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Vietnam

Vietnam[b] (Vietnamese: Việt Nam, [vîət nāːm] (listen)), officially the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (SRV),[c] is a country at the eastern edge of mainland Southeast Asia, with an area of 331,212 square kilometres (127,882 sq mi) and a population of over 100 million, making it the world's fifteenth-most populous country. Vietnam shares land borders with China to the north, and Laos and Cambodia to the west. It shares maritime borders with Thailand through the Gulf of Thailand, and the Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia through the South China Sea. Its capital is Hanoi and its largest city is Ho Chi Minh City (commonly referred to by its former name, Saigon).

Socialist Republic of Vietnam
Cộng hòa xã hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam (Vietnamese)
Motto: Độc lập – Tự do – Hạnh phúc
"Independence – Freedom – Happiness"
Anthem: Tiến Quân Ca
"Army March"
Location of Vietnam (green)

in ASEAN (dark grey)

CapitalHanoi
21°2′N 105°51′E / 21.033°N 105.850°E / 21.033; 105.850
Largest cityHo Chi Minh City
10°48′N 106°39′E / 10.800°N 106.650°E / 10.800; 106.650
Official languageVietnamese[1]
Ethnic groups
(2019)
Religion
(2019)
Demonym(s)Vietnamese
Viet (colloquial)
GovernmentUnitary Marxist–Leninist one-party socialist republic
Nguyễn Phú Trọng
• President
Võ Văn Thưởng
Phạm Minh Chính
Vương Đình Huệ
LegislatureNational Assembly
Formation
939
968
1428
• Nguyễn's unification
1802
25 August 1883
2 September 1945
21 July 1954
30 April 1975
2 July 1976
18 December 1986
28 November 2013[a]
Area
• Total
331,212 km2 (127,882 sq mi) (66th)
• Water (%)
6.38
Population
• 2023 estimate
100,000,000[5] (15th)
• 2019 census
96,208,984[2]
• Density
295.0/km2 (764.0/sq mi) (29th)
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
$1.450 trillion[6] (26th)
• Per capita
$14,458[6] (103th)
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
$449.094 billion[6] (34th)
• Per capita
$4,475[6] (116th)
Gini (2018) 35.7[7]
medium
HDI (2021) 0.703[8]
high · 115th
CurrencyVietnamese đồng (₫) (VND)
Time zoneUTC+07:00 (Vietnam Standard Time)
Driving sideright
Calling code+84
ISO 3166 codeVN
Internet TLD.vn

Vietnam was inhabited by the Paleolithic age, with states established in the first millennium BC on the Red River Delta in modern-day northern Vietnam. The Han dynasty annexed Northern and Central Vietnam under Chinese rule from 111 BC, until the first dynasty emerged in 939. Successive monarchical dynasties absorbed Chinese influences through Confucianism and Buddhism, and expanded southward to the Mekong Delta, conquering Champa. During most of the 17th and 18th centuries, Vietnam was effectively divided into two domains of Đàng Trong and Đàng Ngoài. The Nguyễn—the last imperial dynasty—surrendered to France in 1883. In 1887, its territory was integrated into French Indochina as three separate regions. In the immediate aftermath of World War II, the nationalist coalition Viet Minh, led by the communist revolutionary Ho Chi Minh, launched the August Revolution and declared Vietnam's independence in 1945.

Vietnam went through prolonged warfare in the 20th century. After World War II, France returned to reclaim colonial power in the First Indochina War, from which Vietnam emerged victorious in 1954. As a result of the treaties signed between the Viet Minh and France, Vietnam was also separated into two parts. The Vietnam War began shortly after, between the communist North, supported by the Soviet Union and China, and the anti-communist South, supported by the United States. Upon the North Vietnamese victory in 1975, Vietnam reunified as a unitary socialist state under the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) in 1976. An ineffective planned economy, a trade embargo by the West, and wars with Cambodia and China crippled the country further. In 1986, the CPV initiated economic and political reforms similar to the Chinese economic reform, transforming the country to a socialist-oriented market economy. The reforms facilitated Vietnamese reintegration into the global economy and politics.

A developing country with a lower-middle-income economy, Vietnam is nonetheless one of the fastest-growing economies of the 21st century. Vietnam has high levels of corruption, censorship, environmental issues and a poor human rights record; the country ranks among the lowest in international measurements of civil liberties, freedom of the press, and freedom of religion and ethnic minorities. It is part of international and intergovernmental institutions including the ASEAN, the APEC, the CPTPP, the Non-Aligned Movement, the OIF, and the WTO. It has assumed a seat on the United Nations Security Council twice.

Etymology

The name Việt Nam (Vietnamese pronunciation: [viə̀t naːm], chữ Hán: 越南), literally "Viet South", means "Viet of the South" per Vietnamese word order or "South of the Viet" per Classical Chinese word order.[9] A variation of the name, Nanyue (or Nam Việt, 南越), was first documented in the 2nd century BC.[10] The term "Việt" (Yue) (Chinese: ; pinyin: Yuè; Cantonese Yale: Yuht; Wade–Giles: Yüeh4; Vietnamese: Việt) in Early Middle Chinese was first written using the logograph "戉" for an axe (a homophone), in oracle bone and bronze inscriptions of the late Shang dynasty (c. 1200 BC), and later as "越".[11] At that time it referred to a people or chieftain to the northwest of the Shang.[12] In the early 8th century BC, a tribe on the middle Yangtze were called the Yangyue, a term later used for peoples further south.[12] Between the 7th and 4th centuries BC Yue/Việt referred to the State of Yue in the lower Yangtze basin and its people.[11][12] From the 3rd century BC the term was used for the non-Chinese populations of southern China and northern Vietnam, with particular ethnic groups called Minyue, Ouyue, Luoyue (Vietnamese: Lạc Việt), etc., collectively called the Baiyue (Bách Việt, Chinese: 百越; pinyin: Bǎiyuè; Cantonese Yale: Baak Yuet; Vietnamese: Bách Việt; "Hundred Yue/Viet").[11][12][13] The term Baiyue/Bách Việt first appeared in the book Lüshi Chunqiu compiled around 239 BC.[14] By the 17th and 18th centuries AD, educated Vietnamese apparently referred to themselves as nguoi Viet (Viet people) or nguoi nam (southern people).[15]

The form Việt Nam (越南) is first recorded in the 16th-century oracular poem Sấm Trạng Trình. The name has also been found on 12 steles carved in the 16th and 17th centuries, including one at Bao Lam Pagoda in Hải Phòng that dates to 1558.[16] In 1802, Nguyễn Phúc Ánh (who later became Emperor Gia Long) established the Nguyễn dynasty. In the second year of his rule, he asked the Jiaqing Emperor of the Qing dynasty to confer on him the title 'King of Nam Việt / Nanyue' (南越 in Chinese character) after seizing power in Annam. The Emperor refused because the name was related to Zhao Tuo's Nanyue, which included the regions of Guangxi and Guangdong in southern China. The Qing Emperor, therefore, decided to call the area "Việt Nam" instead,[d][18] meaning "South of the Viet" per Classical Chinese word order but the Vietnamese understood it as "Viet of the South" per Vietnamese word order.[9] Between 1804 and 1813, the name Vietnam was used officially by Emperor Gia Long.[d] It was revived in the early 20th century in Phan Bội Châu's History of the Loss of Vietnam, and later by the Vietnamese Nationalist Party (VNQDĐ).[19] The country was usually called Annam until 1945, when the imperial government in Huế adopted Việt Nam.[20]

History

Prehistory and early history

 
A Đông Sơn bronze drum, c. 800 BC

Archaeological excavations have revealed the existence of humans in what is now Vietnam as early as the Paleolithic age. Stone artefacts excavated in Gia Lai province have been claimed to date to 0.78 Ma,[21] based on associated find of tektites, however this claim has been challenged because tektites are often found in archaeological sites of various ages in Vietnam.[22] Homo erectus fossils dating to around 500,000 BC have been found in caves in Lạng Sơn and Nghệ An provinces in northern Vietnam.[23] The oldest Homo sapiens fossils from mainland Southeast Asia are of Middle Pleistocene provenance, and include isolated tooth fragments from Tham Om and Hang Hum.[24][25][26] Teeth attributed to Homo sapiens from the Late Pleistocene have been found at Dong Can,[27] and from the Early Holocene at Mai Da Dieu,[28][29] Lang Gao[30][31] and Lang Cuom.[32] By about 1,000 BC, the development of wet-rice cultivation in the Ma River and Red River floodplains led to the flourishing of Đông Sơn culture,[33][34] notable for its bronze casting used to make elaborate bronze Đông Sơn drums.[35][36][37] At this point, the early Vietnamese kingdoms of Văn Lang and Âu Lạc appeared, and the culture's influence spread to other parts of Southeast Asia, including Maritime Southeast Asia, throughout the first millennium BC.[36][38]

Dynastic Vietnam

 
Đại Việt, Champa, Angkor Empire and their neighbours, late 13th century
 
Vietnam's territories around 1838, during the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia

According to Vietnamese legends, Hồng Bàng dynasty of the Hùng kings first established in 2879 BC is considered the first state in the history of Vietnam (then known as Xích Quỷ and later Văn Lang).[39][40] In 257 BC, the last Hùng king was defeated by Thục Phán. He consolidated the Lạc Việt and Âu Việt tribes to form the Âu Lạc, proclaiming himself An Dương Vương.[41] In 179 BC, a Chinese general named Zhao Tuo ("Triệu Đà") defeated An Dương Vương and consolidated Âu Lạc into Nanyue.[34] However, Nanyue was itself incorporated into the empire of the Chinese Han dynasty in 111 BC after the Han–Nanyue War.[18][42] For the next thousand years, what is now northern Vietnam remained mostly under Chinese rule.[43][44] Early independence movements, such as those of the Trưng Sisters and Lady Triệu,[45] were temporarily successful,[46] though the region gained a longer period of independence as Vạn Xuân under the Anterior Lý dynasty between AD 544 and 602.[47][48][49] By the early 10th century, Northern Vietnam had gained autonomy, but not sovereignty, under the Khúc family.[50]

In AD 938, the Vietnamese lord Ngô Quyền defeated the forces of the Chinese Southern Han state at Bạch Đằng River and achieved full independence for Vietnam in 939 after a millennium of Chinese domination.[51][52][53] By the 960s, the dynastic Đại Việt (Great Viet) kingdom was established, Vietnamese society enjoyed a golden era under the Lý and Trần dynasties. During the rule of the Trần Dynasty, Đại Việt repelled three Mongol invasions.[54][55] Meanwhile, the Mahāyāna branch of Buddhism flourished and became the state religion.[53][56] Following the 1406–7 Ming–Hồ War, which overthrew the Hồ dynasty, Vietnamese independence was interrupted briefly by the Chinese Ming dynasty, but was restored by Lê Lợi, the founder of the Lê dynasty.[57] The Vietnamese polity reached their zenith in the Lê dynasty of the 15th century, especially during the reign of emperor Lê Thánh Tông (1460–1497).[58][59] Between the 11th and 18th centuries, the Vietnamese polity expanded southward in a gradual process known as Nam tiến ("Southward expansion"),[60] eventually conquering the kingdom of Champa and part of the Khmer Kingdom.[61][62][63]

From the 16th century onward, civil strife and frequent political infighting engulfed much of Dai Viet. First, the Chinese-supported Mạc dynasty challenged the Lê dynasty's power.[64] After the Mạc dynasty was defeated, the Lê dynasty was nominally reinstalled. Actual power, however, was divided between the northern Trịnh lords and the southern Nguyễn lords, who engaged in a civil war for more than four decades before a truce was called in the 1670s.[65] Vietnam was divided into North (Trịnh) and South (Nguyễn) from 1600 to 1777. During this period, the Nguyễn expanded southern Vietnam into the Mekong Delta, annexing the Central Highlands and the Khmer lands in the Mekong Delta.[61][63][66] The division of the country ended a century later when the Tây Sơn brothers helped Trịnh to end Nguyễn, they also established new dynasty and ended Trịnh. However, their rule did not last long, and they were defeated by the remnants of the Nguyễn lords, led by Nguyễn Ánh. Nguyễn Ánh unified Vietnam, and established the Nguyễn dynasty, ruling under the name Gia Long.[66]

French Indochina

In the 1500s, the Portuguese explored the Vietnamese coast and reportedly erected a stele on the Chàm Islands to mark their presence.[67] By 1533, they began landing in the Vietnamese delta but were forced to leave because of local turmoil and fighting. They also had less interest in the territory than they did in China and Japan.[67] After they had settled in Macau and Nagasaki to begin the profitable Macau–Japan trade route, the Portuguese began to involve themselves in trade with Hội An.[67] Portuguese traders and Jesuit missionaries under the Padroado system were active in both Vietnamese realms of Đàng Trong (Cochinchina or Quinan) and Đàng Ngoài (Tonkin) in the 17th century.[68] The Dutch also tried to establish contact with Quinan in 1601 but failed to sustain a presence there after several violent encounters with the locals. The Dutch East India Company (VOC) only managed to establish official relations with Tonkin in the spring of 1637 after leaving Dejima in Japan to establish trade for silk.[69] Meanwhile, in 1613, the first English attempt to establish contact with Hội An failed following a violent incident involving the Honourable East India Company. By 1672 the English did establish relations with Tonkin and were allowed to reside in Phố Hiến.[70]

 
Capture of Saigon by Charles Rigault de Genouilly on 18 February 1859

Between 1615 and 1753, French traders also engaged in trade in Vietnam.[71][72] The first French missionaries arrived in 1658, under the Portuguese Padroado. From its foundation, the Paris Foreign Missions Society under Propaganda Fide actively sent missionaries to Vietnam, entering Cochinchina first in 1664 and Tonkin first in 1666.[73] Spanish Dominicans joined the Tonkin mission in 1676, and Franciscans were in Cochinchina from 1719 to 1834. The Vietnamese authorities began[when?] to feel threatened by continuous Christianisation activities.[74] After several Catholic missionaries were detained, the French Navy intervened in 1843 to free them, as the kingdom was perceived as xenophobic.[75] In a series of conquests from 1859 to 1885, France eroded Vietnam's sovereignty.[76] At the siege of Tourane in 1858, France was aided by Spain (with Filipino, Latin American, and Spanish troops from the Philippines)[77] and perhaps some Tonkinese Catholics.[78] After the 1862 Treaty, and especially after France completely conquered Lower Cochinchina in 1867, the Văn Thân movement of scholar-gentry class arose and committed violence against Catholics across central and northern Vietnam.[79]

Between 1862 and 1867, the southern third of the country became the French colony of Cochinchina.[80] By 1884, the entire country was under French rule, with the central and northern parts of Vietnam separated into the two protectorates of Annam and Tonkin. The three entities were formally integrated into the union of French Indochina in 1887.[81][82] The French administration imposed significant political and cultural changes on Vietnamese society.[83] A Western-style system of modern education introduced new humanist values.[84] Most French settlers in Indochina were concentrated in Cochinchina, particularly in Saigon, and in Hanoi, the colony's capital.[85]

During the colonial period, guerrillas of the royalist Cần Vương movement rebelled against French rule and massacred around a third of Vietnam's Christian population.[86][87] After a decade of resistance, they were defeated in the 1890s by the Catholics in reprisal for their earlier massacres.[88][89] Another large-scale rebellion, the Thái Nguyên uprising, was also suppressed heavily.[90] The French developed a plantation economy to promote export of tobacco, indigo, tea and coffee.[91] However, they largely ignored the increasing demands for civil rights and self-government. An increasing dissatisfaction, even led to half-hearted, badly co-ordinated, and still worsely executed plots to oust the French, like the infamous Hanoi Poison Plot of 1908.

