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Vietnamese encouraged to get married before 30

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has approved a birth rate adjustment programme towards 2030 which encourages people to get married before the age of 30 and women to give birth to their second child before 35.

The programme sets the target to increase the birth rate by 10 percent in localities with a low rate (less than two children per couple) and reduce the rate in localities with a high rate of more than 2.2 children per couple.

Provinces and cities in which each woman of reproductive age has two to 2.2 children should maintain the rate or so-called desired fertility at replacement level.

The targets aim to help Vietnam accomplish the national population strategy by 2030.

The PM ordered the issuance of regulations so that public employees and Party members set the example of having no more than two children in their families.

Areas with a low birth rate or desired fertility at replacement level should encourage families to have two children.

PM Phuc asked local authorities to pilot policies to support couples in giving birth and raising children. Getting married or giving birth at an old age is not encouraged.

Couples who have two children will have their income tax reduced and be assisted with children’s tuition fees or expenses to rent houses or buy social housing. Children of these families will have priority to be admitted to public schools.

Local authorities have been asked to pilot marriage and family consultation services such as dating clubs and pre-marriage health consultations.

Pregnant women or those having two children have access to mother and baby health care and malnutrition prevention consultations./.
VNA/VNP

Soul of Mong peoples panpipe kept alive in mountainous schools

Soul of Mong people’s panpipe kept alive in mountainous schools

Under the early summer sun of Vietnam’s northern mountainous region, the schoolyard of Sung La Semi-Boarding Primary School for ethnic minority students in Sa Phin commune, Tuyen Quang province, fills with a distinctive sound. The melodies of the Mong people’s "khen" (panpipe) blend with the laughter of highland children, bringing life and warmth to the small school nestled amid the karst plateau.

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