› Voyage au Vietnam › Le Tourisme au Vietnam › Est ce qu il vous reste de la place dans vos bagages ?
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18 juillet 2012 à 16h51 #10673
Est ce qu’il vous reste de ma place dans vos bagages ?
Nous sommes une petite association humanitaire et aidons des enfants très pauvres à HUE
Nous avons besoin de leur envoyer quelques affaires mais les colis postaux sont trop onéreux
Si vous allez à Hanoi, Saigon ou HUE, pouvez vous nous aider à leur faire parvenir ? Nous nous débrouillerons de récupérer ces affaires à votre hotel.
Merci de votre aide
Nadine, présidente de l’association « GRAINS DE RIZ POUR UN SOURIRE » -
18 juillet 2012 à 19h49 #150216
C’est sympathique votre truc mais faut quand même faire attention
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Le Vietnam condamne encore à mort
AFP
Mis en ligne le 26/06/2012
Preeyanooch Phuttharaksa, étudiante de 23 ans habitant à Bangkok, a avoué avoir transporté en octobre dernier de la méthamphétamine du Bénin au Vietnam.La justice vietnamienne a condamné à mort mardi une étudiante thaïlandaise jugée coupable d’avoir voulu importer au Vietnam trois kilos de drogue de synthèse, a indiqué la presse officielle.
Preeyanooch Phuttharaksa, étudiante de 23 ans habitant à Bangkok, a avoué avoir transporté en octobre dernier de la méthamphétamine du Bénin au Vietnam, lors d’un procès qui s’est tenu à Ho Chi Minh-Ville (sud-ex-Saïgon), a précisé le quotidien Tuoi Tre.
Elle avait été arrêtée à son atterrissage, à l’aéroport de Tan Son Nhat. La drogue était cachée dans sa valise à double fond. L’accusée a également ajouté qu’elle avait été payée 50.000 bahts (1.570 dollars) pour le transport de la cargaison, selon le journal.
Le trafic de drogue est omniprésent à travers les frontières du Vietnam avec le Laos et le Cambodge.
La législation contre la drogue du pays communiste compte pourtant parmi les plus sévères au monde. Toute personne trouvée en possession de plus de 600 grammes d’héroïne ou plus de 20 kilos d’opium est passible de la peine de mort
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Juste une petite erreur à rectifier
3 kilo d’ectasie qui fait rire c’est déjà la peine de mort, alors l’opium, il me semble que c’est 2 kilo et non 20Je rappelle cette affaire car le mois d’avant, il y avait une étudiante vietnamienne qui a fait la même chose.
Des voyages tout frais payés du Benin à Saïgon + une prime de 1000 $Le tribunal l’avait condamnée à la prison à perpétuité.
Le Parquet a fait appel
Vlan, peine de mort. Elle avait entrainé quelque copines pour faire la même chose.
Même son petit frère.
Celui ci, c’est fait choper au Cambodge
Il a dit qu’il n’était pas au courant de la drogue dans c’est bagage
Alors les Cambodgiens l’ont acquitté 😆C’est dans la presse et à la télé
alors la filière est éventéYa pas de vol directe Cotonou – Saïgon
Students are the new mules
Last Updated: Friday, November 11, 2011 08:00:00African drug smugglers shift carriers to avoid detection
Preyanooch Phuttharaksa, a 22-year-old Thai student, was arrested on October 29 at Ho Chi Minh City’s Tan Son Nhat International Airport for allegedly smuggling more than three kilograms of methamphetamine into VietnamEverything went smoothly for Preyanooch Phuttharaksa on arrival at Ho Chi Minh City’s Tan Son Nhat International Airport after her October 29 flight from Doha.
Her bags easily passed the screening section, but the 22-year-old student was somewhat nervous.
Her nervousness caught the eye of a sharp immigration official and she was asked to wait for her luggage to be inspected. The inspection yielded more than three kilograms of methamphetamine in three packages hidden in a secret chamber in her bag.
Under Vietnamese laws, possession, transport, or trade of more than 600 grams of heroin or cocaine or more than 2.5 kilogram of methamphetamine can be punished with death.
Phuttharaksa is only one of many drug smugglers caught at Vietnam’s international airports. Police have reported an increase of drug smuggling by air into Vietnam, with the smugglers using “more cunning ploys”.
The smuggling rackets’ kingpins are rarely caught as they always hire others to carry the drugs, police said.
In Phuttharaksa’s case, the student confessed that she had met a Nigerian man in Thailand who first invited her to visit Malaysia and Vietnam in January.
In Malaysia, she met another Nigerian man who asked her to bring a suitcase of some product samples to Hanoi. Another woman, yet to be identified, also accompanied her and they managed to bring the luggage through Hanoi’s Noi Bai International Airport twice.