 
The Grand Palais built for the 1902–1903 world's fair, when Hanoi was French Indochina's capital

A nationalist political movement soon emerged, with leaders like Phan Bội Châu, Phan Châu Trinh, Phan Đình Phùng, Emperor Hàm Nghi, and Hồ Chí Minh fighting or calling for independence.[92] This resulted in the 1930 Yên Bái mutiny by the Vietnamese Nationalist Party (VNQDĐ), which the French quashed. The mutiny split the independence movement, as many leading members converted to communism.[93][94][95]

The French maintained full control of their colonies until World War II, when the war in the Pacific led to the Japanese invasion of French Indochina in 1940. Afterwards, the Japanese Empire was allowed to station its troops in Vietnam while the pro-Vichy French colonial administration continued.[96][97] Japan exploited Vietnam's natural resources to support its military campaigns, culminating in a full-scale takeover of the country in March 1945. This led to the Vietnamese Famine of 1945 which killed up to two million people.[98][99]

First Indochina War

In 1941, the Việt Minh, a nationalist liberation movement based on a communist ideology, emerged under the Vietnamese revolutionary leader Hồ Chí Minh. The Việt Minh sought independence for Vietnam from France and the end of the Japanese occupation.[100][101] After the military defeat of Japan in World War II and the fall of its puppet government Empire of Vietnam in August 1945, Saigon's administrative services collapsed and chaos, riots, and murder were widespread.[102] The Việt Minh occupied Hanoi and proclaimed a provisional government, which asserted national independence on 2 September.[101]

In July 1945, the Allies had decided to divide Indochina at the 16th parallel to allow Chiang Kai-shek of the Republic of China to receive the Japanese surrender in the north while Britain's Lord Louis Mountbatten received their surrender in the south. The Allies agreed that Indochina still belonged to France.[103][104]

 
Partition of French Indochina after the 1954 Geneva Conference

But as the French were weakened by the German occupation, British-Indian forces and the remaining Japanese Southern Expeditionary Army Group were used to maintain order and help France reestablish control through the 1945–1946 War in Vietnam.[105] Hồ initially chose to take a moderate stance to avoid military conflict with France, asking the French to withdraw their colonial administrators and for French professors and engineers to help build a modern independent Vietnam.[101] But the Provisional Government of the French Republic did not act on these requests, including the idea of independence, and dispatched the French Far East Expeditionary Corps to restore colonial rule. This resulted in the Việt Minh launching a guerrilla campaign against the French in late 1946.[100][101][106] The resulting First Indochina War lasted until July 1954. The defeat of French colonialists and Vietnamese loyalists in the 1954 battle of Điện Biên Phủ allowed Hồ to negotiate a ceasefire from a favourable position at the subsequent Geneva Conference.[101][107]

The colonial administration was thereby ended and French Indochina was dissolved under the Geneva Accords of 21 July 1954 into three countries—Vietnam, and the kingdoms of Cambodia and Laos as well as Vietnam was further divided into North and South administrative regions at the Demilitarised Zone, roughly along the 17th parallel north (pending elections scheduled for July 1956[e]). A 300-day period of free movement was permitted, during which almost a million northerners, mainly Catholics, moved south, fearing persecution by the communists. This migration was in large part aided by the United States military through Operation Passage to Freedom.[112][113] The partition of Vietnam by the Geneva Accords was not intended to be permanent, and stipulated that Vietnam would be reunited after the elections.[114] But in 1955, the southern State of Vietnam's prime minister, Ngô Đình Diệm, toppled Bảo Đại in a fraudulent referendum organised by his brother Ngô Đình Nhu, and proclaimed himself president of the Republic of Vietnam.[114] This effectively replaced the internationally recognised State of Vietnam by the Republic of Vietnam in the south—supported by the United States, France, Laos, Republic of China and Thailand—and Hồ's Democratic Republic of Vietnam in the north, supported by the Soviet Union, Sweden,[115] Khmer Rouge, and the People's Republic of China.[114]

Vietnam War

From 1953 to 1956, the North Vietnamese government instituted agrarian reforms including "rent reduction" and "land reform", which resulted in significant political repression.[116] This included execution of 13,500[117] to as many as 100,000[118] executions. In the South, Diệm countered North Vietnamese subversion (including the assassination of over 450 South Vietnamese officials in 1956) by detaining tens of thousands of suspected communists in "political reeducation centres".[119][120] This program incarcerated many non-communists, but was successful at curtailing communist activity in the country, if only for a time.[121] The North Vietnamese government claimed that 2,148 people were killed in the process by November 1957.[122] The pro-Hanoi Việt Cộng began a guerrilla campaign in South Vietnam in the late 1950s to overthrow Diệm's government.[123] From 1960, the Soviet Union and North Vietnam signed treaties providing for further Soviet military support.[124][125][126]

 
Three US Fairchild UC-123B aircraft spraying Agent Orange during the Operation Ranch Hand as part of a herbicidal warfare operation depriving the food and vegetation cover of the Việt Cộng, c. 1962–1971

In 1963, Buddhist discontent with Diệm's Catholic regime erupted into mass demonstrations, leading to a violent government crackdown.[127] This led to the collapse of Diệm's relationship with the United States, and ultimately to a 1963 coup in which he and Nhu were assassinated.[128] The Diệm era was followed by more than a dozen successive military governments, before the pairing of Air Marshal Nguyễn Cao Kỳ and General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu took control in mid-1965.[129] Thiệu gradually outmaneuvered Kỳ and cemented his grip on power in fraudulent elections in 1967 and 1971.[130] During this political instability, the communists began to gain ground. To support South Vietnam's struggle against the communist insurgency, the United States used the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident as a pretext for increasing its contribution of military advisers.[131] US forces became involved in ground combat operations by 1965, and at their peak several years later, numbered more than 500,000.[132][133] The US also engaged in sustained aerial bombing. Meanwhile, China and the Soviet Union provided North Vietnam with significant material aid and 15,000 combat advisers.[124][125][134] Communist forces supplying the Việt Cộng carried supplies along the Hồ Chí Minh trail, which passed through Laos.[135]

The communists attacked South Vietnamese targets during the 1968 Tết Offensive. The campaign failed militarily, but shocked the American establishment and turned US public opinion against the war.[136] During the offensive, communist troops massacred over 3,000 civilians at Huế.[137][138] Facing an increasing casualty count, rising domestic opposition to the war, and growing international condemnation, the US began withdrawing from ground combat roles in the early 1970s. This also entailed an unsuccessful effort to strengthen and stabilise South Vietnam.[139] Following the Paris Peace Accords of 27 January 1973, all American combat troops were withdrawn by 29 March 1973.[140] In December 1974, North Vietnam captured the province of Phước Long and started a full-scale offensive, culminating in the fall of Saigon on 30 April 1975.[141] South Vietnam was ruled by a provisional government for almost eight years while under North Vietnamese military occupation.[142]

Reunification and reforms

On 2 July 1976, North and South Vietnam were merged to form the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.[143] The war devastated Vietnam and killed 966,000 to 3.8 million people.[144][145][146] A 1974 US Senate subcommittee estimated nearly 1.4 million Vietnamese civilians were killed or wounded between 1965 and 1974—including 415,000 killed.[147][148] In its aftermath, under Lê Duẩn's administration, there were no mass executions of South Vietnamese who had collaborated with the US or the defunct South Vietnamese government, confounding Western fears,[149] but up to 300,000 South Vietnamese were sent to reeducation camps, where many endured torture, starvation, and disease while being forced to perform hard labour.[150] The government embarked on a mass campaign of collectivisation of farms and factories.[151] Many fled the country following the conclusion of the war.[152] In 1978, in response to the Khmer Rouge government of Cambodia ordering massacres of Vietnamese residents in the border villages in the districts of An Giang and Kiên Giang,[153] the Vietnamese military invaded Cambodia and removed them from power after occupying Phnom Penh.[154] The intervention was a success, resulting in the establishment of a new, pro-Vietnam socialist government, the People's Republic of Kampuchea, which ruled until 1989.[155] However, this worsened relations with China, which had supported the Khmer Rouge. China later launched a brief incursion into northern Vietnam in 1979, causing Vietnam to rely even more heavily on Soviet economic and military aid, while mistrust of the Chinese government escalated.[156]

At the Sixth National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) in December 1986, reformist politicians replaced the "old guard" government with new leadership.[157][158] The reformers were led by 71-year-old Nguyễn Văn Linh, who became the party's new general secretary.[157] He and the reformers implemented a series of free-market reforms known as Đổi Mới ("Renovation") that carefully managed the transition from a planned economy to a "socialist-oriented market economy".[159][160] Although the authority of the state remained unchallenged under Đổi Mới, the government encouraged private ownership of farms and factories, economic deregulation, and foreign investment, while maintaining control over strategic industries.[160][161] Subsequently, Vietnam's economy achieved strong growth in agricultural and industrial production, construction, exports, and foreign investment, although these reforms also resulted in a rise in income inequality and gender disparities.[162][163][164]

Geography

 
Nature attractions in Vietnam, clockwise from top: Hạ Long Bay, Yến River, and Bản-Giốc Waterfalls

Vietnam is located on the eastern Indochinese Peninsula between the latitudes and 24°N, and the longitudes 102° and 110°E. It covers a total area of approximately 331,212 km2 (127,882 sq mi).[f] The combined length of the country's land boundaries is 4,639 km (2,883 mi), and its coastline is 3,444 km (2,140 mi) long.[165] At its narrowest point in the central Quảng Bình Province, the country is as little as 50 kilometres (31 mi) across, though it widens to around 600 kilometres (370 mi) in the north.[166] Vietnam's land is mostly hilly and densely forested, with level land covering no more than 20%. Mountains account for 40% of the country's land area,[167] and tropical forests cover around 42%.[168] The Red River Delta in the north, a flat, roughly triangular region covering 15,000 km2 (5,792 sq mi),[169] is smaller but more intensely developed and more densely populated than the Mekong River Delta in the south. Once an inlet of the Gulf of Tonkin, it has been filled in over the millennia by riverine alluvial deposits.[170][171] The delta, covering about 40,000 km2 (15,444 sq mi), is a low-level plain no more than 3 metres (9.8 ft) above sea level at any point. It is criss-crossed by a maze of rivers and canals, which carry so much sediment that the delta advances 60 to 80 metres (196.9 to 262.5 ft) into the sea every year.[172][173] The exclusive economic zone of Vietnam covers 417,663 km2 (161,261 sq mi) in the South China Sea.[174]

 
Hoàng Liên Sơn mountain range, the range that includes Fansipan which is the highest summit on the Indochinese Peninsula

Southern Vietnam is divided into coastal lowlands, the mountains of the Annamite Range, and extensive forests. Comprising five relatively flat plateaus of basalt soil, the highlands account for 16% of the country's arable land and 22% of its total forested land.[175] The soil in much of the southern part of Vietnam is relatively low in nutrients as a result of intense cultivation.[176] Several minor earthquakes have been recorded.[177][178] The northern part of the country consists mostly of highlands and the Red River Delta. Fansipan (also known as Phan Xi Păng), which is located in Lào Cai Province, is the highest mountain in Vietnam, standing 3,143 m (10,312 ft) high.[179] From north to south Vietnam, the country also has numerous islands; Phú Quốc is the largest.[180] The Hang Sơn Đoòng Cave is considered the largest known cave passage in the world since its discovery in 2009. The Ba Bể Lake and Mekong River are the largest lake and longest river in the country.[181][182][183]

Climate

 
Köppen climate classification map of Vietnam.
 
Nha Trang, a popular beach destination has a tropical savanna climate.

Due to differences in latitude and the marked variety in topographical relief, Vietnam's climate tends to vary considerably for each region.[184] During the winter or dry season, extending roughly from November to April, the monsoon winds usually blow from the northeast along the Chinese coast and across the Gulf of Tonkin, picking up considerable moisture.[185] The average annual temperature is generally higher in the plains than in the mountains, especially in southern Vietnam compared to the north. Temperatures vary less in the southern plains around Ho Chi Minh City and the Mekong Delta, ranging from between 21 and 35 °C (70 and 95 °F) over the year.[186] In Hanoi and the surrounding areas of the Red River Delta, the temperatures are much lower between 15 and 33 °C (59 and 91 °F).[186] Seasonal variations in the mountains, plateaus, and the northernmost areas are much more dramatic, with temperatures varying from 3 °C (37 °F) in December and January to 37 °C (99 °F) in July and August.[187] During winter, snow occasionally falls over the highest peaks of the far northern mountains near the Chinese border.[188] Vietnam receives high rates of precipitation in the form of rainfall with an average amount from 1,500 to 2,000 mm (60 to 80 in) during the monsoon seasons; this often causes flooding, especially in the cities with poor drainage systems.[189] The country is also affected by tropical depressions, tropical storms and typhoons.[189] Vietnam is one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change, with 55% of its population living in low-elevation coastal areas.[190][191]

Biodiversity

 
Native species in Vietnam, clockwise from top-right: crested argus (a peafowl), red-shanked douc, Indochinese leopard, and saola

As the country is located within the Indomalayan realm, Vietnam is one of twenty-five countries considered to possess a uniquely high level of biodiversity. This was noted in the country's National Environmental Condition Report in 2005.[192] It is ranked 16th worldwide in biological diversity, being home to approximately 16% of the world's species. 15,986 species of flora have been identified in the country, of which 10% are endemic. Vietnam's fauna includes 307 nematode species, 200 oligochaeta, 145 acarina, 113 springtails, 7,750 insects, 260 reptiles, and 120 amphibians. There are 840 birds and 310 mammals are found in Vietnam, of which 100 birds and 78 mammals are endemic.[192] Vietnam has two World Natural Heritage Sites—the Hạ Long Bay and Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng National Park—together with nine biosphere reserves, including Cần Giờ Mangrove Forest, Cát Tiên, Cát Bà, Kiên Giang, the Red River Delta, Mekong Delta, Western Nghệ An, Cà Mau, and Cu Lao Cham Marine Park.[193][194][195]

