Hanoi (VNA) - TheVietnam Friendship Village celebrated its 25th founding anniversary (March18, 1998) and received the second-class Labour Order at a ceremony in Hanoi onApril 3.
The village, runby the Vietnam War Veterans’ Association (VWVA), covers over 3 hectares in VanCanh commune, Hoai Duc district of Hanoi. It is intended to support war veterans,former youth volunteers and their children who are Agent Orange (AO)/dioxinvictims.
It was built withcooperation of six countries – the US, Germany, France, Japan, Canada, and theUK - following the initiative of George George Mizo, a US veteran whojoined the war in the south of Vietnam.
Colonel Nguyen ThangLong, director of the village, said the establishment is now home to about 7,000 warveterans and former youth volunteers, and nearly 700 AO victims from differentlocalities.
More than 60 other warveterans and former youth volunteers from 36 cities and provinces are also admittedto the village each month for nursing, caring and treatment.
In his remarks, SeniorLieutenant General Be Xuan Truong, President of the VWVA, called the village asymbol of international solidarity, for peace, friendship and cooperation, betweenVietnamese war veterans and their foreign peers and peace organisations.
Lauding the performance bythe village’s staff, he expressed his hope that they will take a better care of war veterans, former youth volunteers and AO victims, both materially andspiritually./.
The village, runby the Vietnam War Veterans’ Association (VWVA), covers over 3 hectares in VanCanh commune, Hoai Duc district of Hanoi. It is intended to support war veterans,former youth volunteers and their children who are Agent Orange (AO)/dioxinvictims.
It was built withcooperation of six countries – the US, Germany, France, Japan, Canada, and theUK - following the initiative of George George Mizo, a US veteran whojoined the war in the south of Vietnam.
Colonel Nguyen ThangLong, director of the village, said the establishment is now home to about 7,000 warveterans and former youth volunteers, and nearly 700 AO victims from differentlocalities.
More than 60 other warveterans and former youth volunteers from 36 cities and provinces are also admittedto the village each month for nursing, caring and treatment.
In his remarks, SeniorLieutenant General Be Xuan Truong, President of the VWVA, called the village asymbol of international solidarity, for peace, friendship and cooperation, betweenVietnamese war veterans and their foreign peers and peace organisations.
Lauding the performance bythe village’s staff, he expressed his hope that they will take a better care of war veterans, former youth volunteers and AO victims, both materially andspiritually./.
VNA