill in Lao Cai Province; a $1.4 billion bauxite-alumina project in the central highland; waste-treatment and energy-related projects; and a number of textile factories.

Common to all the projects were low bids and cheaper cost of investment arrangements. According to Pham Chi Lan, a Vietnamese economic analyst, this will turn out to be very expensive in the long run -- costs will continue escalating for low quality results.

Mistakes, shoddy work, obsolete machinery, and accidents have become commonplace, causing a general loss of confidence in China-backed projects. Many are being reappraised, including 12 under the ministry of industry and trade.

Viwasupco, a company implementing a water supply project in Hanoi, last year cancelled a contract with China's Xinxing Ductile Iron Pipes, a supplier for the second phase of a pipeline on the Da river. The company quoted 10% below the approved amount for the project, which is intended to supply clean water to nearly 200,000 households. The contract cancellation followed 17 pipeline fractures on the first phase.

https://asia.nikkei.com/Politics-Ec...etnam-earn-reputation-for-poor-quality-delays
 

swine_flu_H1H1

Alfrescian
Loyal
Vietnam Thugs and Crooks sabotage and conducts regular Extortions & Cheating on EVERY PROJECT They can lay their hands on.

The results is screwed project schedule and lost $$$.

See example:


riot.gif


http://www.businessinsider.com/workers-riot-at-samsung-factory-in-vietnam-2014-1/?IR=T


Workers Riot At Samsung Factory In Vietnam


Agence France Presse Jan. 10, 2014, 7:15 AM 48,902

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RiotA screenshot from a Youtube video taken of the riot in progress.Screenshot

Vietnamese police said Friday they had launched an investigation into a riot at a multi-billion dollar Samsung factory that left 13 people injured, four critically.

Violence broke out between security guards and local construction workers early Thursday in northern Thai Nguyen province where the South Korean electronics giant is building a $3.2 billion high-tech complex.

"We have opened an investigation into the regrettable disorder in which 11 factory guards and two policemen were injured," Nguyen Nhu Tuan, director of the provincial police, told AFP.

"This is a serious matter because some workers even attacked and injured local policemen who were brought in," he said, adding that it took about four hours to restore order.

According to reports in state-run media, the violence was sparked when a worker, who had arrived late, was beaten by security guards when he tried to enter the site.

Hundreds of other workers then hurled bricks and rocks at the guards before setting fire to containers being used as offices and dozens of motorbikes.

Videos of the violence posted on YouTube, which AFP was unable to verify, showed huge plumes of smoke rising over the factory complex.

Samsung said in a statement that there had been "a brief altercation" at its site in Thai Nguyen but said "the construction work in the area was not affected".

"We will do our utmost to prevent any such incidents from recurring in the future," the company said in a statement posted on its official blog.

Construction began last year on the plant, which will assemble cell phones, tablets and microprocessors, state-run Thanh Nien reported.

Samsung Electronics already has a $2.5 billion facility in the northern Bac Ninh Province’s Yen Phong Industrial Zone, which makes mobile phones and tablets.

Violent labour disputes are uncommon in authoritarian Vietnam where the communist government is attempting to attract more high-tech manufacturing, in a bid to move away from traditional exports of garments and low-end agricultural products.

A number of tech firms, including Samsung, Intel and Nokia, have set up manufacturing bases in Vietnam, which has far lower labour costs than neighbouring China, with a minimum wage of between $90 and $130 a month.

Copyright (2014) AFP. All rights reserved.
 

virus

Alfrescian
Loyal
U r rite, they need temashake investment, whorejinx wud hv quitely paid up n pronounce it is for long term investment and harmau yourcock would clap her flaps in sappork
 
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