Vietnam is also home to 1,438 species of freshwater microalgae, constituting 9.6% of all microalgae species, as well as 794 aquatic invertebrates and 2,458 species of sea fish.[192] In recent years, 13 genera, 222 species, and 30 taxa of flora have been newly described in Vietnam.[192] Six new mammal species, including the saola, giant muntjac and Tonkin snub-nosed monkey have also been discovered, along with one new bird species, the endangered Edwards's pheasant.[196] In the late 1980s, a small population of Javan rhinoceros was found in Cát Tiên National Park. However, the last individual of the species in Vietnam was reportedly shot in 2010.[197] In agricultural genetic diversity, Vietnam is one of the world's twelve original cultivar centres. The Vietnam National Cultivar Gene Bank preserves 12,300 cultivars of 115 species.[192] The Vietnamese government spent US$49.07 million on the preservation of biodiversity in 2004 alone and has established 126 conservation areas, including 30 national parks.[192]

 
Sa Pa mountain hills with agricultural activities

In Vietnam, wildlife poaching has become a major concern. In 2000, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) called Education for Nature – Vietnam was founded to instill in the population the importance of wildlife conservation in the country.[198] In the years that followed, another NGO called GreenViet was formed by Vietnamese youngsters for the enforcement of wildlife protection. Through collaboration between the NGOs and local authorities, many local poaching syndicates were crippled by their leaders' arrests.[198] A study released in 2018 revealed Vietnam is a destination for the illegal export of rhinoceros horns from South Africa due to the demand for them as a medicine and a status symbol.[199][200]

The main environmental concern that persists in Vietnam today is the legacy of the use of the chemical herbicide Agent Orange, which continues to cause birth defects and many health problems in the Vietnamese population. In the southern and central areas affected most by the chemical's use during the Vietnam War, nearly 4.8 million Vietnamese people have been exposed to it and suffered from its effects.[201][202][203] In 2012, approximately 50 years after the war,[204] the US began a US$43 million joint clean-up project in the former chemical storage areas in Vietnam to take place in stages.[202][205] Following the completion of the first phase in Đà Nẵng in late 2017,[206] the US announced its commitment to clean other sites, especially in the heavily impacted site of Biên Hòa.[207]

The Vietnamese government spends over VNĐ10 trillion each year ($431.1 million) for monthly allowances and the physical rehabilitation of victims of the chemicals.[208] In 2018, the Japanese engineering group Shimizu Corporation, working with Vietnamese military, built a plant for the treatment of soil polluted by Agent Orange. Plant construction costs were funded by the company itself.[209][210] One of the long-term plans to restore southern Vietnam's damaged ecosystems is through the use of reforestation efforts. The Vietnamese government began doing this at the end of the war. It started by replanting mangrove forests in the Mekong Delta regions and in Cần Giờ outside Hồ Chí Minh City, where mangroves are important to ease (though not eliminate) flood conditions during monsoon seasons.[211] The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5.35/10, ranking it 104th globally out of 172 countries.[212]

Apart from herbicide problems, arsenic in the ground water in the Mekong and Red River Deltas has also become a major concern.[213][214] And most notoriously, unexploded ordnances (UXO) pose dangers to humans and wildlife—another bitter legacy from the long wars.[215] As part of the continuous campaign to demine/remove UXOs, several international bomb removal agencies from the United Kingdom,[216] Denmark,[217] South Korea[218] and the US[219] have been providing assistance. The Vietnam government spends over VNĐ1 trillion ($44 million) annually on demining operations and additional hundreds of billions of đồng for treatment, assistance, rehabilitation, vocational training and resettlement of the victims of UXOs.[220]

 
Panoramic view of Hạ Long Bay

Government and politics

Vietnam is a unitary Marxist-Leninist one-party socialist republic, one of the two communist states (the other being Laos) in Southeast Asia.[221] Although Vietnam remains officially committed to socialism as its defining creed, its economic policies have grown increasingly capitalist,[222][223] with The Economist characterising its leadership as "ardently capitalist communists".[224] Under the constitution, the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) asserts their role in all branches of the country's politics and society.[221] The president is the elected head of state and the commander-in-chief of the military, serving as the chairman of the Council of Supreme Defence and Security, and holds the second highest office in Vietnam as well as performing executive functions and state appointments and setting policy.[221]

The general secretary of the CPV performs numerous key administrative functions, controlling the party's national organisation.[221] The prime minister is the head of government, presiding over a council of ministers composed of five deputy prime ministers and the heads of 26 ministries and commissions. Only political organisations affiliated with or endorsed by the CPV are permitted to contest elections in Vietnam. These include the Vietnamese Fatherland Front and worker and trade unionist parties.[221]

 
The National Assembly of Vietnam building in Hanoi

The National Assembly of Vietnam is the unicameral state legislature composed of 500 members.[225] Headed by a chairman, it is superior to both the executive and judicial branches, with all government ministers being appointed from members of the National Assembly.[221] The Supreme People's Court of Vietnam, headed by a chief justice, is the country's highest court of appeal, though it is also answerable to the National Assembly. Beneath the Supreme People's Court stand the provincial municipal courts and many local courts. Military courts possess special jurisdiction in matters of state security. Vietnam maintains the death penalty for numerous offences.[226]

Foreign relations

 
President Trần Đại Quang with Russian President Vladimir Putin on 19 November 2016
 
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson accompanies US President Donald Trump to a commercial deal signing ceremony with Vietnamese President on 12 November 2017.

Throughout its history, Vietnam's main foreign relationship has been with various Chinese dynasties.[227] Following the partition of Vietnam in 1954, North Vietnam maintained relations with the Eastern Bloc, South Vietnam maintained relations with the Western Bloc.[227] Despite these differences, Vietnam's sovereign principles and insistence on cultural independence have been laid down in numerous documents over the centuries before its independence. These include the 11th-century patriotic poem "Nam quốc sơn hà" and the 1428 proclamation of independence "Bình Ngô đại cáo". Though China and Vietnam are now formally at peace,[227] significant territorial tensions remain between the two countries over the South China Sea.[228] Vietnam holds membership in 63 international organisations, including the United Nations (UN), Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), International Organisation of the Francophonie (La Francophonie), and World Trade Organization (WTO). It also maintains relations with over 650 non-governmental organisations.[229] As of 2010 Vietnam had established diplomatic relations with 178 countries.[230]

Vietnam's current foreign policy is to consistently implement a policy of independence, self-reliance, peace, co-operation, and development, as well openness, diversification, multilateralisation with international relations.[231][232] The country declares itself a friend and partner of all countries in the international community, regardless of their political affiliation, by actively taking part in international and regional cooperative development projects.[160][231] Since the 1990s, Vietnam has taken several key steps to restore diplomatic ties with capitalist Western countries. It already had relations with communist Western countries in the decades prior.[233] Relations with the United States began improving in August 1995 with both states upgrading their liaison offices to embassy status.[234] As diplomatic ties between the two governments grew, the United States opened a consulate general in Ho Chi Minh City while Vietnam opened its consulate in San Francisco. Full diplomatic relations were also restored with New Zealand, which opened its embassy in Hanoi in 1995;[235] Vietnam established an embassy in Wellington in 2003.[236] Pakistan also reopened its embassy in Hanoi in October 2000, with Vietnam reopening its embassy in Islamabad in December 2005 and trade office in Karachi in November 2005.[237][238] In May 2016, US President Barack Obama further normalised relations with Vietnam after he announced the lifting of an arms embargo on sales of lethal arms to Vietnam.[239] Despite their historical past, today Vietnam is considered to be a potential ally of the United States, especially in the geopolitical context of the territorial disputes in the South China Sea and in containment of Chinese expansionism.[240][241][242]

Military

The Vietnam People's Armed Forces consists of the Vietnam People's Army (VPA), the Vietnam People's Public Security and the Vietnam Self-Defence Militia. The VPA is the official name for the active military services of Vietnam, and is subdivided into the Vietnam People's Ground Forces, the Vietnam People's Navy, the Vietnam People's Air Force, the Vietnam Border Guard and the Vietnam Coast Guard. The VPA has an active manpower of around 450,000, but its total strength, including paramilitary forces, may be as high as 5,000,000.[243] In 2015, Vietnam's military expenditure totalled approximately US$4.4 billion, equivalent to around 8% of its total government spending.[244] Joint military exercises and war games have been held with Brunei,[245] India,[246] Japan,[247] Laos,[248] Russia,[249] Singapore[245] and the US.[250] In 2017, Vietnam signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.[251][252]

Human rights and sociopolitical issues

Under the current constitution, the CPV is the only party allowed to rule, the operation of all other political parties being outlawed. Other human rights issues concern freedom of association, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and freedom of the press. In 2009, Vietnamese lawyer Lê Công Định was arrested and charged with the capital crime of subversion; several of his associates were also arrested.[253][254] Amnesty International described him and his arrested associates as prisoners of conscience.[253] Vietnam has also suffered from human trafficking and related issues.[255][256][257]

Administrative divisions

Vietnam is divided into 58 provinces (Vietnamese: Tỉnh, chữ Hán: ).[258] There are also five municipalities (thành phố trực thuộc trung ương), which are administratively on the same level as provinces.

 
A Communist Party poster in Hanoi

Provinces are subdivided into provincial municipalities (thành phố trực thuộc tỉnh, 'city under province'), townships (thị xã) and counties (huyện), which are in turn subdivided into towns (thị trấn) or communes ().

Centrally controlled municipalities are subdivided into districts (quận) and counties, which are further subdivided into wards (phường).

Economy

 
Historical GDP per capita development of Vietnam
Share of world GDP (PPP)[6]
Year Share
1980 0.21%
1990 0.28%
2000 0.39%
2010 0.52%
2020 0.80%
 
Tree map showing Vietnam's exports

Throughout the history of Vietnam, its economy has been based largely on agriculture—primarily wet rice cultivation.[259] Bauxite, an important material in the production of aluminium, is mined in central Vietnam.[260] Since reunification, the country's economy is shaped primarily by the CPV through Five Year Plans decided upon at the plenary sessions of the Central Committee and national congresses.[261] The collectivisation of farms, factories, and capital goods was carried out as part of the establishment of central planning, with millions of people working for state enterprises. Under strict state control, Vietnam's economy continued to be plagued by inefficiency, corruption in state-owned enterprises, poor quality and underproduction.[262][263][264] With the decline in economic aid from its main trading partner, the Soviet Union, following the erosion of the Eastern bloc in the late 1980s, and the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union, as well as the negative impacts of the post-war trade embargo imposed by the United States,[265][266] Vietnam began to liberalise its trade by devaluing its exchange rate to increase exports and embarked on a policy of economic development.[267]

 
Vietnam's tallest skyscraper, the Landmark 81, located in Bình Thạnh, Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon).

In 1986, the Sixth National Congress of the CPV introduced socialist-oriented market economic reforms as part of the Đổi Mới reform program. Private ownership began to be encouraged in industry, commerce and agriculture and state enterprises were restructured to operate under market constraints.[268][269] This led to the five-year economic plans being replaced by the socialist-oriented market mechanism.[270] As a result of these reforms, Vietnam achieved approximately 8% annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth between 1990 and 1997.[271][272] The United States ended its economic embargo against Vietnam in early 1994.[273] Although the 1997 Asian financial crisis caused an economic slowdown to 4–5% growth per year, its economy began to recover in 1999,[268] and grew at around 7% per year from 2000 to 2005, one of the fastest in the world.[274][275] According to the General Statistics Office of Vietnam (GSO), growth remained strong despite the late-2000s global recession, holding at 6.8% in 2010. Vietnam's year-on-year inflation rate reached 11.8% in December 2010 and the currency, the Vietnamese đồng, was devalued three times.[276][277]

Deep poverty, defined as the percentage of the population living on less than $1 per day, has declined significantly in Vietnam and the relative poverty rate is now less than that of China, India and the Philippines.[278] This decline can be attributed to equitable economic policies aimed at improving living standards and preventing the rise of inequality.[279] These policies have included egalitarian land distribution during the initial stages of the Đổi Mới program, investment in poorer remote areas, and subsidising of education and healthcare.[280][281] Since the early 2000s, Vietnam has applied sequenced trade liberalisation, a two-track approach opening some sectors of the economy to international markets.[279][282] Manufacturing, information technology and high-tech industries now form a large and fast-growing part of the national economy. Although Vietnam is a relative newcomer to the oil industry, it is the third-largest oil producer in Southeast Asia with a total 2011 output of 318,000 barrels per day (50,600 m3/d).[283] In 2010, Vietnam was ranked as the eighth-largest crude petroleum producer in the Asia and Pacific region.[284] The US bought the highest amount of Vietnam's exports,[285] while goods from China were the most popular Vietnamese import.[286]

Based on findings by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2022, the unemployment rate in Vietnam was 2.3%, the nominal GDP US$406.452 billion, and a nominal GDP per capita $4,086.[6][287] Besides the primary sector economy, tourism has contributed significantly to Vietnam's economic growth with 7.94 million foreign visitors recorded in 2015.[288]

Agriculture

 
Terraced rice fields in Sa Pa

As a result of several land reform measures, Vietnam has become a major exporter of agricultural products. It is now the world's largest producer of cashew nuts, with a one-third global share;[289] the largest producer of black pepper, accounting for one-third of the world's market;[290] and the second-largest rice exporter in the world after Thailand since the 1990s.[291] Subsequently, Vietnam is also the world's second largest exporter of coffee.[292] The country has the highest proportion of land use for permanent crops together with other states in the Greater Mekong Subregion.[293] Other primary exports include tea, rubber and fishery products. Agriculture's share of Vietnam's GDP has fallen in recent decades, declining from 42% in 1989 to 20% in 2006 as production in other sectors of the economy has risen.

