The Communist Party keeps missing chances to solve its most pressing problem
FOR years residents of Dong Tam, a village on the edge of Vietnam’s capital, have fought for the right to continue tending farms on land earmarked for military development. Their patience evaporated in April, when authorities arrested a group of elders whom they had chosen to press their case with the government. The villagers overpowered dozens of policemen who had been sent to secure the settlement, holding them captive in a municipal hall (pictured above). Supporters blocked nearby lanes with rubble, and at least one hothead threatened to set the hall on fire.
The week-long siege that followed marked a new escalation in Vietnam’send less battles over land—the primary cause of complaints in the country and one of the ruling Communist Party’s biggest headaches. Vietnamese followed the drama on social media and, eventually, in the state press. But just as startling was the government’s capitulation, negotiated in person by Hanoi’s mayor. Authorities secured the hostages’ release by promising not to prosecute the villagers, and by pledging to re-examine their complaint.
Vietnam’s zippy economy, growing at more than 6% annually, demands ever more room for roads, bridges, dams and industrial parks. Each year swelling cities must find space for a million new arrivals. The total area of farmland lost to development over the past two decades is difficult to quantify. One certainty is that it far exceeds the acreage that changed hands during violent upheavals in the 1950s, when the Communist rulers of North Vietnam forcibly redistributed farmland.
هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة June 17th - 23rd 2017 من The Economist.
ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 8500 مجلة وصحيفة.
بالفعل مشترك ? تسجيل الدخول
هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة June 17th - 23rd 2017 من The Economist.
ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 8500 مجلة وصحيفة.
بالفعل مشترك? تسجيل الدخول
Forza!
Tennis has a new force: the 22-year-old Italian ski racer turned court champion Jannik Sinner nickname: The Fox). Abby Aguirre meets him in the midst of an electrifying winning streak.
THE OTHER SIDE
Sophie Turner talks about the harsh glare of attention following her breakup and how she has emerged stronger, happier, and healthier than ever.
Now and Forever
From corsetry and embroidery to the fineness of tailoring, this season's most beguiling silhouettes offer a palpable sense of history and craft. Liya Kebede and her children connect the dots between past, present, and future.
Madame Paris
Mayor Anne Hidalgo has long been a leader under scrutiny. And now she and her glorious city will be center stage for the Olympics.
Free Reign
Boho chic, the liberated and unfettered style statement of the aughts, is back with a floaty, festival-ready vengeance.
No Filler
The sandwich” facial migrates to other parts of the body.
Everything Under the Sun
To Kendall Jenner, mental health means many things: rest, reflection, riding, reading—and being open. She talks to Rob Haskell about a decade in modeling. Photographed by Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott.
The Longest Journey
In 2022 a stroke brought Hamish Bowless teeming life to a crashing halt. After months spent in the hospital and a year back at home, he reflects on just how far hes come.
A WATERY STAGE
The Paris Games will kick off, in spectacular fashion, with a procession on the Seine. Gaby Wood meets the creative director orchestrating it all.
DOUBLE ACT
Married artists Sam Moyer and Eddie Martinez have built their lives and careers on parallel tracks. Now, with simultaneous shows at the same museum, they are converging.
THE BATTLE OF THE BUILDS DEDICATED VS INTEGRATED GPUs
We put AMD's latest Ryzen 5 8600G to the test
Use Photoshop's new AI features
YOU'LL NEED THIS PHOTOSHOP CC 25.5 OR LATER
HP Omen 45L
HP's biggest desktop PC offers mighty gaming potential
Intel Raptor Lake Core 19 Instability Problems
THE RACE BETWEEN AMD AND INTEL has heated up in the past few years as Ryzen processors have become increasingly competitive. The amount of headroom for overclocking has shrunk in response, and it seems motherboard vendors may have tweaked settings a bit too aggressively.
CREATE A SECURE WIREGUARD VPN SERVER
Discover how to securely access your home network when out and about, with Nick Peers
Intel announces 6th Gen Xeon brand
'Xeon Scalable' becomes the Xeon 6 series
What exactly is an 'AI' PC?
AI, EVERYWHERE, all at once. That, in a nutshell, is what's happening to the computing industry. The PC, inevitably, is not immune. Later this summer, you'll be able to buy a machine that officially qualifies as an 'Al' PC, according to no lesser an authority than Microsoft. But you might be surprised at who's making it.
LG ANNOUNCES GAMING OLED
The panel can alter refresh rates and resolutions
Sapphire RX 7900 GRE Pulse
The Golden Rabbit Edition goes global
HOW DO YOU KNOW IF YOU'VE BEEN HACKED?
Don't let attackers sneak under your radar: Nik Rawlinson reveals the telltale signs to look out for
THE THEATRE - PHOTO REALISM
Moisés Kaufman's Here There Are Blueberries.”
Thataway Thomas McGuane
The two sisters were growing old now, but they went on gazing toward Palm Springs from this windblown prairie town as though to Mecca.
FAMILY PORTRAIT
In his latest novel, Garth Risk Hallberg shrinks his frame.
AGE OF ANXIETY
The love songs of Billie Eilish.
A REPORTER AT LARGE YOU MAKE ME SICK
How corporate scientists discovered—and then helped to conceal—the dangers of forever chemicals.
THE WORLD OF TELEVISION CASTOFFS
REALITY-TV CONTESTANTS ARE BARELY PAID, AND THE EXPERIENCE CAN FEEL LIKE ABUSE. SHOULD THEY UNIONIZE?
ONWARD AND UPWARD WITH TECHNOLOGY ABRIDGED TOO FAR
The world according to Blinkist.
ANNALS OF INQUIRY WAIT FOR IT
Suspense in literature and life.
THE CURRENT CINEMA APOCALYPSE WHEN
“Megalopolis.”
SHOUTS & MURMURS IDENTIFIED
A panel of scientific experts commissioned by NASA to study unidentified anomalous phenomena,” more widely known as UFOs, said Thursday that it found no evidence that any of the reported objects were extraterrestrial in origin.