Showing posts with label government officials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government officials. Show all posts

Thursday, September 30, 2010

PM commits to reaching year's economic goals

Workers align a rotor for the Son La hydroelectric facility. Development of electrical resources is one of the key targets in the Government's socio-econmic plan. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

Workers align a rotor for the Son La hydroelectric facility. Development of electrical resources is one of the key targets in the Government's socio-econmic plan. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

HA NOI — Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung yesterday urged the Government to do its utmost to achieve the year's socio-economic goals.

Despite positive progress in its economic development plan, the country's economy was still facing challenges on its way to reaching the targeted socio-economic aim, PM Dung said yesterday at the Government's monthly meeting.

Government officials gather every month to review the socio-economic development of the month and discuss measures to stabilise the macro-economics, restrain inflation and ensure the social security for the rest of the year.

The Ministry of Planning and Investment reported that the first eight months of the year.

The industrial production continued to grow,increasing by 15.2 per cent compared to the same period last year, and the trade gap slightly decreased, the ministry said in its report.

Meanwhile, the month's consumer price index grew by 0.23 per cent over the previous month.

Good co-ordination among sectors and localities had helped agriculture improve and kept pandemics under control despite the negative impact of floods and storms, the Ministry of Planning and Investment reported.

Social security had been ensured and people's living standards had been lifted, the ministry reported.

Nevertheless, the Government pointed out shortcomings of the economy, which needed to be made good.

The domestic economy was facing the negative impact of the global market's increasing prices, especially in the last quarter of the year, Government officials said.

Firms and enterprises were still ineffective in mobilising capital sources as bank loan interest rates remained high. Epidemic diseases were at a critical point and still threatened to seriously affect production and people's lives.

The officials also discussed ways to effectively implement the socio-economic development plan next year and in the coming five years.

One of the most discussed issues was how to develop the electricity industry.

The officials agreed on a plan to introduce an open and favourable mechanism to boost electricity production. The Government would favour the socialisation of the industry, calling on the involvement and investment of all economic sectors.

Together with implementing hydro-power projects, the Government would boost the development of natural-energy generated power programmes.

Dung asked the Ministry of Industry and Trade to focus on producing electricity to avoid shortages of power, with Government playing the key role in the field with the support of all sectors. He asked the Government to set the economic growth for the next year at 7.5 per cent.

While the Government was expecting to see its GDP grow at 6.5-7 per cent this year, the consumer price index should be maintained at 7 per cent to make sure the macro-economy stabilised, he said, and the excess of imports over exports was to be kept below 18 per cent.

Dung said policies to support the nation's key programmes would be introduced and the new rural development plan would be on the next five years' economic plan.

In discussion of the 2011-15 economic plan, Government officials said the guarantee of social security should be the key factor. They asked that ministries and sectors review their own targets to set out the single goal for the country.

Special attention needed to be paid to environment protection work and sustainable development, the officials said, adding that the tasks of addressing climate change would also need great effort. Government confirmed its commitment to administrative reform and equitisation in State-run enterprises. — VNS

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Thursday, September 16, 2010

India says BlackBerry must give access or face ban

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A customer holds a BlackBerry handset at a mobile phone shop in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad August 26, 2010.
Photo: Reuters

India insisted on Friday it would block some BlackBerry services next week if the smartphone maker did not address security concerns, and government officials said they were hopeful for a solution soon.

Time is running out for Canada's Research In Motion to give India the means to track and read its secure email and instant messaging services that officials fear could be misused by militants and to create political instability.

Executives of the Canadian firm will meet Indian government officials for a second day on Friday in last-ditch negotiations aimed at finding a solution ahead of an August 31 deadline. The government has said it will take a final decision on Monday.

"We will only accept a solution which will enable us lawful interception of BlackBerry services in the interest of national security," a government official close to the talks told Reuters.

"The solution, if they come up with it, will have to go through field trials and satisfy our technical experts," he said. "The government's position does not change ... We are hopeful they will come up with some solution."

BlackBerry's troubles in India, which could cut it out from one of the world's fastest growing mobile phone markets, are the latest in the firm's global headaches as governments worry its encrypted services could be used for activities from terrorism to peddling pornography.

India is one of a number of countries putting pressure on RIM for the same reason its BlackBerry device is so popular with business professionals and politicians: confidentiality.

The governments of Saudi Arabia and other nations fear it could become a tool to plan militant attacks or for those breaking Islamic laws.

Security concerns

RIM has offered to lead an industry forum to look at India's need to have "lawful access" to its encrypted email and messenger in an effort to stave off the blocking of the popular services.

RIM said singling out BlackBerry for blocking would be counter-productive for India, as it would limit the efficiency and productivity of local firms.

But India says nothing short of a solution giving access to secure email would satisfy security agencies.

"I think these concerns have been addressed in other parts of the world. I see no reason why the Indian government and its agencies should take any risk at all as far as technology is concerned," junior telecoms minister Sachin Pilot said on Friday.

Pilot said he was hopeful the company would offer a solution.

A shutdown would affect about 1 million users in India out of a total 41 million BlackBerry users worldwide, allowing them to use the devices only for calls and Internet browsing.

RIM uses powerful codes to scramble, or encrypt, email messages as they travel between a BlackBerry device and a computer known as a BlackBerry Enterprise Server that is designed to secure those emails.

RIM has said BlackBerry security is based on a system where the customers create their own key and the company neither has a master key nor any "back door" to allow RIM or any third party to gain access to crucial corporate data.

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