Seafood

The overall fisheries production of Vietnam from capture fisheries and aquaculture was 5.6 million MT in 2011 and 6.7 million MT in 2016. The output of Vietnam's fisheries sector has seen strong growth, which could be attributed to the continued expansion of the aquaculture sub-sector.[294]

Science and technology

 
A Vietnamese-made TOPIO 3.0 humanoid ping-pong-playing robot displayed during the 2009 International Robot Exhibition (IREX) in Tokyo[295][296]

In 2010, Vietnam's total state spending on science and technology amounted to roughly 0.45% of its GDP.[297] Vietnamese scientists have made many significant contributions in various fields of study, most notably in mathematics. Hoàng Tụy pioneered the applied mathematics field of global optimisation in the 20th century,[298] while Ngô Bảo Châu won the 2010 Fields Medal for his proof of fundamental lemma in the theory of automorphic forms.[299][300] Since the establishment of the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology (VAST) by the government in 1975, the country is working to develop its first national space flight program especially after the completion of the infrastructure at the Vietnam Space Centre (VSC) in 2018.[301][302] Vietnam has also made significant advances in the development of robots, such as the TOPIO humanoid model.[295][296] One of Vietnam's main messaging apps, Zalo, was developed by Vương Quang Khải, a Vietnamese hacker who later worked with the country's largest information technology service company, the FPT Group.[303]

 
Vietnamese science students working on an experiment in their university lab

According to the UNESCO Institute for Statistics, Vietnam devoted 0.19% of its GDP to science research and development in 2011.[304] Vietnam was ranked 44th in the Global Innovation Index in 2021, it has increased its ranking considerably since 2012, where it was ranked 76th.[305][306][307][308] Between 2005 and 2014, the number of Vietnamese scientific publications recorded in Thomson Reuters' Web of Science increased at a rate well above the average for Southeast Asia, albeit from a modest starting point.[309] Publications focus mainly on life sciences (22%), physics (13%) and engineering (13%), which is consistent with recent advances in the production of diagnostic equipment and shipbuilding.[309]

Tourism

 
Hội An, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is a major tourist destination.

Tourism is an important element of economic activity in the nation, contributing 7.5% of the total GDP. Vietnam hosted roughly 13 million tourists in 2017, an increase of 29.1% over the previous year, making it one of the fastest growing tourist destinations in the world. The vast majority of the tourists in the country, some 9.7 million, came from Asia; namely China (4 million), South Korea (2.6 million), and Japan (798,119).[310] Vietnam also attracts large numbers of visitors from Europe, with almost 1.9 million visitors in 2017; most European visitors came from Russia (574,164), followed by the United Kingdom (283,537), France (255,396), and Germany (199,872). Other significant international arrivals by nationality include the United States (614,117) and Australia (370,438).[310]

The most visited destinations in Vietnam is the largest city, Ho Chi Minh City, with over 5.8 million international arrivals, followed by Hanoi with 4.6 million and Hạ Long, including Hạ Long Bay with 4.4 million arrivals. All three are ranked in the top 100 most visited cities in the world.[311] Vietnam is home to eight UNESCO World Heritage Sites. In 2018, Travel + Leisure ranked Hội An as one of the world's top 15 best destinations to visit.[312]

Infrastructure

Transport

Much of Vietnam's modern transportation network can trace its roots to the French colonial era when it was used to facilitate the transportation of raw materials to its main ports. It was extensively expanded and modernised following the partition of Vietnam.[313] Vietnam's road system includes national roads administered at the central level, provincial roads managed at the provincial level, district roads managed at the district level, urban roads managed by cities and towns and commune roads managed at the commune level.[314] In 2010, Vietnam's road system had a total length of about 188,744 kilometres (117,280 mi) of which 93,535 kilometres (58,120 mi) are asphalt roads comprising national, provincial and district roads.[314] The length of the national road system is about 15,370 kilometres (9,550 mi) with 15,085 kilometres (9,373 mi) of its length paved. The provincial road system has around 27,976 kilometres (17,383 mi) of paved roads while 50,474 kilometres (31,363 mi) district roads are paved.[314]

 
HCMC–LT–DG section of the North–South Expressway
 
Tan Son Nhat International Airport is the busiest airport in the country.

Bicycles, motorcycles and motor scooters remain the most popular forms of road transport in the country, a legacy of the French, though the number of privately owned cars has been increasing in recent years.[315] Public buses operated by private companies are the main mode of long-distance travel for much of the population. Road accidents remain the major safety issue of Vietnamese transportation with an average of 30 people losing their lives daily.[316] Traffic congestion is a growing problem in both Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City especially with the growth of individual car ownership.[317][318] Vietnam's primary cross-country rail service is the Reunification Express from Ho Chi Minh City to Hanoi, a distance of nearly 1,726 kilometres (1,072 mi).[319] From Hanoi, railway lines branch out to the northeast, north, and west; the eastbound line runs from Hanoi to Hạ Long Bay, the northbound line from Hanoi to Thái Nguyên, and the northeast line from Hanoi to Lào Cai. In 2009, Vietnam and Japan signed a deal to build a high-speed railwayshinkansen (bullet train)—using Japanese technology.[320] Vietnamese engineers were sent to Japan to receive training in the operation and maintenance of high-speed trains.[321] The planned railway will be a 1,545 kilometres (960 mi)-long express route serving a total of 23 stations, including Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, with 70% of its route running on bridges and through tunnels.[322][323] The trains will travel at a maximum speed of 350 kilometres (220 mi) per hour.[323][324] Plans for the high-speed rail line, however, have been postponed after the Vietnamese government decided to prioritise the development of both the Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City metros and expand road networks instead.[319][325][326]

 
The port of Hai Phong is one of the largest and busiest container ports in Vietnam.

Vietnam operates 20 major civil airports, including three international gateways: Noi Bai in Hanoi, Da Nang International Airport in Đà Nẵng and Tan Son Nhat in Ho Chi Minh City. Tan Son Nhat is the country's largest airport handling the majority of international passenger traffic.[327] According to a government-approved plan, Vietnam will have another seven international airports by 2025, including Vinh International Airport, Phu Bai International Airport, Cam Ranh International Airport, Phu Quoc International Airport, Cat Bi International Airport, Can Tho International Airport, and Long Thanh International Airport. The planned Long Thanh International Airport will have an annual service capacity of 100 million passengers once it becomes fully operational in 2025.[328] Vietnam Airlines, the state-owned national airline, maintains a fleet of 86 passenger aircraft and aims to operate 170 by 2020.[329] Several private airlines also operate in Vietnam, including Air Mekong, Bamboo Airways, Jetstar Pacific Airlines, VASCO and VietJet Air. As a coastal country, Vietnam has many major sea ports, including Cam Ranh, Đà Nẵng, Hải Phòng, Ho Chi Minh City, Hạ Long, Qui Nhơn, Vũng Tàu, Cửa Lò and Nha Trang. Further inland, the country's extensive network of rivers plays a key role in rural transportation with over 47,130 kilometres (29,290 mi) of navigable waterways carrying ferries, barges and water taxis.[330]

Energy

 
Sơn La Dam in northern Vietnam, the largest hydroelectric dam in Southeast Asia[331]

Vietnam's energy sector is dominated largely by the state-controlled Vietnam Electricity Group (EVN). As of 2017, EVN made up about 61.4% of the country's power generation system with a total power capacity of 25,884 MW.[332] Other energy sources are PetroVietnam (4,435 MW), Vinacomin (1,785 MW) and 10,031 MW from build–operate–transfer (BOT) investors.[333]

Most of Vietnam's power is generated by either hydropower or fossil fuel power such as coal, oil and gas, while diesel, small hydropower and renewable energy supplies the remainder.[333] The Vietnamese government had planned to develop a nuclear reactor as the path to establish another source for electricity from nuclear power. The plan was abandoned in late 2016 when a majority of the National Assembly voted to oppose the project due to widespread public concern over radioactive contamination.[334]

The household gas sector in Vietnam is dominated by PetroVietnam, which controls nearly 70% of the country's domestic market for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).[335] Since 2011, the company also operates five renewable energy power plants including the Nhơn Trạch 2 Thermal Power Plant (750 MW), Phú Quý Wind Power Plant (6 MW), Hủa Na Hydro-power Plant (180 MW), Dakdrinh Hydro-power Plant (125 MW) and Vũng Áng 1 Thermal Power Plant (1,200 MW).[336]

According to statistics from British Petroleum (BP), Vietnam is listed among the 52 countries that have proven crude oil reserves. In 2015 the reserve was approximately 4.4 billion barrels ranking Vietnam first place in Southeast Asia, while the proven gas reserves were about 0.6 trillion cubic metres (tcm) and ranking it third in Southeast Asia after Indonesia and Malaysia.[337]

Telecommunication

Telecommunications services in Vietnam are wholly provided by the Vietnam Post and Telecommunications General Corporation (now the VNPT Group) which is a state-owned company.[338] The VNPT retained its monopoly until 1986. The telecom sector was reformed in 1995 when the Vietnamese government began to implement a competitive policy with the creation of two domestic telecommunication companies, the Military Electronic and Telecommunication Company (Viettel, which is wholly owned by the Vietnamese Ministry of Defence) and the Saigon Post and Telecommunication Company (SPT or SaigonPostel), with 18% of it owned by VNPT.[338] VNPT's monopoly was finally ended by the government in 2003 with the issuance of a decree.[339] By 2012, the top three telecom operators in Vietnam were Viettel, Vinaphone and MobiFone. The remaining companies included: EVNTelecom, Vietnammobile and S-Fone.[340] With the shift towards a more market-orientated economy, Vietnam's telecommunications market is continuously being reformed to attract foreign investment, which includes the supply of services and the establishment of nationwide telecom infrastructure.[341]

Water supply and sanitation

 
In rural areas of Vietnam, piped water systems are operated by a wide variety of institutions including a national organisation, people committees (local government), community groups, co-operatives and private companies.

Vietnam has 2,360 rivers with an average annual discharge of 310 billion . The rainy season accounts for 70% of the year's discharge.[342] Most of the country's urban water supply systems have been developed without proper management within the last 10 years. Based on a 2008 survey by the Vietnam Water Supply and Sewerage Association (VWSA), existing water production capacity exceeded demand, but service coverage is still sparse. Most of the clean water supply infrastructure is not widely developed. It is only available to a small proportion of the population with about one third of 727 district towns having some form of piped water supply.[343] There is also concern over the safety of existing water resources for urban and rural water supply systems. Most industrial factories release their untreated wastewater directly into the water sources. Where the government does not take measures to address the issue, most domestic wastewater is discharged, untreated, back into the environment and pollutes the surface water.[343]

In recent years, there have been some efforts and collaboration between local and foreign universities to develop access to safe water in the country by introducing water filtration systems. There is a growing concern among local populations over the serious public health issues associated with water contamination caused by pollution as well as the high levels of arsenic in groundwater sources.[344] The government of Netherlands has been providing aid focusing its investments mainly on water-related sectors including water treatment projects.[345][346][347] Regarding sanitation, 78% of Vietnam's population has access to "improved" sanitation—94% of the urban population and 70% of the rural population. However, there are still about 21 million people in the country lacking access to "improved" sanitation according to a survey conducted in 2015.[348] In 2018, the construction ministry said the country's water supply, and drainage industry had been applying hi-tech methods and information technology (IT) to sanitation issues but faced problems like limited funding, climate change, and pollution.[349] The health ministry has also announced that water inspection units will be established nationwide beginning in June 2019. Inspections are to be conducted without notice, since there have been many cases involving health issues caused by poor or polluted water supplies as well unhygienic conditions reported every year.[350]

Health

 
Development of life expectancy in Vietnam since 1950

By 2015, 97% of the population had access to improved water sources.[351] In 2016, Vietnam's national life expectancy stood at 80.9 years for women and 71.5 for men, and the infant mortality rate was 17 per 1,000 live births.[352][353][354] Since the partition, North Vietnam has established a public health system that has reached down to the hamlet level.[355] After the national reunification in 1975, a nationwide health service was established.[164] In the late 1980s, the quality of healthcare declined to some degree as a result of budgetary constraints, a shift of responsibility to the provinces and the introduction of charges.[280] Inadequate funding has also contributed to a shortage of nurses, midwives and hospital beds; in 2000, Vietnam had only 24.7 hospital beds per 10,000 people before declining to 23.7 in 2005 as stated in the annual report of Vietnamese Health Ministry.[356] The controversial use of herbicides as a chemical weapon by the US military during the war left tangible, long-term impacts upon the Vietnamese people that persist in the country today.[357][358] For instance, it led to three million Vietnamese people suffering health problems, one million birth defects caused directly by exposure to the chemical and 24% of Vietnam's land being defoliated.[359]

Since the early 2000s, Vietnam has made significant progress in combating malaria. The malaria mortality rate fell to about five per cent of its 1990s equivalent by 2005 after the country introduced improved antimalarial drugs and treatment.[360] Tuberculosis (TB) cases, however, are on the rise. TB has become the second most infectious disease in the country after respiratory-related illness.[361] With an intensified vaccination program, better hygiene and foreign assistance, Vietnam hopes to reduce sharply the number of TB cases and new TB infections.[362] In 2004, government subsidies covering about 15% of health care expenses.[363] That year, the United States announced Vietnam would be one of 15 states to receive funding as part of its global AIDS relief plan.[364] By the following year, Vietnam had diagnosed 101,291 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) cases, of which 16,528 progressed to acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS); 9,554 have died.[365] The actual number of HIV-positive individuals is estimated to be much higher. On average between 40 and 50 new infections are reported daily in the country. In 2007, 0.4% of the population was estimated to be infected with HIV and the figure has remained stable since 2005.[366] More global aid is being delivered through The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria to fight the spread of the disease in the country.[362] In September 2018, the Hanoi People's Committee urged the citizens of the country to stop eating dog and cat meat as it can cause diseases like rabies and leptospirosis. More than 1,000 stores in the capital city of Hanoi were found to be selling both meats. The decision prompted positive comments among Vietnamese on social media, though some noted that the consumption of dog meat will remain an ingrained habit among many people.[367]

Education

Vietnam has an extensive state-controlled network of schools, colleges, and universities and a growing number of privately run and partially privatised institutions. General education in Vietnam is divided into five categories: kindergarten, elementary schools, middle schools, high schools, and universities. A large number of public schools have been constructed across the country to raise the national literacy rate, which stood at 90% in 2008.[368] Most universities are located in major cities of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City with the country's education system continuously undergoing a series of reforms by the government. Basic education in the country is relatively free for the poor although some families may still have trouble paying tuition fees for their children without some form of public or private assistance.[369] Regardless, Vietnam's school enrolment is among the highest in the world.[370][371] The number of colleges and universities increased dramatically in the 2000s from 178 in 2000 to 299 in 2005. In higher education, the government provides subsidised loans for students through the national bank, although there are deep concerns about access to the loans as well the burden on students to repay them.[372][373]Since 1995, enrolment in higher education has grown tenfold to over 2.2 million with 84,000 lecturers and 419 institutions of higher education.[374] A number of foreign universities operate private campuses in Vietnam, including Harvard University (United States) and the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (Australia). The government's strong commitment to education has fostered significant growth but still need to be sustained to retain academics. In 2018, a decree on university autonomy allowing them to operate independently without ministerial control is in its final stages of approval. The government will continue investing in education especially for the poor to have access to basic education.[375]

Demographics

 
Vietnam population pyramid in 2019

Ethnic groups of Vietnam[376]

  Vietnamese (85.32%)
  Other (14.68%)

