link ae888

Fuel smuggling on the rise in Vietnamese waters

Fuel smuggling is on the rise in Vietnamese waters bordering Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand recently, partly due to the discrepancy between selling prices in Vietnam and neighbouring countries.
Fuel smuggling on the rise in Vietnamese waters ảnh 1Illustrative image (Photo: thanhnien.vn)
 
Hanoi (VNA) - Fuel smuggling is on the rise in Vietnamese watersbordering Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand recently, partly due to thediscrepancy between selling prices in Vietnam and neighbouring countries,according to the Vietnamese coastguard.

Colonel Tran Van Nam, head of the LegalDepartment at the Maritime Police High Command, said that thecoastguard struggled to inspect petroleum smuggling activities in the seaareas between Vietnam and other countries.

According to the colonel, foreign vessels oftenillegally transport and sell oil to Vietnamese boats disguised as fishing boatsat the border areas. After several investigations, the boats have become morecautious and better prepared. After discovering, they are under observation,they quickly move out of Vietnamese waters areas.

On a more serious note, Nam said some smuggling boats were even equipped withweapons.

Boat owners often hire crews from differentcountries, including Thailand, Cambodia and Laos, making it difficult for thecoastguard to identify the origin of the vessel during inspections.

From the end of April until the end of May, thecoastguard seized more than 3.5 million litres of smuggled oil, Nam said.

“Smuggled oil brings huge profits. The oil price offshore is only two-thirds ofthat sold on shore,” he added.

The sale of fuel with unknown origin is still taking place at seaport areas inQuang Ninh province, Hai Phong city, Da Nang city and Vung Tau city.

In April, 26 people from Cambodia andThailand aboard three boats were arrested for transporting diesel off Vietnam’ssouthern coast. In this case, coastguard officials in southern Vietnam seizedmore than 1.2 million litres of diesel from the three foreign boats.

None of the crew could produce legal documentsfor the fuel.

Last December, Vietnam’s coastguard intercepted a Thai ship with 1.3 millionlitres of undocumented gasoline.

Between March and July last year, at least fourothers were caught with nearly one million litres of illegal diesel.-VNA

VNA

See more

A motorbike production line of Honda Vietnam — a Japanese company located in Phu Tho province. (Photo: VNA)

🌟 Phu Tho emerges as FDI magnet following mergence

In the first seven months of the year, Phu Tho attracted an impressive 651.7 million USD in foreign direct investment, including 35 newly licensed projects totaling 119 million USD in registered capital and 45 existing projects with an additional capital of 533 million USD.
Infraction levels will correspond to fines of 1-80 million VND, depending on the nature and number of invoicing violations. (Photo: vietnamfinance.vn)

♌ Maximum fine of 3,000 USD proposed for violating invoice regulations

Under a draft to amend and supplement the Government's Decree 125/2020/ND-CP on administrative sanctions for violations of tax and invoice regulations, the Ministry of Finance has proposed classifying the failure to issue invoices into five different levels. Infraction levels will correspond to fines of 1 million VND to 80 million VND, depending on the nature and number of invoicing violations.
At the strategic partnership signing ceremony between Sun PhuQuoc Airways and Amadeus. (Photo: Sun Group)

🌱 Sun PhuQuoc Airways enters strategic partnership with Amadeus to build a five-star aviation technology ecosystem

A new airline developed and invested by Sun Group — has officially announced a strategic partnership with Amadeus IT Group (Amadeus), one of the world’s leading travel technology companies. This agreement not only lays the foundation for a modern digital infrastructure but also marks a pivotal step in SPA’s global expansion strategy, enabling the airline to access international distribution networks and reach customers worldwide.
A local resident makes a bank transfer using the Momo app. (Photo: VNA)

꧟ Banks accelerate digitalisation, non-cash payments

Cashless payments are growing at an impressive rate, averaging 30–40% annually. Vietnam’s per capita cashless transaction volume now trails only China, with total value of 295.2 quadrillion VND (11.26 trillion USD), or 26 times of its GDP.
{dagathomo tructiep hôm nay}|{link ae888 city 165}|{dá gà thomo}|{trực tiếp đá gà thomo hom nay}|{sbobet asian handicap}|