HCM City wants to expand the use of online public services to simplify administrative procedures and reduce their cost for the public, vice chairman of the municipal People’s Committee, Tran Vinh Tuyen said.
![]() |
Speaking at a meeting with districts’ leaders on March 15, he admitted that online public services are not synchronised and have many shortcomings.
Level 3 alone includes around 300 online public services applicable in all 24 districts and related to individuals and companies, according to the Department of Information and Communications.
But their use remains at a very low level. Only 1% of work is done online in the cases of the labour, land, construction and food safety and hygiene sectors, and 2% in the economic and civilian sectors.
The departments of Environment and Natural Resources, Home Affairs and Finance do not offer online services.
Of those that do, the Department of Training and Education has the highest percentage of online services -- 73% -- while the departments of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs and Planning and Architecture has the lowest -- zero per cent.
Officials of districts and departments blamed the low rate on several reasons like lack of funding and the public’s lack of familiarity with online public services.
Nguyen Tan Binh, director of the Department of Health, said the cost of seven software applications used by his department for online public services was around VND20 billion (US$900,000).
Tuyen said authorities should lease software and use the money collected for providing public services to pay for them.
He urged district authorities to set up teams of volunteers by the end of this year to help users become familiar with using online public services.
The districts should co-ordinate with city’s departments to organise training courses for individuals and enterprises in using online public services, he said.
Besides, the Department of Home Affairs should petition the People’s Committee to consider reducing or even scrapping fees for online services, he said.
“The city will stop manual services in future. This will be done first in some areas to persuade people to switch to online services to ensure transparency.”
The city would set up inspection teams to monitor implementation of administrative work at all offices and fine violations, he said.
Tuyen called on the Department of Information and Communications to provide digital signatures to all departments to stop the use of paper documents.
In the next four months the city Department of Planning and Architecture and districts should publish online all detailed 1:2,000 plans, including population targets, to enable the public to access them, he said.
Under the plan, all central and local media outlets are required to launch columns on the campaign, maintain regular coverage, and produce at least five to seven in-depth reports each month in key search areas. Media agencies will also be encouraged to gather and verify valuable information and develop high-quality products in both Vietnamese and foreign languages, including feature articles, documentaries, reports and short videos.
Ambassador Pham Quang Hieu expressed confidence that the establishment will serve as a strong spiritual anchor for Vietnamese people living in Japan while contributing to friendship and cultural exchanges between the two countries.
Cyberspace now runs through children’s learning, entertainment, and daily lives, but warned it is laced with dangerous content, online insults, threats, and seemingly harmless clicks that can trigger fraud, data breaches, and risks children who are not yet equipped to handle.
Cambodia’s General Department of Immigration under the Ministry of Interior deported the group for violations of regulations related to immigration, labour and residency.
A scholar has stressed the need for Vietnam to make use of cooperation opportunities arising from the RoK’s foreign policy, particularly in semiconductor technology, artificial intelligence (AI), supply chains, digital transformation, and green energy, as well as chances in multilateral diplomacy.
Protecting children in the digital environment is becoming an increasingly urgent issue as children gain access to the internet earlier and face growing online risks.
The citizens, whose registered living places, are mainly in northern, central, Central Highlands, and southwestern localities, had travelled to Cambodia through different border gates at various times.
VOV.VN - Vietnam’s competent agencies have dismantled a self-proclaimed organisation known as “Bahnar Dega Kon Kong” in the Central Highlands, describing it as a variant of the outlawed “Dega Protestantism” movement allegedly directed by overseas FULRO-linked extremists.
Police in Ho Chi Minh City have filed charges against 35 people with illegally storing and trading toxic substances in connection with a large-scale cross-border cyanide smuggling ring, investigators said on May 23.
The 2026 fundraising programme served as a platform connecting art and compassion while spreading the message that “No one should fight cancer alone.”
Pham Van Hat is best known as the creator of the made-in-Vietnam “Seed Sowing Robot,” now exported to 15 countries, alongside dozens of practical inventions that have eased labour for thousands of farmers.
Films, music, television programmes, e-books, video games, journalistic works, images and creative data can now be copied, edited and redistributed within minutes. While copyright violations were once linked mainly to pirated discs or counterfeit books, infringements have shifted online with faster speed, wider scale and greater anonymity.
Consul General Nguyen Viet Kien stressed President Ho Chi Minh’s reputation and career transcended Vietnam’s borders to inspire liberation movements worldwide, and that his ideas on the right to self-determination, peace, and friendship among nations remain deeply relevant today.
Party General Secretary and State President To Lam stressed that citizens should have access to stable, safe and affordable housing suited to eligible beneficiaries, with rental housing becoming a long-term pillar.
Sailing Ship 286 – Le Quy Don of the Vietnam People’s Navy (VPN) departed on May 16 for a diplomatic and training voyage to Thailand and Cambodia, combining naval exchanges with long-distance maritime training for cadets.
A key target under the new plan is the establishment of five digital technology incubators, or Deeptech Hubs, at universities and research institutes with strong potential. The education ministry also plans to launch a training programme for 1,000 outstanding technology entrepreneurs and develop criteria for selecting and supporting startup ecosystems within educational institutions.
During the second phase of the 25th campaign, nearly two months of operations under challenging terrain and weather conditions, as well as the dangers posed by unexploded ordnance, enabled search teams to recover 158 sets of remains, bringing the total number recovered during the campaign to 322.
To accelerate the implementation of the the Ethnic Affairs Strategy by 2030, with a vision toward 2045, the Prime Minister requested ministries, agencies and local authorities to continue thoroughly carrying out the Party and State’s policies on ethnic affairs, enhancing the effectiveness of State management and strengthening oversight of policy implementation.
Vietnamese authorities also provided the Chinese side with photographs and video footage recording the rescue operation and repairs to the vessels, demonstrating transparency and Vietnam’s full efforts in maritime search and rescue.
The team examined the APEC 2027 Convention Centre, where main conference activities are scheduled; Sun Serenia Hospital, designated to provide healthcare and emergency medical services for delegates; provincial road DT.975, which connects Phu Quoc International Airport to the convention centre; and the area surrounding Phu Quoc International Airport.