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District authorities say culling of 15 dogs necessary for COVID-19 prevention in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta

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Authorities in Tran Van Thoi District, located in the Mekong Delta province of Ca Mau, stated that the recent culling of 15 dogs and one cat after their owners tested positive for COVID-19 was necessary due to pressure for pandemic prevention and from local residents.

The Tran Van Thoi People’s Committee organized a press meeting on Sunday evening to provide information on the incident.

At around 10:30 pm on Friday, authorities in Khanh Hung Commune, Tran Van Thoi District received a group of seven people, along with 15 dogs and a cat, returning from a virus-hit area.

All of the individuals and their pets were taken to a concentrated quarantine facility at Khanh Hung High School.

The seven people later had their samples collected for both rapid and real-time RT-PCR COVID-19 testing.

During the process, many people at the quarantine center did not agree to let the dogs run around the premises due to problems related to hygiene, safety, and pandemic prevention and control.

The owners were thus asked to tie their pets to a tree to better manage them.

As the rapid test results of five out of the seven individuals came back positive for the novel coronavirus, they were required to stay in a room that was separate from the other two.

The dogs later slipped off leash and began running around the facility again, thus the owners had to put them in bags and baskets and placed them in front of their rooms.

People in the quarantine facility, as well as residents living around continued expressing their concern that the dogs might run to the nearby residential area, posing high risk of COVID-19 transmission.

At 7:30 am on Saturday, the management board of the quarantine center had to cull the dogs and cat, and the process was witnessed by many people inside the venue as well as local residents.

At 2:40 pm the same day, the RT-PCR test results of the five individuals came back positive, thus they were transferred to Tran Van Thoi General Hospital for treatment.

The dogs and cat are culled at the quarantine center in Tran Van Thoi District, Ca Mau Province, October 9, 2021 in this supplied photo.

The dogs and cat are culled at the quarantine center in Tran Van Thoi District, Ca Mau Province, October 9, 2021 in this supplied photo.

Tran Tan Cong, chairman of Tran Van Thoi District, claimed that the culling was necessary to ensure pandemic prevention and control, adding that the management board was also under pressure from people at the quarantine facility as well as local residents.

“If we had had better management capacity, we could have isolated the pets, disinfected them, and monitored them carefully,” Cong admitted.

“The animals should have been culled only when they had been confirmed to be infected with the disease.”

In the prevention and control of COVID-19, ensuring people’s health and preventing cross-infection in quarantine facilities are the top priorities, the chairman continued.

The health ministry has also advised that COVID-19 patients should not come into close contact with their pets, he added.

Competent authorities are encouraging the owners of the dogs and cat to focus on their COVID-19 treatment.

Following their recovery, the administration in Khanh Hung Commune will further discuss with them regarding this incident.

According to previous reports, the families of Pham Minh Hung, 49, and Nguyen Duy Khanh, 39, traveled from southern Long An Province to Ca Mau Province on their motorbikes on Friday.

Hung and Khanh worked as masons in Long An, but their livelihood was negatively affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The two families brought along 17 dogs, including 13 puppies, and one cat. They later gave away two of the pups.

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Source: https://tuoitrenews.vn/news/society/20211011/district-authorities-say-culling-of-15-dogs-necessary-for-covid19-prevention-in-vietnams-mekong-delta/63522.html

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31 Vietnamese students suffer suspected poisoning after receiving balloons from strangers

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Thirty-one students at an elementary school in Vietnam’s Central Highlands had symptoms such as dizziness, headache, and nausea after being given balloons by strangers.

The incident was recorded at Ly Tu Trong Elementary School in Buon Trap Town, Krong Ana District, Dak Lak Province.

Among the 31 students, 17 were admitted to the district medical center, five of whom received transfusions, a representative of the Krong Ana District Office of Education and Training said on Thursday morning.

The other 14 are being monitored at home.

Doctors diagnosed the children with poisoning, but the cause is unknown.

Currently, the health of the poisoned students is stable.

According to the report of Ly Tu Trong Elementary School, four strangers, including three women and one man, were giving balloons to students in front of the school on Wednesday afternoon.

This group of people was then asked to leave by a security guard.

About 30 minutes later, many of the students who had been given the balloons began to show signs of dizziness, headache, abdominal pain, and nausea.

The students were then taken to the school’s medical room and the case was reported to local authorities.

Authorities are investigating the incident.

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Thirty-one students at an elementary school in Vietnam’s Central Highlands had symptoms such as dizziness, headache, and nausea after being given balloons by strangers.

The incident was recorded at Ly Tu Trong Elementary School in Buon Trap Town, Krong Ana District, Dak Lak Province.

Among the 31 students, 17 were admitted to the district medical center, five of whom received transfusions, a representative of the Krong Ana District Office of Education and Training said on Thursday morning.

The other 14 are being monitored at home.

Doctors diagnosed the children with poisoning, but the cause is unknown.

Currently, the health of the poisoned students is stable.

According to the report of Ly Tu Trong Elementary School, four strangers, including three women and one man, were giving balloons to students in front of the school on Wednesday afternoon.

This group of people was then asked to leave by a security guard.

