Vietnam

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  • Blessed Father Trương Bửu Diệp, an example for today's Vietnam

    On behalf of Pope Leo, Cardinal Tagle presided over the beatification ceremony of the martyred priest killed in 1946. Held in Tắc Sậy before 70,000 people, this was the first time the Church of Vietnam was able to hold a service like this in the country. He teaches us to prioritise honesty over corruption, sharing over selfishness, and solidarity over the exclusive pursuit of self-interest.

  • Vietnam celebrates its first 20th-century blessed

    On 2 July, over 70,000 faithful are expected at the Tac Say shrine for the beatification of Fr Truong Buu Diep, who was killed in 1946 by militiamen recruited by the Viet Minh for refusing to abandon his community. Cardinal Tagle is expected to preside over the ceremony as Pope Leo’s special envoy.

  • Vietnam's tourism boom reaches double-digit growth

    Arrivals reach record levels, especially from Russia and China, and tens of billions of dollars are pouring in to build new infrastructure. Vietnam aims to overtake Thailand and Malaysia as Southeast Asia's top destination. While Thailand is struggling to keep up, Vietnam’s rapid growth comes with risks of overtourism.

  • Asia-Pacific boosting Israeli military exports with Vietnam (and India) leading the way

    Israeli arms exports reached a record US$ 19.2 billion in 2025, with purchases nearly doubling in the Asia-Pacific. Vietnam is one of Israel’s main partners, making it, its the second-largest supplier after Russia. Nguyễn Thị Thanh Nhàn, a businesswoman who fell out of favour with the authorities and was sentenced in absentia to 30 years in prison, played a key role in this. India, Thailand, and Singapore are also nurturing military ties with the Jewish state in order to develop their own capabilities.

  • Vietnam’s new anti-fake news decree includes fines of up to US$ 1,900

    The measure levies penalties in social media starting 1 July, aimed at organisations, household businesses, and individuals. Fines are imposed for content that, among other things, deemed to cause panic, obstruct state agencies, and reveal state secrets. The latest crackdown on press freedom comes in the wake of similar action taken in late 2025, following Tô Lâm rise to power.

  • Hanoi plans to relocate hundreds of thousands of residents from the city centre to the suburbs

    An incentive plan has been launched to encourage residents to move from densely populated areas to new developments connected to metro stations. Some of the targeted areas are currently undergoing redevelopment. The capital's new master plan envisions development along a multipolar and multicentric structure, with the Red River as the main ecological and cultural axis.

  • From Hanoi, Takaichi relaunches Japan's ambitions in the Indo-Pacific

    Reviving Shinzo Abe's vision for a "free and open" ocean, the Japanese prime minister outlined a programme aimed at strengthening economic cooperation with ASEAN countries, extending the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, and strengthening military assistance and security programmes. Meanwhile, she promised Vietnam US$ 5 billion in annual investments.

  • From Minsk to Hanoi, Kim Jong-un's new course beyond the 'rhetoric of isolation'

    The meeting between North Korea’s leader and Belarus’s Lukashenko marks a new course. The North Korean regime is managing its isolation as a strategic resource rather than simply enduring it. Pyongyang is choosing its interlocutors, building relationships, and using the diversification of its partners as a tool to maintain its autonomy from Beijing and Moscow with a growing focus on Southeast Asia at the expense of South Korea.

  • To Lam invites Pope Leo XIV: plans for the visit to Vietnam are back on track

    The President of the National Assembly in Hanoi presented the Pope with a letter from the President, who is now firmly at the helm of power in Vietnam. It was precisely internal disagreements over the local political balance of power that had slowed down the preparations for the visit, which is so eagerly awaited by the Catholic community. Cardinal Parolin is due to visit soon to establish full diplomatic relations. The possibility of 2027, when the Pope is already expected in Seoul for World Youth Day.

  • Ho Chi Minh City bids farewell to Cardinal Phạm Minh Mẫn

    The funeral of the cardinal, who led the Church in Saigon from 1998 to 2014 and passed away on Sunday at the age of 93, took place today. Mons. Peter Van Kham, who served as his auxiliary bishop, recalls: "He always placed his trust in the Lord. And he knew how to involve everyone in the mission of making Christ’s love ever more widely known.”

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