Giám Đốc Công An Thừa Thiên - Huế Bị Bắt
Huỳnh Thị Hạnh Phúc - Tổng giám đốc Công ty cổ phần Xây dựng địa ốc bất động sản Thiên Ân Phát, trụ sở tại quận Thủ Đức, bị Công an TP HCM bắt giam về hành vi Lừa đảo chiếm đoạt tài sản, ngày 11/8.
(TNO) Liên quan đến vụ án “Trần Văn Dũng cùng đồng bọn tổ chức cho người khác trốn đi nước ngoài”, sáng nay 22.2, Cơ quan An ninh điều tra Bộ Công an đã thực hiện bắt, tạm giam ông Dương Tự Trọng.
Ông Trọng là em trai ông Dương Chí Dũng - nguyên Cục trưởng Cục Hàng hải Việt Nam, nguyên Chủ tịch Hội đồng Thành viên Tổng công ty Hàng hải VN (Vinalines), bị bắt về hành vi tổ chức cho người khác trốn đi nước ngoài trái phép theo điều 275 bộ luật Hình sự.
Ông Trọng, 52 tuổi, cấp bậc đại tá, nguyên là Phó giám đốc Công an TP.Hải Phòng. Sau khi ông Dương Chí Dũng bỏ trốn và bị Cơ quan CSĐT, Bộ Công an truy nã, ông Trọng được điều chuyển làm Cục phó Cục Cảnh sát Quản lý hành chính về trật tự xã hội, Bộ Công an.
Trước đó, Cơ quan An ninh Điều tra, Bộ Công an cũng đã khởi tố và bắt giam thượng tá Vũ Tiến Sơn (47 tuổi, nguyên Phó trưởng phòng CSĐT tội phạm hình sự, Công an TP.Hải Phòng), Vũ Văn Sáu (44 tuổi, Trưởng công an xã An Thọ, H.An Lão, TP.Hải Phòng), Phạm Đình Nghiên (43 tuổi, Phó trưởng Công an xã An Thọ), Hà Trọng Tuấn (48 tuổi, ở đường Lê Lợi, Q.Ngô Quyền, TP.Hải Phòng), trung tá Hoàng Văn Thắng (43 tuổi, Đội trưởng thuộc Phòng Cảnh sát Môi trường, Công an TP.Hải Phòng), thiếu úy Nguyễn Trọng Ánh (cán bộ Phòng CSĐT tội phạm hình sự, Công an TP.Hải Phòng) và hiện truy nã gắt gao Đồng Xuân Phong (nguyên cán bộ Cục Hải quan Hải Phòng).
Trong một diễn biến khác, mới đây em rể ông Dương Chí Dũng và Dương Tự Trọng là đại tá Nguyễn Bình Kiên, Phó giám đốc Công an TP.Hải Phòng vừa bị khai trừ Đảng vì vi phạm nghiêm trọng quy định công tác nghiệp vụ của ngành công an và xâm phạm quyền tự do cá nhân của công dân...
Ngôi nhà của ông Dương Tự Trọng ở khu Phú Hải, quận Dương Kinh, TP.Hải Phòng - Ảnh P.H.Sâm
For the municipality of Huế, see
Province in North Central Coast, Vietnam
Location of Thừa Thiên Huế within Vietnam
Thừa Thiên Huế is a southernmost coastal province in the North Central Coast region, the Central of Vietnam, approximately in the center of the country. It borders Quảng Trị to the north, Quảng Nam and Đà Nẵng to the south, Salavan of Laos to the west and the South China Sea to the east.
Thừa Thiên Huế has 128 km of coastline, 22,000 ha of lagoons and over 200,000 ha of forest. The province is located in the middle of thr North Central and South Central regions (including the South Central Coast and Central Highlands), and is transitional in many aspects: geology, climate, administrative division and local culture.
The province is widely known as Xứ Huế (the Land of Huế), after its provincial capital and largest city of Huế. The former imperial capital of the Nguyễn dynasty, Huế is today a popular tourist destination thanks to its extensive complex of imperial palaces, tombs and temples.
In recognition of Huế's rapid development, it is due to become Vietnam's sixth centrally-governed municipality in 2025. As part of this process, Huế will annex the rest of Thừa Thiên Huế province to streamline administration.[5]
The region's history dates back some 20,800 years according to archaeological findings from the Sa Huynh culture, as well as from relics in the region. Đại Việt became an independent nation around 938 AD of which territorial conflict lasts for about four centuries between the Đại Việt and the Champa. The two provinces then changed their names to Thanh and Hóa. In 1307, Đoàn Nhữ Hài was appointed by the emperor, Trần Anh Tông, to administer the area. Settlers from the north (Thanh Hóa) migrated south and integrated with the people of the Kingdom of Champa. During this time, the settlement of Hoa Chau province began, which included the area of present-day Thừa Thiên.