As of 2021, the population of Vietnam stands at approximately 97.5 million people.[377] The population had grown significantly from the 1979 census, which showed the total population of reunified Vietnam to be 52.7 million.[378] According to the 2019 census, the country's population was 96,208,984.[2] Based on the 2019 census, 65.6% of the Vietnamese population live in rural areas while only 34.4% live in urban areas. The average growth rate of the urban population has recently increased which is attributed mainly to migration and rapid urbanisation.[2] The dominant Viet or Kinh ethnic group constitute 82,085,826 people or 85.32% of the population.[2] Most of their population is concentrated in the country's alluvial deltas and coastal plains. As a majority ethnic group, the Kinh possess significant political and economic influence over the country.[376] Despite this, Vietnam is also home to various ethnic groups, of which 54 are officially recognised, including the Hmong, Dao, Tày, Thái and Nùng.[379] Many ethnic minorities such as the Muong, who are closely related to the Kinh, dwell in the highlands which cover two-thirds of Vietnam's territory.[380]

Since the partition of Vietnam, the population of the Central Highlands was almost exclusively Degar (including more than 40 tribal groups); however, the South Vietnamese government at the time enacted a program of resettling Kinh in indigenous areas.[381][382] The Hoa (ethnic Chinese) and Khmer Krom people are mainly lowlanders.[376][383] Throughout Vietnam's history, many Chinese people, largely from South China, migrated to the country as administrators, merchants and even refugees.[384] Since the reunification in 1976, an increase of communist policies nationwide resulted in the nationalisation and confiscation of property especially from the Hoa in the south and the wealthy in cities. This led many of them to leave Vietnam.[385][386]

Urbanisation

 
District 1, Ho Chi Minh City

The number of people who live in urbanised areas in 2019 is 33,122,548 people (with the urbanisation rate at 34.4%).[2] Since 1986, Vietnam's urbanisation rates have surged rapidly after the Vietnamese government implemented the Đổi Mới economic program, changing the system into a socialist one and liberalising property rights. As a result, Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City (the two major cities in the Red River Delta and Southeast regions respectively) increased their share of the total urban population from 8.5% and 24.9% to 15.9% and 31% respectively.[387] The Vietnamese government, through its construction ministry, forecasts the country will have a 45% urbanisation rate by 2020 although it was confirmed to only be 34.4% according to the 2019 census.[2] Urbanisation is said to have a positive correlation with economic growth. Any country with higher urbanisation rates has a higher GDP growth rate.[388] Furthermore, the urbanisation movement in Vietnam is mainly between the rural areas and the country's Southeast region. Ho Chi Minh City has received a large number of migrants due mainly to better weather and economic opportunities.[389]

 
Urbanisation in west Hanoi

A study also shows that rural-to-urban area migrants have a higher standard of living than both non-migrants in rural areas and non-migrants in urban areas. This results in changes to economic structures. In 1985, agriculture made up 37.2% of Vietnam's GDP; in 2008, that number had declined to 18.5%.[390] In 1985, industry made up only 26.2% of Vietnam's GDP; by 2008, that number had increased to 43.2%. Urbanisation also helps to improve basic services which increase people's standards of living. Access to electricity grew from 14% of total households with electricity in 1993 to above 96% in 2009.[390] In terms of access to fresh water, data from 65 utility companies shows that only 12% of households in the area covered by them had access to the water network in 2002; by 2007, more than 70% of the population was connected. Though urbanisation has many benefits, it has some drawbacks since it creates more traffic, and air and water pollution.[390]

Many Vietnamese use mopeds for transportation, since they are relatively cheap and easy to operate. Their large numbers have been known to cause traffic congestion and air pollution in Vietnam. In the capital city alone, the number of mopeds increased from 0.5 million in 2001 to 4.7 million in 2013.[390] With rapid development, factories have sprung up which indirectly pollute the air and water, for example in the 2016 Vietnam marine life disaster.[391] The government is intervening and attempting solutions to decrease air pollution by decreasing the number of motorcycles while increasing public transportation. It has introduced more regulations for waste handling. The amount of solid waste generated in urban areas of Vietnam has increased by more than 200% from 2003 to 2008. Industrial solid waste accounted for 181% of that increase. One of the government's efforts includes attempting to promote campaigns that encourage locals to sort household waste, since waste sorting is still not practised by most of Vietnamese society.[392]

 
Rank Name Province Pop. Rank Name Province Pop.
 
Ho Chi Minh City
 
Hanoi
1 Ho Chi Minh City Municipality 8,993,082 11 Tân Uyên Bình Dương 466,053  
Haiphong
 
Cần Thơ
2 Hanoi Municipality 8,053,663 12 Nha Trang Khánh Hòa 422,601
3 Haiphong Municipality 2,028,514 13 Dĩ An Bình Dương 403,760
4 Cần Thơ Municipality 1,235,171 14 Buôn Ma Thuột Đắk Lắk 375,590
5 Da Nang Municipality 1,134,310 15 Thanh Hóa Thanh Hóa 359,910
6 Biên Hòa Đồng Nai 1,055,414 16 Vũng Tàu Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu 357,124
7 Thủ Đức Ho Chi Minh City 1,013,795 17 Thái Nguyên Thái Nguyên 340,403
8 Huế Thừa Thiên Huế 652,572 18 Vinh Nghệ An 339,114
9 Thuận An Bình Dương 508,433 19 Thủ Dầu Một Bình Dương 321,607
10 Hải Dương Hải Dương 508,190 20 Hạ Long Quảng Ninh 300,267
  1. ^ Some cities were established or expanded after the 2019 census was conducted, including Thủ Đức,[394] Huế,[395] Thuận An,[396] Hải Dương,[397] Dĩ An,[396] and Hạ Long.[398]

Religion

Religion in Vietnam (2019)[2]

  Vietnamese folk religion or no religion (86.32%)
  Buddhism (4.79%)
  Catholicism (6.1%)
  Protestantism (1.0%)
  Hoahaoism (1.02%)
  Caodaism (0.58%)
  Islam (0.07%)
  Others (0.12%)

Under Article 70 of the 1992 Constitution of Vietnam, all citizens enjoy freedom of belief and religion.[399] All religions are equal before the law and each place of worship is protected under Vietnamese state law. Religious beliefs cannot be misused to undermine state law and policies.[399][400] According to a 2007 survey 81% of Vietnamese people did not believe in a god.[401] Based on government findings in 2009, the number of religious people increased by 932,000.[402] The official statistics, presented by the Vietnamese government to the United Nations special rapporteur in 2014, indicate the overall number of followers of recognised religions is about 24 million of a total population of almost 90 million.[403] According to the General Statistics Office of Vietnam in 2019, Buddhists account for 4.79% of the total population, Catholics 6.1%, Protestants 1.0%, Hoahao Buddhists 1.02%, and Caodaism followers 0.58%.[2] Other religions includes Islam, Bahaʼís and Hinduism, representing less than 0.2% of the population.

The majority of Vietnamese do not follow any organised religion, though many of them observe some form of Vietnamese folk religion. Confucianism as a system of social and ethical philosophy still has certain influences in modern Vietnam. Mahāyāna is the dominant branch of Buddhism, while Theravāda is practised mostly by the Khmer minority. About 8 to 9% of the population is Christian—made up of Roman Catholics and Protestants. Catholicism was introduced to Vietnam in the 16th century and was firmly established by Jesuits missionaries (mainly Portuguese and Italian) in the 17th centuries from nearby Portuguese Macau.[68] French missionaries (from the Paris Foreign Missions Society) together with Spanish missionaries (from the Dominican Order of the neighbouring Spanish East Indies) actively sought converts in the 18th, 19th, and first half of the 20th century.[404][405][406] A significant number of Vietnamese people, especially in the South, are also adherents of two indigenous religions of syncretic Caodaism and quasi-Buddhist Hoahaoism.[407] Protestantism was only recently spread by American and Canadian missionaries in the 20th century;[408] the largest Protestant denomination is the Evangelical Church of Vietnam. Around 770,000 of the country's Protestants are members of ethnic minorities,[408] particularly the highland Montagnards[409] and Hmong people. Although it is one of the country's minority religions, Protestantism is the fastest-growing religion in Vietnam, expanding at a rate of 600% in recent decades.[408][410] Several other minority faiths exist in Vietnam, these include: Bani, Sunni and non-denominational sections of Islam which is practised primarily among the ethnic Cham minority.[411] There are also a few Kinh adherents of Islam, other minority adherents of Baha'i, as well as Hindus among the Cham's.[412][413]

Languages

The national language of the country is Vietnamese, a tonal Austroasiatic language (Mon–Khmer), which is spoken by the majority of the population. Vietnam's minority groups speak a variety of languages, including: Tày, Mường, Cham, Khmer, Chinese, Nùng and Hmong. The Montagnard peoples of the Central Highlands also speak a number of distinct languages, some belonging to the Austroasiatic and others to the Malayo-Polynesian language families.[414] In recent years, a number of sign languages have developed in the major cities.

 
Vietnamese calligraphy in Latin alphabet

The French language, a legacy of colonial rule, is spoken by many educated Vietnamese as a second language, especially among the older generation and those educated in the former South Vietnam, where it was a principal language in administration, education and commerce. Vietnam remains a full member of the International Organisation of the Francophonie (La Francophonie) and education has revived some interest in the language.[415] Russian, and to a lesser extent German, Czech and Polish are known among some northern Vietnamese whose families had ties with the Eastern Bloc during the Cold War.[416] With improved relations with Western countries and recent reforms in Vietnamese administration, English has been increasingly used as a second language and the study of English is now obligatory in most schools either alongside or in place of French.[417][418] The popularity of Japanese, Korean, and Mandarin Chinese have also grown as the country's ties with other East Asian nations have strengthened.[419][420][421] Third-graders can choose one of seven languages (English, Russian, French, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, German) as their first foreign language.[422][423][424] In Vietnam's high school graduation examinations, students can take their foreign language exam in one of the above-mentioned languages.[425]

Culture

 
 
The Municipal Theatre (Saigon Opera House) in Ho Chi Minh City

Vietnamese culture is considered part of Sinosphere. Vietnam's culture has developed over the centuries from indigenous ancient Đông Sơn culture with wet rice cultivation as its economic base.[33][36] Some elements of the nation's culture have Chinese origins, drawing on elements of Confucianism, Mahāyāna Buddhism, and Taoism in its traditional political system and philosophy.[426][427] Vietnamese society is structured around làng (ancestral villages);[428] all Vietnamese mark a common ancestral anniversary on the tenth day of the third lunar month.[429][430] The influence of Chinese culture such as the Cantonese, Hakka, Hokkien, and Hainanese cultures is more evident in the north where Buddhism is strongly entwined with popular culture.[431] Despite this, there are Chinatowns in the south, such as in Chợ Lớn, where many Chinese have intermarried with Kinh and are indistinguishable among them.[432] In the central and southern parts of Vietnam, traces of Champa and Khmer culture are evidenced through the remains of ruins, artefacts as well within their population as the successor of the ancient Sa Huỳnh culture.[433][434] In recent centuries, Western cultures have become popular among recent generations of Vietnamese.[427]

 
Vietnamese traditional white school uniform for girls in the country, the áo dài with the addition of nón lá, a conical hat

The traditional focuses of Vietnamese culture are based on humanity (nhân nghĩa) and harmony (hòa) in which family and community values are highly regarded.[431] Vietnam reveres a number of key cultural symbols,[435] such as the Vietnamese dragon which is derived from crocodile and snake imagery; Vietnam's national father, Lạc Long Quân is depicted as a holy dragon.[429][436][437] The lạc is a holy bird representing Vietnam's national mother Âu Cơ. Other prominent images that are also revered are the turtle, buffalo and horse.[438] Many Vietnamese also believe in the supernatural and spiritualism where illness can be brought on by a curse or sorcery or caused by non-observance of a religious ethic. Traditional medical practitioners, amulets and other forms of spiritual protection and religious practices may be employed to treat the ill person.[439] In the modern era, the cultural life of Vietnam has been deeply influenced by government-controlled media and cultural programs.[427] For many decades, foreign cultural influences, especially those of Western origin, were shunned. But since the recent reformation, Vietnam has seen a greater exposure to neighbouring Southeast Asian, East Asian as well to Western culture and media.[440]

The main Vietnamese formal dress, the áo dài is worn for special occasions such as weddings and religious festivals. White áo dài is the required uniform for girls in many high schools across the country. Other examples of traditional Vietnamese clothing include: the áo tứ thân, a four-piece woman's dress; the áo ngũ, a form of the thân in five-piece form, mostly worn in the north of the country; the yếm, a woman's undergarment; the áo bà ba, rural working "pyjamas" for men and women; the áo gấm, a formal brocade tunic for government receptions; and the áo the, a variant of the áo gấm worn by grooms at weddings.[441][442] Traditional headwear includes the standard conical nón lá and the "lampshade-like" nón quai thao.[442][443] In tourism, a number of popular cultural tourist destinations include the former Imperial City of Huế, the World Heritage Sites of Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng National Park, Hội An and Mỹ Sơn, coastal regions such as Nha Trang, the caves of Hạ Long Bay and the Marble Mountains.[444][445]

Literature

 
Vietnamese dragon on Emperor Khải Định's c. 1917 scroll in British Library collection

Vietnamese literature has centuries-deep history and the country has a rich tradition of folk literature based on the typical six–to-eight-verse poetic form called ca dao which usually focuses on village ancestors and heroes.[446] Written literature has been found dating back to the 10th century Ngô dynasty, with notable ancient authors including: Nguyễn Trãi, Trần Hưng Đạo, Nguyễn Du and Nguyễn Đình Chiểu. Some literary genres play an important role in theatrical performance, such as hát nói in ca trù.[447] Some poetic unions have also been formed in Vietnam, such as the tao đàn. Vietnamese literature has been influenced by Western styles in recent times, with the first literary transformation movement of thơ mới emerging in 1932.[448] Vietnamese folk literature is an intermingling of many forms. It is not only an oral tradition, but a mixing of three media: hidden (only retained in the memory of folk authors), fixed (written), and shown (performed). Folk literature usually exists in many versions, passed down orally, and has unknown authors. Myths consist of stories about supernatural beings, heroes, creator gods and reflect the viewpoint of ancient people about human life.[449] They consist of creation stories, stories about their origins (Lạc Long Quân and Âu Cơ), culture heroes (Sơn Tinh and Thủy Tinh) which are referred to as a mountain and water spirit respectively and many other folklore tales.[432][450]

