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The Saigon Times is a Vietnamese media organization with two Vietnamese- and two English-language publications. Its flagship publication is Thoi Bao Kinh Te Saigon , the most widely-read weekly economics and business news magazine in Vietnamese.
Below is a list of websites published in Vietnam in alphabetical order. 24h.com.vn [38] Báo Mới [39] Báo Điện tử Chính phủ nước Cộng hòa Xã hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam [40] Việt Báo [41] VietNamNet [42] Việt Nam News [43] VnExpress [44]
Saigon News is part of several other newspapers owned by Saigon Times Group. Saigon Times Daily focuses mainly on the local economic and social situation with its main readers being in Ho Chi Minh City and Đông Nam Bộ. It is available at various newsstands in Vietnam. It is also available aboard Vietnam Airlines flights.
Việt Nam News is an English-language daily print newspaper with offices in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh, published by the Vietnam News Agency, [1] [2] the news service of the government of Vietnam. The newspaper was first published in 1991. It is published seven days a week and is the main English newspaper in Vietnam. [3] The paper is a member of ...
The leaders of China and Vietnam hailed as "strategic" on Wednesday their decision to strengthen ties and be part of a community with a "shared future", as a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping ...
The newspaper office was first established on an empty lot currently occupied by a church, near the Franklin high school area where immigrants started settling in after the Vietnam War. In 2001, it was moved further south on the Martin Luther King Jr Way corridor that runs through the heart of south Seattle, next to the current day Othello ...
HANOI (Reuters) -Russian President Vladimir Putin will visit Hanoi this week, Vietnamese and Russian state media said on Monday, highlighting Communist-ruled Vietnam's loyalty to Russia and ...
The news then reflected communism and the Cold War.In asking how the United States got into Vietnam, attention must be paid to the enormous strength of the Cold War consensus in the early 1960s shared by journalists and policymakers alike and due to the great power of the administration to control the agenda and the framing of foreign affairs reporting.