About 30 minutes later, many of the students who had been given the balloons began to show signs of dizziness, headache, abdominal pain, and nausea.

The students were then taken to the school’s medical room and the case was reported to local authorities.

Authorities are investigating the incident.

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Source: https://tuoitrenews.vn/news/society/20230323/31-vietnamese-students-suffer-suspected-poisoning-after-receiving-balloons-from-strangers/72225.html

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Vietnamese woman extradited from Indonesia after 8-year evasion of international wanted notice

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A Vietnamese woman has been extradited from Indonesia by Interpol for an investigation into a fraud case dating back to 2015, local police said on Wednesday.

Nguyen Thi Anh Nga, a 36-year-old from Dong Thap Province in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta region, has been wanted internationally since 2015 after fraudulently appropriating over VND3 billion (US$127,591) from various individuals.

Nga then fled Vietnam to work in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Cambodia.

Police in Indonesia arrested Nga on March 7.

After discussing with their Indonesian counterparts, Interpol Vietnam brought Nga to Tan Son Nhat International Airport in Ho Chi Minh City and handed her over to Dong Thap police officers for an investigation into the case.

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A Vietnamese woman has been extradited from Indonesia by Interpol for an investigation into a fraud case dating back to 2015, local police said on Wednesday.

Nguyen Thi Anh Nga, a 36-year-old from Dong Thap Province in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta region, has been wanted internationally since 2015 after fraudulently appropriating over VND3 billion (US$127,591) from various individuals.

Nga then fled Vietnam to work in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Cambodia.

Police in Indonesia arrested Nga on March 7.

After discussing with their Indonesian counterparts, Interpol Vietnam brought Nga to Tan Son Nhat International Airport in Ho Chi Minh City and handed her over to Dong Thap police officers for an investigation into the case.

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Source: https://tuoitrenews.vn/news/society/20230323/vietnamese-women-extradited-after-8year-evasion-of-international-wanted-notice/72224.html

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Two children die following suspected dog bite in north-central Vietnam

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Two children from Nghe An Province, north-central Vietnam have died following suspected dog bites.

Nghe An Obstetrics and Pediatrics Hospital confirmed on Wednesday it had recently received two young patients in critical conditions.

Doctors believed that the patients had been bitten by dogs and were infected with rabies.

In the first case, three-year-old L.B.T. showed symptoms, such as vomiting and convulsions, before his family took him to a district hospital for examination.  

T. was then transferred to Nghe An Obstetrics and Pediatrics Hospital for emergency treatment, with symptoms including respiratory failure, prolonged convulsions, profuse sputum secretion, and dread of wind and water.

Family members said T. often played with dogs and cats, and that a dog raised by the family recently died of unknown causes.

Doctors diagnosed T. with rabies.

Despite the treatment, the young boy eventually passed away.

The second patient, nine-year-old V.Q.H., also contracted rabies and did not survive.

Doctors said the patient did not receive any vaccination after coming into contact with an infected animal.

Rabies is a dangerous infectious disease transmitted from animals to humans mainly through bites or wounds, said Dr. Tran Van Cuong, head of the emergency department at Nghe An Obstetrics and Pediatrics Hospital.

The fatality rate of rabies is nearly 100 percent, and there is no specific treatment for the disease.

Vaccination is still the only effective way to prevent rabies for people bitten by dogs, Cuong stated.

Nearly 520,000 dogs are raised by residents in Nghe An, of which only 20 percent are vaccinated, according to the provincial department of livestock and veterinary medicine.

The province recorded five deaths by rabies in 2022.

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Two children from Nghe An Province, north-central Vietnam have died following suspected dog bites.

Nghe An Obstetrics and Pediatrics Hospital confirmed on Wednesday it had recently received two young patients in critical conditions.

Doctors believed that the patients had been bitten by dogs and were infected with rabies.

In the first case, three-year-old L.B.T. showed symptoms, such as vomiting and convulsions, before his family took him to a district hospital for examination.  

T. was then transferred to Nghe An Obstetrics and Pediatrics Hospital for emergency treatment, with symptoms including respiratory failure, prolonged convulsions, profuse sputum secretion, and dread of wind and water.

Family members said T. often played with dogs and cats, and that a dog raised by the family recently died of unknown causes.

Doctors diagnosed T. with rabies.

Despite the treatment, the young boy eventually passed away.

The second patient, nine-year-old V.Q.H., also contracted rabies and did not survive.

Doctors said the patient did not receive any vaccination after coming into contact with an infected animal.

Rabies is a dangerous infectious disease transmitted from animals to humans mainly through bites or wounds, said Dr. Tran Van Cuong, head of the emergency department at Nghe An Obstetrics and Pediatrics Hospital.

The fatality rate of rabies is nearly 100 percent, and there is no specific treatment for the disease.

Vaccination is still the only effective way to prevent rabies for people bitten by dogs, Cuong stated.

Nearly 520,000 dogs are raised by residents in Nghe An, of which only 20 percent are vaccinated, according to the provincial department of livestock and veterinary medicine.

The province recorded five deaths by rabies in 2022.

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Source: https://tuoitrenews.vn/news/society/20230322/two-children-die-following-suspected-dog-bite-in-northcentral-vietnam/72218.html

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