Music

 
Ca trù trio performance in northern Vietnam

Traditional Vietnamese music varies between the country's northern and southern regions.[451] Northern classical music is Vietnam's oldest musical form and is traditionally more formal. The origins of Vietnamese classical music can be traced to the Mongol invasions in the 13th century when the Vietnamese captured a Chinese opera troupe.[452] Throughout its history, Vietnam has been the most heavily impacted by the Chinese musical tradition along with those of Japan, Korea and Mongolia.[453] Nhã nhạc is the most popular form of imperial court music, Chèo is a form of generally satirical musical theatre, while Xẩm or hát xẩm (xẩm singing) is a type of Vietnamese folk music. Quan họ (alternate singing) is popular in the former Hà Bắc Province (which is now divided into Bắc Ninh and Bắc Giang Provinces) and across Vietnam. Another form of music called Hát chầu văn or hát văn is used to invoke spirits during ceremonies. Nhạc dân tộc cải biên is a modern form of Vietnamese folk music which arose in the 1950s, while ca trù (also known as hát ả đào) is a popular folk music. can be thought of as the southern style of Quan họ. There is a range of traditional instruments, including the đàn bầu (a monochord zither), the đàn gáo (a two-stringed fiddle with coconut body), and the đàn nguyệt (a two-stringed fretted moon lute). In recent times, there have been some efforts at mixing Vietnamese traditional music—especially folk music—with modern music to revive and promote national music in the modern context and educate the younger generations about Vietnam's traditional musical instruments and singing styles.[454] Bolero music has gained popularity in the country since the 1930s, albeit with a different style—a combination of traditional Vietnamese music with Western elements.[455] In the 21st century, the modern Vietnamese pop music industry known as V-pop incorporates elements of many popular genres worldwide, such as electronic, dance and R&B.[456][457]

Cuisine

 
Some of the notable Vietnamese cuisine, clockwise from top-right: phở noodle, chè thái fruit dessert, chả giò spring roll, and bánh mì sandwich

Traditionally, Vietnamese cuisine is based around five fundamental taste "elements" (Vietnamese: ngũ vị): spicy (metal), sour (wood), bitter (fire), salty (water) and sweet (earth).[458] Common ingredients include fish sauce, shrimp paste, soy sauce, rice, fresh herbs, fruits and vegetables. Vietnamese recipes use: lemongrass, ginger, mint, Vietnamese mint, long coriander, Saigon cinnamon, bird's eye chilli, lime and basil leaves.[459] Traditional Vietnamese cooking is known for its fresh ingredients, minimal use of oil and reliance on herbs and vegetables; it is considered one of the healthiest cuisines worldwide.[460] The use of meats such as pork, beef and chicken was relatively limited in the past. Instead freshwater fish, crustaceans (particularly crabs), and molluscs became widely used. Fish sauce, soy sauce, prawn sauce and limes are among the main flavouring ingredients. Vietnam has a strong street food culture, with 40 popular dishes commonly found throughout the country.[461] Many notable Vietnamese dishes such as gỏi cuốn (salad roll), bánh cuốn (rice noodle roll), bún riêu (rice vermicelli soup) and phở noodles originated in the north and were introduced to central and southern Vietnam by northern migrants.[462][463] Local foods in the north are often less spicy than southern dishes, as the colder northern climate limits the production and availability of spices.[464] Black pepper is frequently used in place of chillis to produce spicy flavours. Vietnamese drinks in the south also are usually served cold with ice cubes, especially during the annual hot seasons; in contrast, in the north hot drinks are more preferable in a colder climate. Some examples of basic Vietnamese drinks include cà phê đá (Vietnamese iced coffee), cà phê trứng (egg coffee), chanh muối (salted pickled lime juice), cơm rượu (glutinous rice wine), nước mía (sugarcane juice) and trà sen (Vietnamese lotus tea).[465]

Media

 
Vietnam Television (VTV), the main state television station

Vietnam's media sector is regulated by the government under the 2004 Law on Publication.[466] It is generally perceived that the country's media sector is controlled by the government and follows the official communist party line, though some newspapers are relatively outspoken.[467][468] The Voice of Vietnam (VOV) is the official state-run national radio broadcasting service, broadcasting internationally via shortwave using rented transmitters in other countries and providing broadcasts from its website, while Vietnam Television (VTV) is the national television broadcasting company. Since 1997, Vietnam has regulated public internet access extensively using both legal and technical means. The resulting lockdown is widely referred to as the "Bamboo Firewall".[469] The collaborative project OpenNet Initiative classifies Vietnam's level of online political censorship to be "pervasive",[470] while Reporters Without Borders (RWB) considers Vietnam to be one of 15 global "internet enemies".[471] Though the government of Vietnam maintains that such censorship is necessary to safeguard the country against obscene or sexually explicit content, many political and religious websites that are deemed to be undermining state authority are also blocked.[472]

Holidays and festivals

 
Special Tết decoration in the country seen during the holiday

The country has eleven national recognised holidays. These include: New Year's Day on 1 January; Vietnamese New Year (Tết) from the last day of the last lunar month to fifth day of the first lunar month; Hùng Kings' Festival on the 10th day of the third lunar month; Reunification Day on 30 April; International Workers' Day on 1 May; and National Day on 2 September.[473][474][475] During Tết, many Vietnamese from the major cities will return to their villages for family reunions and to pray for dead ancestors.[476][477] Older people will usually give the young a lì xì (red envelope) while special holiday food, such as bánh chưng (rice cake) in a square shape together with variety of dried fruits, are presented in the house for visitors.[478] Many other festivals are celebrated throughout the seasons, including the Lantern Festival (Tết Nguyên Tiêu), Mid-Autumn Festival (Tết Trung Thu) and various temple and nature festivals.[479] In the highlands, Elephant Race Festivals are held annually during the spring; riders will ride their elephants for about 1.6 km (0.99 mi) and the winning elephant will be given sugarcane.[480] Traditional Vietnamese weddings remain widely popular.[481]

Sports

 
Mỹ Đình National Stadium in Hanoi

The Vovinam, kim ke and bình định martial arts are widespread in Vietnam,[482][483] while football is the country's most popular sport.[484] Its national team won the ASEAN Football Championship twice in 2008 and 2018 and reached the quarter-finals of 2019 AFC Asian Cup,[485][486][487] its junior team of under-23 became the runners-up of 2018 AFC U-23 Championship and reached fourth place in 2018 Asian Games, while the under-20 managed to qualify the 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup for the first time in their football history.[488][489] The national football women's team also traditionally dominates the Southeast Asian Games, along with its chief rival, Thailand. Other Western sports such as badminton, tennis, volleyball, ping-pong and chess are also widely popular. Vietnam has participated in the Summer Olympic Games since 1952. After the partition of the country in 1954, only South Vietnam competed in the games, sending athletes to the 1956 and 1972 Olympics. Since the reunification of Vietnam in 1976, it has competed as the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, attending every Summer Olympics from 1988 onwards. The present Vietnam Olympic Committee was formed in 1976 and recognised by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1979.[490] Vietnam has never participated in the Winter Olympic Games. In 2016, Vietnam won their first gold medal at the Olympics.[491] Basketball has become an increasingly popular sport in Vietnam, especially in Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi and Sóc Trăng.[492]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In effect since 1 January 2014.[4]
  2. ^ The spelling "Viet Nam" or the full Vietnamese form "Việt Nam" is sometimes used in English by local and government-operated media. "Viet Nam" is, in fact, formally designated and recognized by the Government of Vietnam, the United Nations and the International Organization for Standardization as the standardized country name. See also other spellings.
  3. ^ Alternatively the Socialist Republic of Viet Nam with the different spelling for "Vietnam"
    Vietnamese: Cộng hòa xã hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam
  4. ^ a b At first, Gia Long requested the name "Nam Việt", but the Jiaqing Emperor refused.[10][17]
  5. ^ Neither the American government nor Ngô Đình Diệm's State of Vietnam signed anything at the 1954 Geneva Conference. The non-communist Vietnamese delegation objected strenuously to any division of Vietnam; however, the French accepted the Việt Minh proposal[108] that Vietnam be united by elections under the supervision of "local commissions".[109] The United States, with the support of South Vietnam and the United Kingdom, countered with the "American Plan",[110] which provided for United Nations-supervised unification elections. The plan, however, was rejected by Soviet and other communist delegations.[111]
  6. ^ See List of countries and dependencies by area.