On the second visit to Hanoi, Phuttharaksa asked the other woman about the product samples and was told that it was actually drugs. However, she continued to do it because of the high payment she received, until she was arrested during her third trip.
Phuttharaksa said she is the eldest child of a family with two children and that her father is an official with the Thai army. She was handed to the Ministry of Public Security’s Narcotics Police Department for further investigation.
Le Thanh Liem, deputy chief of the Narcotics Police Department, said employing foreign students to carry drugs into Vietnam is a new ploy.
Earlier, local students were found to have been hired by drug smugglers to carry drugs into Vietnam through international airports.
Liem had warned local students against falling into the traps set mostly by African drug smuggling rings after they began to target Vietnamese female students as traffickers instead of middle-aged women as they did earlier.
The warning came following a case in July where two students were arrested on drug smuggling charges.
On July 20, a 22-year-old student of the Hong Bang University International in HCMC, Tran Ha Duy, gave herself up to the police after being informed that her 20-year-old sister, Tran Ha Tien, was nabbed at HCMC’s Tan Son Nhat International Airport two days earlier for attempting to smuggle more than four kilograms of methamphetamine into the country.
Customs officers found a large bag of methamphetamine at the bottom of Tien’s luggage as she disembarked from Qatar’s Doha Airport where she was transiting on her way from Tanzania.
Duy told the police she had known a man of African origin named Francis (no further information has been disclosed about him) since 2007.
In August 2010, Francis asked her to join his business by delivering clothes and shoes to foreign countries, and she accepted. She introduced her sister, Tien, also a student at Hong Bang University International, to the business.
Duy said she had successfully delivered four batches – one from Malaysia to Indonesia and others from Benin, a West African country, to Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines via Vietnam – between August 2010 and July 2011.
She was paid US$1,000 for each trip. She told the police she had not known that drugs were hidden in the suitcases during the first three trips.
When she realized she was transporting drugs on the final trip, Francis forced her to keep silent, she said.
Meanwhile, Tien told the police she had realized drugs were hidden in the suitcase during her first overseas trip, but persisted with the business as she needed the money for her studies.
Human detectors
Last month, the Tan Son Nhat International Airport Customs Department held a training course for officials trying to tackle new ruses used by drug smugglers.Following the course, the agency has implemented inspections with new equipment and police dogs.
However, the agency’s head, Dinh Ngoc Thang, said equipment plays only a limited role in detecting criminals.
“The officials themselves should be ‘live screening devices’ to detect suspicious faces because they (the drug smugglers) can avoid detection by machines with many cunning tricks,” he said, adding that his agency has also detected weapons and explosives using this tactic.
Thang said experience helped him and his colleagues develop a special sense for detecting illegal commodities imported through the airport.
In a recent case, a company in District 4 imported 24 packages of 48 loudspeakers. The importer presented all required documents and the screening device found no suspicious signs of drugs in the packages.
However, Thang’s team decided to unpack the products despite strong opposition from the owner.
They found nearly 760,000 tablets of illegal drugs hidden inside the loudspeakers, with a total market price of more than VND300 billion ($14.3 million).
“Earlier, I had agreed to compensate for the product value personally if I failed to find anything illegal inside,” Thang said.
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18 juillet 2012 à 19h55 #150217
Voici la 2ème affaire :
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Vietnamese student given death penalty for drug smuggling
Last Updated: Wednesday, June 20, 2012 09:40:00
Tran Ha Duy being escorted by police after being sentenced to death on Wednesday for drug smugglingThe Supreme People’s Court in Ho Chi Minh City on Wednesday increased the sentence of a 23-year-old student convicted of drug smuggling from life in prison to death.
Tran Ha Duy, a former student of Hong Bang University from Lam Dong Province, received the death penalty for smuggling a total of 7.5 kilogram of crystal methamphetamine (ice) into Vietnam beginning in 2010.
At the court of first instance in March, Duy was sentenced to life imprisonment for smuggling the drug from Benin and Malaysia into Vietnam between October of 2010 and July the following year.
The Supreme Prosecutors’ Office appealed that decision, arguing that a life sentence amounted to an insufficient deterrent, noting that drug smuggling has become more “complicated” recently.
According to the verdict, she was working for a man known only as Francis in Benin, adding that the drugs were to be transported to another country from Vietnam.
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1.6 kg of meth seized at Vietnam airportThey said Duy convinced her friends and relatives to smuggle drugs also. Her younger sister, 21-year-old Tran Ha Tien, a former student of Van Lang University, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for transporting over four kilograms of drugs.