Between the settlement of Thuận Hóa (1306) to the founding of Phú Xuân (1687), there were conflicts and uncertainties for the local people, which including the fall of the Trần Dynasty to the renaissance of the Hồ dynasty. Thuận Hóa and Phú Xuân became the location of the Đại Việt kingdom once Nguyễn Hoàng was appointed head of Thuận Hóa (1511–1558). Lord Nguyễn Hoàng (1558–1613) established bases at Ai Tu, Tra Bat and Dinh Cat, while his lords moved palaces to Kim Long [vi] (1636), where they would eventually base their operations in Phú Xuân (1687). The Nguyễn lords ruled the area until the Trinh clan conquered it in 1775. The farmers' movement led by the Tây Sơn brothers gained momentum in 1771. The Tây Sơn insurgent army conquered the Nguyễn capital after winning the battle of Phú Xuân in 1786, where they continued north and overthrew the Trinh Dynasty. In Phú Xuân, Nguyễn Huệ appointed himself king; with internal strife within the Tây Sơn Movement and the death of Nguyễn Huệ (1792), Nguyễn Ánh took advantage of the situation and conquered Gia Định with the support of foreign forces. He became attached to the Tây Sơn movement and took over Phú Xuân and the throne, thereby choosing the dynasty title of Gia Long (1802).
After the French conquest of Vietnam, Phú Xuân was officially renamed to Huế in 1899. It remained the capital of Annam, one of French Indochina's six constituent regions, until the State of Vietnam was established in 1949.[6] Prior to 1975, the province was known simply as Thừa Thiên.
The province suffered from heavy fighting during the Vietnam War, as it was the second-most northerly province of the South Vietnam, close to the North Vietnamese border (DMZ) at the 17th parallel. 2,893 U.S. soldiers died in Thừa Thiên, more than in any other Vietnamese province.[7] The Massacre at Huế occurred here; an estimated 2,800 to 6,000 civilians and South Vietnamese army prisoners of war were slaughtered by the Việt Cộng during the Tet Offensive of 1968. The province saw a large influx of northern settlers soon after the Vietnam War ended, as with the rest of the former South. Thừa Thiên Huế and neighboring Quảng Nam province suffered greatly from severe flooding in 1999.
The Perfume River (called Sông Hương or Hương Giang in Vietnamese) passes through the center of province. The province also accommodates the Tam Giang–Cau Hai lagoon, the largest lagoon in Southeast Asia, which is 68 kilometres (42 mi) long with a surface area of 220 square kilometres (85 sq mi). The province comprises four different zones: a mountainous area, hills, plains and lagoons separated from the sea by sandbanks. It has 128 kilometres (80 mi) of beaches. The mountains, covering more than half the total surface of the province, are along the west and southwest border of the province, their height varying from 500 metres (1,600 ft) to 1,480 metres (4,860 ft). The hills are lower, between 20 metres (66 ft) and 200 metres (660 ft), with some points at 400 metres (1,300 ft), and occupy about a third of the province's area, between the mountains and the plains. The plains account for about a tenth of the surface area, with a height of only up to 20 metres (66 ft) above sea level. Between the hills are the lagoons which occupy the remaining 5% of the province's surface area.[8]
Bạch Mã National Park is a protected area near the city of Hué. It covers 220 square kilometres (85 sq mi) and comprises three zones: a strictly protected core area, an administrative area and a buffer zone. The climate is similar to central Vietnam in general: a tropical monsoon climate. In the plains and in the hills, the average annual temperature is 25 °C (77 °F), but in the mountains only 21 °C (70 °F) (statistical yearbook 2004). The cool season is from November to March with cold northeasterly winds. The lowest average monthly temperature is in January: 20 °C (68 °F). In the cool season temperatures can fall to 12 °C (54 °F) in the plains and the relative humidity is high, between 85% and 95%. Then follows a warmer period from April to September with average monthly temperatures up to 29 °C (84 °F) in July, reaching up to 41 °C (106 °F) at times. It is very humid in July but relative humidity is lower, sometimes down to 50%.[9]
The annual precipitation in the province is 3,200 millimetres (130 in), but there are important variations. Depending on the year, the annual average may be 2,500 millimetres (98 in) to 3,500 millimetres (140 in) in the plains and 3,000 millimetres (120 in) to 4,500 millimetres (180 in) in the mountains. In some years the rainfall may be much higher and reach more than 5,000 millimetres (200 in) in the mountains.[8] The rainy season is from September to December—about 70% of the precipitation occurring in those months. Rainfall often occurs in short heavy bursts which can cause flooding and erosion, with serious social, economic and environmental consequences. The historic floods of November 1999 led to 600 deaths and affected 600,000 homes.[10][11]
A remote region known as the "Green Corridor" is home to many rare species. New species of snake, butterfly, and orchid have been found there in 2005 and 2006, as stated by Chris Dickinson of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) on 26 September 2007.[12][13] The scientists discovered 11 new species of plants and animals, including a snake, two butterflies and five leafless orchid varieties. The new snake species is a white-lipped keelback (Hebius leucomystax). The new butterfly species are a skipper from the genus Zela, and the other from Satyrinae. The new plant species also include one in the genus Aspidistra, and a poisonous Arum perennial.[14]
Thừa Thiên Huế is subdivided into 9 district-level sub-divisions:[15]
They are further subdivided into 8 commune-level towns (or townlets), 105 communes, and 39 wards.