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vietnam, other, uses, disambiguation, việt, vîət, nāːm, listen, officially, socialist, republic, country, eastern, edge, mainland, southeast, asia, with, area, square, kilometres, population, over, million, making, world, fifteenth, most, populous, country, sh. For other uses see Vietnam disambiguation Vietnam b Vietnamese Việt Nam viet naːm listen officially the Socialist Republic of Vietnam SRV c is a country at the eastern edge of mainland Southeast Asia with an area of 331 212 square kilometres 127 882 sq mi and a population of over 100 million making it the world s fifteenth most populous country Vietnam shares land borders with China to the north and Laos and Cambodia to the west It shares maritime borders with Thailand through the Gulf of Thailand and the Philippines Indonesia and Malaysia through the South China Sea Its capital is Hanoi and its largest city is Ho Chi Minh City commonly referred to by its former name Saigon Socialist Republic of VietnamCộng hoa xa hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam Vietnamese Flag EmblemMotto Độc lập Tự do Hạnh phuc Independence Freedom Happiness Anthem Tiến Quan Ca Army March source source track track track track track track track track track track track track Show globeShow map of ASEANLocation of Vietnam green in ASEAN dark grey CapitalHanoi21 2 N 105 51 E 21 033 N 105 850 E 21 033 105 850Largest cityHo Chi Minh City10 48 N 106 39 E 10 800 N 106 650 E 10 800 106 650Official languageVietnamese 1 Ethnic groups 2019 85 32 Kinh Vietnamese14 68 Others 2 Religion 2019 73 7 No religion Folk14 9 Buddhism8 5 Christianity1 5 Hoahaoism1 2 Caodaism0 2 Others 3 Demonym s VietnameseViet colloquial GovernmentUnitary Marxist Leninist one party socialist republic General SecretaryNguyễn Phu Trọng PresidentVo Văn Thưởng Prime MinisterPhạm Minh Chinh National Assembly ChairmanVương Đinh HuệLegislatureNational AssemblyFormation Independence from China939 First kingdom968 Regaining independence1428 Nguyễn s unification1802 Protectorate Treaty25 August 1883 Declaration of Independence2 September 1945 North South division21 July 1954 End of Vietnam War30 April 1975 Reunification2 July 1976 Đổi Mới18 December 1986 Current constitution28 November 2013 a Area Total331 212 km2 127 882 sq mi 66th Water 6 38Population 2023 estimate100 000 000 5 15th 2019 census96 208 984 2 Density295 0 km2 764 0 sq mi 29th GDP PPP 2023 estimate Total 1 450 trillion 6 26th Per capita 14 458 6 103th GDP nominal 2023 estimate Total 449 094 billion 6 34th Per capita 4 475 6 116th Gini 2018 35 7 7 mediumHDI 2021 0 703 8 high 115thCurrencyVietnamese đồng VND Time zoneUTC 07 00 Vietnam Standard Time Driving siderightCalling code 84ISO 3166 codeVNInternet TLD vnThis article contains Vietnamese text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of chữ Nom chữ Han and chữ Quốc ngữ Vietnam was inhabited by the Paleolithic age with states established in the first millennium BC on the Red River Delta in modern day northern Vietnam The Han dynasty annexed Northern and Central Vietnam under Chinese rule from 111 BC until the first dynasty emerged in 939 Successive monarchical dynasties absorbed Chinese influences through Confucianism and Buddhism and expanded southward to the Mekong Delta conquering Champa During most of the 17th and 18th centuries Vietnam was effectively divided into two domains of Đang Trong and Đang Ngoai The Nguyễn the last imperial dynasty surrendered to France in 1883 In 1887 its territory was integrated into French Indochina as three separate regions In the immediate aftermath of World War II the nationalist coalition Viet Minh led by the communist revolutionary Ho Chi Minh launched the August Revolution and declared Vietnam s independence in 1945 Vietnam went through prolonged warfare in the 20th century After World War II France returned to reclaim colonial power in the First Indochina War from which Vietnam emerged victorious in 1954 As a result of the treaties signed between the Viet Minh and France Vietnam was also separated into two parts The Vietnam War began shortly after between the communist North supported by the Soviet Union and China and the anti communist South supported by the United States Upon the North Vietnamese victory in 1975 Vietnam reunified as a unitary socialist state under the Communist Party of Vietnam CPV in 1976 An ineffective planned economy a trade embargo by the West and wars with Cambodia and China crippled the country further In 1986 the CPV initiated economic and political reforms similar to the Chinese economic reform transforming the country to a socialist oriented market economy The reforms facilitated Vietnamese reintegration into the global economy and politics A developing country with a lower middle income economy Vietnam is nonetheless one of the fastest growing economies of the 21st century Vietnam has high levels of corruption censorship environmental issues and a poor human rights record the country ranks among the lowest in international measurements of civil liberties freedom of the press and freedom of religion and ethnic minorities It is part of international and intergovernmental institutions including the ASEAN the APEC the CPTPP the Non Aligned Movement the OIF and the WTO It has assumed a seat on the United Nations Security Council twice Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistory and early history 2 2 Dynastic Vietnam 2 3 French Indochina 2 4 First Indochina War 2 5 Vietnam War 2 6 Reunification and reforms 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Biodiversity 4 Government and politics 4 1 Foreign relations 4 2 Military 4 3 Human rights and sociopolitical issues 5 Administrative divisions 6 Economy 6 1 Agriculture 6 1 1 Seafood 6 2 Science and technology 6 3 Tourism 7 Infrastructure 7 1 Transport 7 2 Energy 7 3 Telecommunication 7 4 Water supply and sanitation 7 5 Health 7 6 Education 8 Demographics 8 1 Urbanisation 8 2 Religion 8 3 Languages 9 Culture 9 1 Literature 9 2 Music 9 3 Cuisine 9 4 Media 9 5 Holidays and festivals 9 6 Sports 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 13 1 Print 13 2 Legislation and government source 13 3 Academic publications 13 4 News and magazines 13 5 Websites 13 6 Free content 14 External links 14 1 Government 14 2 Media and censorship 14 3 TourismEtymologyMain article Names of Vietnam The name Việt Nam Vietnamese pronunciation vie t naːm chữ Han 越南 literally Viet South means Viet of the South per Vietnamese word order or South of the Viet per Classical Chinese word order 9 A variation of the name Nanyue or Nam Việt 南越 was first documented in the 2nd century BC 10 The term Việt Yue Chinese 越 pinyin Yue Cantonese Yale Yuht Wade Giles Yueh4 Vietnamese Việt in Early Middle Chinese was first written using the logograph 戉 for an axe a homophone in oracle bone and bronze inscriptions of the late Shang dynasty c 1200 BC and later as 越 11 At that time it referred to a people or chieftain to the northwest of the Shang 12 In the early 8th century BC a tribe on the middle Yangtze were called the Yangyue a term later used for peoples further south 12 Between the 7th and 4th centuries BC Yue Việt referred to the State of Yue in the lower Yangtze basin and its people 11 12 From the 3rd century BC the term was used for the non Chinese populations of southern China and northern Vietnam with particular ethnic groups called Minyue Ouyue Luoyue Vietnamese Lạc Việt etc collectively called the Baiyue Bach Việt Chinese 百越 pinyin Bǎiyue Cantonese Yale Baak Yuet Vietnamese Bach Việt Hundred Yue Viet 11 12 13 The term Baiyue Bach Việt first appeared in the book Lushi Chunqiu compiled around 239 BC 14 By the 17th and 18th centuries AD educated Vietnamese apparently referred to themselves as nguoi Viet Viet people or nguoi nam southern people 15 The form Việt Nam 越南 is first recorded in the 16th century oracular poem Sấm Trạng Trinh The name has also been found on 12 steles carved in the 16th and 17th centuries including one at Bao Lam Pagoda in Hải Phong that dates to 1558 16 In 1802 Nguyễn Phuc Anh who later became Emperor Gia Long established the Nguyễn dynasty In the second year of his rule he asked the Jiaqing Emperor of the Qing dynasty to confer on him the title King of Nam Việt Nanyue 南越 in Chinese character after seizing power in Annam The Emperor refused because the name was related to Zhao Tuo s Nanyue which included the regions of Guangxi and Guangdong in southern China The Qing Emperor therefore decided to call the area Việt Nam instead d 18 meaning South of the Viet per Classical Chinese word order but the Vietnamese understood it as Viet of the South per Vietnamese word order 9 Between 1804 and 1813 the name Vietnam was used officially by Emperor Gia Long d It was revived in the early 20th century in Phan Bội Chau s History of the Loss of Vietnam and later by the Vietnamese Nationalist Party VNQDĐ 19 The country was usually called Annam until 1945 when the imperial government in Huế adopted Việt Nam 20 HistoryMain article History of Vietnam For a chronological guide see Timeline of Vietnamese history Prehistory and early history A Đong Sơn bronze drum c 800 BCArchaeological excavations have revealed the existence of humans in what is now Vietnam as early as the Paleolithic age Stone artefacts excavated in Gia Lai province have been claimed to date to 0 78 Ma 21 based on associated find of tektites however this claim has been challenged because tektites are often found in archaeological sites of various ages in Vietnam 22 Homo erectus fossils dating to around 500 000 BC have been found in caves in Lạng Sơn and Nghệ An provinces in northern Vietnam 23 The oldest Homo sapiens fossils from mainland Southeast Asia are of Middle Pleistocene provenance and include isolated tooth fragments from Tham Om and Hang Hum 24 25 26 Teeth attributed to Homo sapiens from the Late Pleistocene have been found at Dong Can 27 and from the Early Holocene at Mai Da Dieu 28 29 Lang Gao 30 31 and Lang Cuom 32 By about 1 000 BC the development of wet rice cultivation in the Ma River and Red River floodplains led to the flourishing of Đong Sơn culture 33 34 notable for its bronze casting used to make elaborate bronze Đong Sơn drums 35 36 37 At this point the early Vietnamese kingdoms of Văn Lang and Au Lạc appeared and the culture s influence spread to other parts of Southeast Asia including Maritime Southeast Asia throughout the first millennium BC 36 38 Dynastic Vietnam For a chronological guide see Timeline of Vietnam under Chinese rule Đại Việt Champa Angkor Empire and their neighbours late 13th century Vietnam s territories around 1838 during the Vietnamese occupation of CambodiaAccording to Vietnamese legends Hồng Bang dynasty of the Hung kings first established in 2879 BC is considered the first state in the history of Vietnam then known as Xich Quỷ and later Văn Lang 39 40 In 257 BC the last Hung king was defeated by Thục Phan He consolidated the Lạc Việt and Au Việt tribes to form the Au Lạc proclaiming himself An Dương Vương 41 In 179 BC a Chinese general named Zhao Tuo Triệu Đa defeated An Dương Vương and consolidated Au Lạc into Nanyue 34 However Nanyue was itself incorporated into the empire of the Chinese Han dynasty in 111 BC after the Han Nanyue War 18 42 For the next thousand years what is now northern Vietnam remained mostly under Chinese rule 43 44 Early independence movements such as those of the Trưng Sisters and Lady Triệu 45 were temporarily successful 46 though the region gained a longer period of independence as Vạn Xuan under the Anterior Ly dynasty between AD 544 and 602 47 48 49 By the early 10th century Northern Vietnam had gained autonomy but not sovereignty under the Khuc family 50 In AD 938 the Vietnamese lord Ngo Quyền defeated the forces of the Chinese Southern Han state at Bạch Đằng River and achieved full independence for Vietnam in 939 after a millennium of Chinese domination 51 52 53 By the 960s the dynastic Đại Việt Great Viet kingdom was established Vietnamese society enjoyed a golden era under the Ly and Trần dynasties During the rule of the Trần Dynasty Đại Việt repelled three Mongol invasions 54 55 Meanwhile the Mahayana branch of Buddhism flourished and became the state religion 53 56 Following the 1406 7 Ming Hồ War which overthrew the Hồ dynasty Vietnamese independence was interrupted briefly by the Chinese Ming dynasty but was restored by Le Lợi the founder of the Le dynasty 57 The Vietnamese polity reached their zenith in the Le dynasty of the 15th century especially during the reign of emperor Le Thanh Tong 1460 1497 58 59 Between the 11th and 18th centuries the Vietnamese polity expanded southward in a gradual process known as Nam tiến Southward expansion 60 eventually conquering the kingdom of Champa and part of the Khmer Kingdom 61 62 63 From the 16th century onward civil strife and frequent political infighting engulfed much of Dai Viet First the Chinese supported Mạc dynasty challenged the Le dynasty s power 64 After the Mạc dynasty was defeated the Le dynasty was nominally reinstalled Actual power however was divided between the northern Trịnh lords and the southern Nguyễn lords who engaged in a civil war for more than four decades before a truce was called in the 1670s 65 Vietnam was divided into North Trịnh and South Nguyễn from 1600 to 1777 During this period the Nguyễn expanded southern Vietnam into the Mekong Delta annexing the Central Highlands and the Khmer lands in the Mekong Delta 61 63 66 The division of the country ended a century later when the Tay Sơn brothers helped Trịnh to end Nguyễn they also established new dynasty and ended Trịnh However their rule did not last long and they were defeated by the remnants of the Nguyễn lords led by Nguyễn Anh Nguyễn Anh unified Vietnam and established the Nguyễn dynasty ruling under the name Gia Long 66 French Indochina Main articles Cochinchina campaign Sino French War Tonkin campaign and French Indochina In the 1500s the Portuguese explored the Vietnamese coast and reportedly erected a stele on the Cham Islands to mark their presence 67 By 1533 they began landing in the Vietnamese delta but were forced to leave because of local turmoil and fighting They also had less interest in the territory than they did in China and Japan 67 After they had settled in Macau and Nagasaki to begin the profitable Macau Japan trade route the Portuguese began to involve themselves in trade with Hội An 67 Portuguese traders and Jesuit missionaries under the Padroado system were active in both Vietnamese realms of Đang Trong Cochinchina or Quinan and Đang Ngoai Tonkin in the 17th century 68 The Dutch also tried to establish contact with Quinan in 1601 but failed to sustain a presence there after several violent encounters with the locals The Dutch East India Company VOC only managed to establish official relations with Tonkin in the spring of 1637 after leaving Dejima in Japan to establish trade for silk 69 Meanwhile in 1613 the first English attempt to establish contact with Hội An failed following a violent incident involving the Honourable East India Company By 1672 the English did establish relations with Tonkin and were allowed to reside in Phố Hiến 70 Capture of Saigon by Charles Rigault de Genouilly on 18 February 1859Between 1615 and 1753 French traders also engaged in trade in Vietnam 71 72 The first French missionaries arrived in 1658 under the Portuguese Padroado From its foundation the Paris Foreign Missions Society under Propaganda Fide actively sent missionaries to Vietnam entering Cochinchina first in 1664 and Tonkin first in 1666 73 Spanish Dominicans joined the Tonkin mission in 1676 and Franciscans were in Cochinchina from 1719 to 1834 The Vietnamese authorities began when to feel threatened by continuous Christianisation activities 74 After several Catholic missionaries were detained the French Navy intervened in 1843 to free them as the kingdom was perceived as xenophobic 75 In a series of conquests from 1859 to 1885 France eroded Vietnam s sovereignty 76 At the siege of Tourane in 1858 France was aided by Spain with Filipino Latin American and Spanish troops from the Philippines 77 and perhaps some Tonkinese Catholics 78 After the 1862 Treaty and especially after France completely conquered Lower Cochinchina in 1867 the Văn Than movement of scholar gentry class arose and committed violence against Catholics across central and northern Vietnam 79 Between 1862 and 1867 the southern third of the country became the French colony of Cochinchina 80 By 1884 the entire country was under French rule with the central and northern parts of Vietnam separated into the two protectorates of Annam and Tonkin The three entities were formally integrated into the union of French Indochina in 1887 81 82 The French administration imposed significant political and cultural changes on Vietnamese society 83 A Western style system of modern education introduced new humanist values 84 Most French settlers in Indochina were concentrated in Cochinchina particularly in Saigon and in Hanoi the colony s capital 85 During the colonial period guerrillas of the royalist Cần Vương movement rebelled against French rule and massacred around a third of Vietnam s Christian population 86 87 After a decade of resistance they were defeated in the 1890s by the Catholics in reprisal for their earlier massacres 88 89 Another large scale rebellion the Thai Nguyen uprising was also suppressed heavily 90 The French developed a plantation economy to promote export of tobacco indigo tea and coffee 91 However they largely ignored the increasing demands for civil rights and self government An increasing dissatisfaction even led to half hearted badly co ordinated and still worsely executed plots to oust the French like the infamous Hanoi Poison Plot of 1908 The Grand Palais built for the 1902 1903 world s fair when Hanoi was French Indochina s capitalA nationalist political movement soon emerged with leaders like Phan Bội Chau Phan Chau Trinh Phan Đinh Phung Emperor Ham Nghi and Hồ Chi Minh fighting or calling for independence 92 This resulted in the 1930 Yen Bai mutiny by the Vietnamese Nationalist Party VNQDĐ which the French quashed The mutiny split the independence movement as many leading members converted to communism 93 94 95 The French maintained full control of their colonies until World War II when the war in the Pacific led to the Japanese invasion of French Indochina in 1940 Afterwards the Japanese Empire was allowed to station its troops in Vietnam while the pro Vichy French colonial administration continued 96 97 Japan exploited Vietnam s natural resources to support its military campaigns culminating in a full scale takeover of the country in March 1945 This led to the Vietnamese Famine of 1945 which killed up to two million people 98 99 First Indochina War Main articles First Indochina War Empire of Vietnam Democratic Republic of Vietnam State of Vietnam and Operation Passage to Freedom In 1941 the Việt Minh a nationalist liberation movement based on a communist ideology emerged under the Vietnamese revolutionary leader Hồ Chi Minh The Việt Minh sought independence for Vietnam from France and the end of the Japanese occupation 100 101 After the military defeat of Japan in World War II and the fall of its puppet government Empire of Vietnam in August 1945 Saigon s administrative services collapsed and chaos riots and murder were widespread 102 The Việt Minh occupied Hanoi and proclaimed a provisional government which asserted national independence on 2 September 101 In July 1945 the Allies had decided to divide Indochina at the 16th parallel to allow Chiang Kai shek of the Republic of China to receive the Japanese surrender in the north while Britain s Lord Louis Mountbatten received their surrender in the south The Allies agreed that Indochina still belonged to France 103 104 Partition of French Indochina after the 1954 Geneva ConferenceBut as the French were weakened by the German occupation British Indian forces and the remaining Japanese Southern Expeditionary Army Group were used to maintain order and help France reestablish control through the 1945 1946 War in Vietnam 105 Hồ initially chose to take a moderate stance to avoid military conflict with France asking the French to withdraw their colonial administrators and for French professors and engineers to help build a modern independent Vietnam 101 But the Provisional Government of the French Republic did not act on these requests including the idea of independence and dispatched the French Far East Expeditionary Corps to restore colonial rule This resulted in the Việt Minh launching a guerrilla campaign against the