Prosecutors said for every trip, the smugglers were paid between US$500 and $1,000.
Vietnam has some of the world’s toughest drug laws, with those convicted of smuggling more than 600 grams of heroin or more than 2.5 kilograms of methamphetamine eligible for the death penalty.
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18 juillet 2012 à 20h17 #150218
Ca dépend de quoi il s’agit mais sachez que faire passer les médicaments en grande quantité est sanctionné à la douane de Saigon.Je parle en gain de cause.Un ami a été arrêté l’an dernier et a eu une amende,et j’ai vu de mes propres yeux qu ‘ils ont arrêté un couple de Vietnamiens des US.
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19 juillet 2012 à 3h28 #150222
@DédéHeo 147989 wrote:
According to the verdict, she was working for a man known only as Francis in Benin, adding that the drugs were to be transported to another country from Vietnam.
Je connais un peu le Benin.
Quand je lis, grossiste au Benin, je traduis immediatement par mafia du Nigeria.
Le Nigeria pourrit deja tous ses pays limitrophes.
– alcool frelate,
– medicament bidons,
– essence et huile d’origines (plus que) douteuses,
– arnaques +++En plus du fait que ce sont des drogues illicites, le fait que ca vienne a 99% du Nigeria signifie que la qualite est plus qu’incertaine et qu’on peut en crever assez facilement.
La Justice Vietnamienne est peut -etre tres dure, mais les drogues de Lagos sont plus dures encore. -
19 juillet 2012 à 6h34 #150223
Non, non ! Rassurez vous. C’est un appareil photo numérique, des savons de marseille, des coloriages et des vêtements pour les enfants ! Rien d’illicite, je vous le promets !:jap:
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19 juillet 2012 à 13h04 #150226
C’est pas moins cher d’acheter tout ça au Vietnam ?
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20 juillet 2012 à 17h04 #150234
Il s’agit surement de dons.
Je vous souhaite bon courage!! (c’est pas gagné, vu les commentaires).
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21 juillet 2012 à 10h24 #150240
bjr..c’est tres simple au vietnam..tout detenteur trouve en possesion de drogues illicites au dela de 150 grammes et dealant est passible perpete ou peine de mort..aucune ambassade ne levera le petit doigt…pour les etrangers en possesion de – 150g.c’est une amende qui va de 1500usd a 5000usd et reconduite a l’avion avec interdiction de sejour a minima 5 ans ,sinon plus..l’etranger sera au fichier dans tout l’asean et un dossier sera transmis a interpol.DEA US etc…FUMEUR DE JOINTS .ATTENTION AU VIETNAM…TOUT SE SAIT au moindre fait et gestes illicites..
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21 juillet 2012 à 12h17 #150241
@nono32 148011 wrote:
Il s’agit surement de dons.
Je vous souhaite bon courage!! (c’est pas gagné, vu les commentaires).
C normal ! C le clash entre les « Locaux », les « Touristes » Bisounours et les intermédiaires « Gentil Organisateur »
@Nca78 147999 wrote:C’est pas moins cher d’acheter tout ça au Vietnam ?
Je le crois aussi !
Le savon de Marseille, c super pour les pauvres Petits, mais de nos jours l’usine CaoXaLa à Hanoi (Xa veut dire XaVong = Savon si vous n’êtes pas au courant) soustraite sa fabrication à Unilever Vietnam ; Ca sent tellement le savon qu’on renifle l’usine à 500 mètres !
Et il y a la guerre avec son concurrent Procter & Gamble plus établis dans le Sud.
Il y a même la guerre entre ces 2 la ! Maintenant, les Américains viennent faire la gerre chimique chez nous et ça nous fait rire.
Bréve de comptoir: Un commando de Viêt Khong Unilever a ataqué et neutralisé une usine de savon P&G Vietnam Cong Hoa à Binh Duong :
10 February 2012 : Blaze destroyed P&G company in Binh DuongBINH DUONG – Fire fighters this morning finished putting out a blaze at Procter and Gamble (P&G) Viet Nam’s raw material warehouse, after an eight-hour struggle in southern Binh Duong Province’s Thuan An District.
Initial investigation results show the blaze began at 6pm yesterday, damaging 2,500 sq.m of the company’s workshop.
Fortunately, no injuries was reported and the cause of the fire and total damages are still unknown.
A total of 12 fire engines and 100 fire fighters were sent to control the blaze.
The property saved from the blaze is estimated to be worth about VND50 billion (US$2.4 million).
However, P&G representative confirmed that the company production would resume today and its customers would not be affected.
The 100 per cent foreign-capital company specialises in producing soap powder and cosmetics. – VNS
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