The average population of the province is 1.143.572, which consist of approximately 567.253 males and 576.319 females. The rural population is approximately 587.516 while the urban population is 556.056 (2015).[16]
The retail sales of goods and services (trade, hotel, restaurant, tourism) in the province is 10,960.6 billion đồng, or 0.9 percent of national GDP. This is compared with 12.7 percent for Hanoi and 23.5 percent for Ho Chi Minh City (2009).[17] The province has more than 120 km of coastline, which provides for a seafood industry that produces over 40,000 tonnes per year, consisting of over 500 species of fish.[18]
There are more than 100 mines for minerals and non-mineral resources with the majority consisting of limestone, granite and kaolin.[19] Arts and crafts (wood works, fabrics, furnitures, paper arts, pottery, etc.), literature (textbooks), and spicy cuisines (includes dry goods and vegetarian fare) are the main exports of this region. Exquisite custom-made áo dài (Vietnamese long dress) and nón lá (conical hat) are popular souvenirs for foreign visitors and overseas Vietnamese. Toy-making, lantern design, paper flower crafting, and figurine-making are traditional local crafts. Fruits such as rambutan, jackfruit, lychee, durian, dao, dragon fruit, star fruit, mangosteen, coconut, and kumquat are grown in this area, thanks to substantial rainfall received each year.
Huế is home to a vast number of historically significant buildings, largely a legacy from its time as a capital of the Nguyễn dynasty (1802–1945), including the Imperial Citadel, the Flag Tower, the Royal Palace, and the Royal Tombs. Huế's Forbidden Purple City was once reserved solely for the royal family's use; it was severely damaged during the Vietnam War. Outside the city is the religious site known as Nam Giao Hill ("Heaven's Altar"). Hue Brewery Ltd is located on the Hương Giang river, a popular brand widely known across Vietnam. The Brewery is a joint state-private partnership founded in 1990, with an initial investment of US$2.4 million and a capacity of 3 million liters per year, which has since grown to a capacity of 100 million liters per year in 2007.[20]
Vietnam's National Route 1, which runs the entire length of the nation from north to south, passes through Huế. Huế and Đà Nẵng are the main intermediate stops on the railway line from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City. This province is served by two sea ports, Thuận An Port and Chân Mây Port.
Phu Bai International Airport, the province's sole airport, is situated 15 km south of Huế; it ranks fourth in passenger numbers among Vietnam's airports. While a new terminal was completed in 2023 to receive international flights, Phu Bai currently still only has direct flights to domestic destinations; the first international routes to Kunming, Taipei and Seoul are planned to be inaugurated in 2025.[21]
This province is home to Huế University (e.g.: Huế Economic University, Huế Medicine University, Huế Pedagogical University, Huế Forestry and Agriculture University, Huế University of Sciences, Huế University of Arts, Huế Conservatory of Music and Huế College of Foreign Languages). As of 2009 the province had 190 schools, 1302 classrooms, 2184 teachers and 36,200 pupils.[22]
The most famous high school in Thua Thien Hue province is Quốc Học – Huế High School for the Gifted. It is well known for its high quality of education and French heritage.
The province's name derives from the Sino-Vietnamese 承天順化.[citation needed]
Places adjacent to Thừa Thiên Huế province