French in late 1946 100 101 106 The resulting First Indochina War lasted until July 1954 The defeat of French colonialists and Vietnamese loyalists in the 1954 battle of Điện Bien Phủ allowed Hồ to negotiate a ceasefire from a favourable position at the subsequent Geneva Conference 101 107 The colonial administration was thereby ended and French Indochina was dissolved under the Geneva Accords of 21 July 1954 into three countries Vietnam and the kingdoms of Cambodia and Laos as well as Vietnam was further divided into North and South administrative regions at the Demilitarised Zone roughly along the 17th parallel north pending elections scheduled for July 1956 e A 300 day period of free movement was permitted during which almost a million northerners mainly Catholics moved south fearing persecution by the communists This migration was in large part aided by the United States military through Operation Passage to Freedom 112 113 The partition of Vietnam by the Geneva Accords was not intended to be permanent and stipulated that Vietnam would be reunited after the elections 114 But in 1955 the southern State of Vietnam s prime minister Ngo Đinh Diệm toppled Bảo Đại in a fraudulent referendum organised by his brother Ngo Đinh Nhu and proclaimed himself president of the Republic of Vietnam 114 This effectively replaced the internationally recognised State of Vietnam by the Republic of Vietnam in the south supported by the United States France Laos Republic of China and Thailand and Hồ s Democratic Republic of Vietnam in the north supported by the Soviet Union Sweden 115 Khmer Rouge and the People s Republic of China 114 Vietnam War Main articles Vietnam War and Role of the United States in the Vietnam War From 1953 to 1956 the North Vietnamese government instituted agrarian reforms including rent reduction and land reform which resulted in significant political repression 116 This included execution of 13 500 117 to as many as 100 000 118 executions In the South Diệm countered North Vietnamese subversion including the assassination of over 450 South Vietnamese officials in 1956 by detaining tens of thousands of suspected communists in political reeducation centres 119 120 This program incarcerated many non communists but was successful at curtailing communist activity in the country if only for a time 121 The North Vietnamese government claimed that 2 148 people were killed in the process by November 1957 122 The pro Hanoi Việt Cộng began a guerrilla campaign in South Vietnam in the late 1950s to overthrow Diệm s government 123 From 1960 the Soviet Union and North Vietnam signed treaties providing for further Soviet military support 124 125 126 Three US Fairchild UC 123B aircraft spraying Agent Orange during the Operation Ranch Hand as part of a herbicidal warfare operation depriving the food and vegetation cover of the Việt Cộng c 1962 1971In 1963 Buddhist discontent with Diệm s Catholic regime erupted into mass demonstrations leading to a violent government crackdown 127 This led to the collapse of Diệm s relationship with the United States and ultimately to a 1963 coup in which he and Nhu were assassinated 128 The Diệm era was followed by more than a dozen successive military governments before the pairing of Air Marshal Nguyễn Cao Kỳ and General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu took control in mid 1965 129 Thiệu gradually outmaneuvered Kỳ and cemented his grip on power in fraudulent elections in 1967 and 1971 130 During this political instability the communists began to gain ground To support South Vietnam s struggle against the communist insurgency the United States used the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident as a pretext for increasing its contribution of military advisers 131 US forces became involved in ground combat operations by 1965 and at their peak several years later numbered more than 500 000 132 133 The US also engaged in sustained aerial bombing Meanwhile China and the Soviet Union provided North Vietnam with significant material aid and 15 000 combat advisers 124 125 134 Communist forces supplying the Việt Cộng carried supplies along the Hồ Chi Minh trail which passed through Laos 135 The communists attacked South Vietnamese targets during the 1968 Tết Offensive The campaign failed militarily but shocked the American establishment and turned US public opinion against the war 136 During the offensive communist troops massacred over 3 000 civilians at Huế 137 138 Facing an increasing casualty count rising domestic opposition to the war and growing international condemnation the US began withdrawing from ground combat roles in the early 1970s This also entailed an unsuccessful effort to strengthen and stabilise South Vietnam 139 Following the Paris Peace Accords of 27 January 1973 all American combat troops were withdrawn by 29 March 1973 140 In December 1974 North Vietnam captured the province of Phước Long and started a full scale offensive culminating in the fall of Saigon on 30 April 1975 141 South Vietnam was ruled by a provisional government for almost eight years while under North Vietnamese military occupation 142 Reunification and reforms Further information Re education camp Vietnam Vietnamese boat people and Đổi Mới On 2 July 1976 North and South Vietnam were merged to form the Socialist Republic of Vietnam 143 The war devastated Vietnam and killed 966 000 to 3 8 million people 144 145 146 A 1974 US Senate subcommittee estimated nearly 1 4 million Vietnamese civilians were killed or wounded between 1965 and 1974 including 415 000 killed 147 148 In its aftermath under Le Duẩn s administration there were no mass executions of South Vietnamese who had collaborated with the US or the defunct South Vietnamese government confounding Western fears 149 but up to 300 000 South Vietnamese were sent to reeducation camps where many endured torture starvation and disease while being forced to perform hard labour 150 The government embarked on a mass campaign of collectivisation of farms and factories 151 Many fled the country following the conclusion of the war 152 In 1978 in response to the Khmer Rouge government of Cambodia ordering massacres of Vietnamese residents in the border villages in the districts of An Giang and Kien Giang 153 the Vietnamese military invaded Cambodia and removed them from power after occupying Phnom Penh 154 The intervention was a success resulting in the establishment of a new pro Vietnam socialist government the People s Republic of Kampuchea which ruled until 1989 155 However this worsened relations with China which had supported the Khmer Rouge China later launched a brief incursion into northern Vietnam in 1979 causing Vietnam to rely even more heavily on Soviet economic and military aid while mistrust of the Chinese government escalated 156 At the Sixth National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam CPV in December 1986 reformist politicians replaced the old guard government with new leadership 157 158 The reformers were led by 71 year old Nguyễn Văn Linh who became the party s new general secretary 157 He and the reformers implemented a series of free market reforms known as Đổi Mới Renovation that carefully managed the transition from a planned economy to a socialist oriented market economy 159 160 Although the authority of the state remained unchallenged under Đổi Mới the government encouraged private ownership of farms and factories economic deregulation and foreign investment while maintaining control over strategic industries 160 161 Subsequently Vietnam s economy achieved strong growth in agricultural and industrial production construction exports and foreign investment although these reforms also resulted in a rise in income inequality and gender disparities 162 163 164 GeographyMain article Geography of Vietnam Nature attractions in Vietnam clockwise from top Hạ Long Bay Yến River and Bản Giốc WaterfallsVietnam is located on the eastern Indochinese Peninsula between the latitudes 8 and 24 N and the longitudes 102 and 110 E It covers a total area of approximately 331 212 km2 127 882 sq mi f The combined length of the country s land boundaries is 4 639 km 2 883 mi and its coastline is 3 444 km 2 140 mi long 165 At its narrowest point in the central Quảng Binh Province the country is as little as 50 kilometres 31 mi across though it widens to around 600 kilometres 370 mi in the north 166 Vietnam s land is mostly hilly and densely forested with level land covering no more than 20 Mountains account for 40 of the country s land area 167 and tropical forests cover around 42 168 The Red River Delta in the north a flat roughly triangular region covering 15 000 km2 5 792 sq mi 169 is smaller but more intensely developed and more densely populated than the Mekong River Delta in the south Once an inlet of the Gulf of Tonkin it has been filled in over the millennia by riverine alluvial deposits 170 171 The delta covering about 40 000 km2 15 444 sq mi is a low level plain no more than 3 metres 9 8 ft above sea level at any point It is criss crossed by a maze of rivers and canals which carry so much sediment that the delta advances 60 to 80 metres 196 9 to 262 5 ft into the sea every year 172 173 The exclusive economic zone of Vietnam covers 417 663 km2 161 261 sq mi in the South China Sea 174 Hoang Lien Sơn mountain range the range that includes Fansipan which is the highest summit on the Indochinese PeninsulaSouthern Vietnam is divided into coastal lowlands the mountains of the Annamite Range and extensive forests Comprising five relatively flat plateaus of basalt soil the highlands account for 16 of the country s arable land and 22 of its total forested land 175 The soil in much of the southern part of Vietnam is relatively low in nutrients as a result of intense cultivation 176 Several minor earthquakes have been recorded 177 178 The northern part of the country consists mostly of highlands and the Red River Delta Fansipan also known as Phan Xi Păng which is located in Lao Cai Province is the highest mountain in Vietnam standing 3 143 m 10 312 ft high 179 From north to south Vietnam the country also has numerous islands Phu Quốc is the largest 180 The Hang Sơn Đoong Cave is considered the largest known cave passage in the world since its discovery in 2009 The Ba Bể Lake and Mekong River are the largest lake and longest river in the country 181 182 183 Climate Main article Climate of Vietnam Koppen climate classification map of Vietnam Nha Trang a popular beach destination has a tropical savanna climate Due to differences in latitude and the marked variety in topographical relief Vietnam s climate tends to vary considerably for each region 184 During the winter or dry season extending roughly from November to April the monsoon winds usually blow from the northeast along the Chinese coast and across the Gulf of Tonkin picking up considerable moisture 185 The average annual temperature is generally higher in the plains than in the mountains especially in southern Vietnam compared to the north Temperatures vary less in the southern plains around Ho Chi Minh City and the Mekong Delta ranging from between 21 and 35 C 70 and 95 F over the year 186 In Hanoi and the surrounding areas of the Red River Delta the temperatures are much lower between 15 and 33 C 59 and 91 F 186 Seasonal variations in the mountains plateaus and the northernmost areas are much more dramatic with temperatures varying from 3 C 37 F in December and January to 37 C 99 F in July and August 187 During winter snow occasionally falls over the highest peaks of the far northern mountains near the Chinese border 188 Vietnam receives high rates of precipitation in the form of rainfall with an average amount from 1 500 to 2 000 mm 60 to 80 in during the monsoon seasons this often causes flooding especially in the cities with poor drainage systems 189 The country is also affected by tropical depressions tropical storms and typhoons 189 Vietnam is one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change with 55 of its population living in low elevation coastal areas 190 191 Biodiversity Main articles Wildlife of Vietnam Environmental issues in Vietnam List of endangered species in Vietnam and Protected areas of Vietnam Native species in Vietnam clockwise from top right crested argus a peafowl red shanked douc Indochinese leopard and saolaAs the country is located within the Indomalayan realm Vietnam is one of twenty five countries considered to possess a uniquely high level of biodiversity This was noted in the country s National Environmental Condition Report in 2005 192 It is ranked 16th worldwide in biological diversity being home to approximately 16 of the world s species 15 986 species of flora have been identified in the country of which 10 are endemic Vietnam s fauna includes 307 nematode species 200 oligochaeta 145 acarina 113 springtails 7 750 insects 260 reptiles and 120 amphibians There are 840 birds and 310 mammals are found in Vietnam of which 100 birds and 78 mammals are endemic 192 Vietnam has two World Natural Heritage Sites the Hạ Long Bay and Phong Nha Kẻ Bang National Park together with nine biosphere reserves including Cần Giờ Mangrove Forest Cat Tien Cat Ba Kien Giang the Red River Delta Mekong Delta Western Nghệ An Ca Mau and Cu Lao Cham Marine Park 193 194 195 Vietnam is also home to 1 438 species of freshwater microalgae constituting 9 6 of all microalgae species as well as 794 aquatic invertebrates and 2 458 species of sea fish 192 In recent years 13 genera 222 species and 30 taxa of flora have been newly described in Vietnam 192 Six new mammal species including the saola giant muntjac and Tonkin snub nosed monkey have also been discovered along with one new bird species the endangered Edwards s pheasant 196 In the late 1980s a small population of Javan rhinoceros was found in Cat Tien National Park However the last individual of the species in Vietnam was reportedly shot in 2010 197 In agricultural genetic diversity Vietnam is one of the world s twelve original cultivar centres The Vietnam National Cultivar Gene Bank preserves 12 300 cultivars of 115 species 192 The Vietnamese government spent US 49 07 million on the preservation of biodiversity in 2004 alone and has established 126 conservation areas including 30 national parks 192 Sa Pa mountain hills with agricultural activitiesIn Vietnam wildlife poaching has become a major concern In 2000 a non governmental organisation NGO called Education for Nature Vietnam was founded to instill in the population the importance of wildlife conservation in the country 198 In the years that followed another NGO called GreenViet was formed by Vietnamese youngsters for the enforcement of wildlife protection Through collaboration between the NGOs and local authorities many local poaching syndicates were crippled by their leaders arrests 198 A study released in 2018 revealed Vietnam is a destination for the illegal export of rhinoceros horns from South Africa due to the demand for them as a medicine and a status symbol 199 200 The main environmental concern that persists in Vietnam today is the legacy of the use of the chemical herbicide Agent Orange which continues to cause birth defects and many health problems in the Vietnamese population In the southern and central areas affected most by the chemical s use during the Vietnam War nearly 4 8 million Vietnamese people have been exposed to it and suffered from its effects 201 202 203 In 2012 approximately 50 years after the war 204 the US began a US 43 million joint clean up project in the former chemical storage areas in Vietnam to take place in stages 202 205 Following the completion of the first phase in Đa Nẵng in late 2017 206 the US announced its commitment to clean other sites especially in the heavily impacted site of Bien Hoa 207 The Vietnamese government spends over VNĐ10 trillion each year 431 1 million for monthly allowances and the physical rehabilitation of victims of the chemicals 208 In 2018 the Japanese engineering group Shimizu Corporation working with Vietnamese military built a plant for the treatment of soil polluted by Agent Orange Plant construction costs were funded by the company itself 209 210 One of the long term plans to restore southern Vietnam s damaged ecosystems is through the use of reforestation efforts The Vietnamese government began doing this at the end of the war It started by replanting mangrove forests in the Mekong Delta regions and in Cần Giờ outside Hồ Chi Minh City where mangroves are important to ease though not eliminate flood conditions during monsoon seasons 211 The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5 35 10 ranking it 104th globally out of 172 countries 212 Apart from herbicide problems arsenic in the ground water in the Mekong and Red River Deltas has also become a major concern 213 214 And most notoriously unexploded ordnances UXO pose dangers to humans and wildlife another bitter legacy from the long wars 215 As part of the continuous campaign to demine remove UXOs several international bomb removal agencies from the United Kingdom 216 Denmark 217 South Korea 218 and the US 219 have been providing assistance The Vietnam government spends over VNĐ1 trillion 44 million annually on demining operations and additional hundreds of billions of đồng for treatment assistance rehabilitation vocational training and resettlement of the victims of UXOs 220 Panoramic view of Hạ Long BayGovernment and politicsMain articles Politics of Vietnam and Government of Vietnam Vietnam is a unitary Marxist Leninist one party socialist republic one of the two communist states the other being Laos in Southeast Asia 221 Although Vietnam remains officially committed to socialism as its defining creed its economic policies have grown increasingly capitalist 222 223 with The Economist characterising its leadership as ardently capitalist communists 224 Under the constitution the Communist Party of Vietnam CPV asserts their role in all branches of the country s politics and society 221 The president is the elected head of state and the commander in chief of the military serving as the chairman of the Council of Supreme Defence and Security and holds the second highest office in Vietnam as well as performing executive functions and state appointments and setting policy 221 The general secretary of the CPV performs numerous key administrative functions controlling the party s national organisation 221 The prime minister is the head of government presiding over a council of ministers composed of five deputy prime ministers and the heads of 26 ministries and commissions Only political organisations affiliated with or endorsed by the CPV are permitted to contest elections in Vietnam These include the Vietnamese Fatherland Front and worker and trade unionist parties 221 The National Assembly of Vietnam building in HanoiThe National Assembly of Vietnam is the unicameral state legislature composed of 500 members 225 Headed by a chairman it is superior to both the executive and judicial branches with all government ministers being appointed from members of the National Assembly 221 The Supreme People s Court of Vietnam headed by a chief justice is the country s highest court of appeal though it is also answerable to the National Assembly Beneath the Supreme People s Court stand the provincial municipal courts and many local courts Military courts possess special jurisdiction in matters of state security Vietnam maintains the death penalty for numerous offences 226 Foreign relations Main article Foreign relations of Vietnam President Trần Đại Quang with Russian President Vladimir Putin on 19 November 2016 US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson accompanies US President Donald Trump to a commercial deal signing ceremony with Vietnamese President on 12 November 2017 Throughout its history Vietnam s main foreign relationship has been with various Chinese dynasties 227 Following the partition of Vietnam in 1954 North Vietnam maintained relations with the Eastern Bloc South Vietnam maintained relations with the Western Bloc 227 Despite these differences Vietnam s sovereign principles and insistence on cultural independence have been laid down in numerous documents over the centuries before its independence These include the 11th century patriotic poem Nam quốc sơn ha and the 1428 proclamation of independence Binh Ngo đại cao Though China and Vietnam are now formally at peace 227 significant territorial tensions remain between the two countries over the South China Sea 228 Vietnam holds membership in 63 international organisations including the United Nations UN Association of Southeast Asian Nations ASEAN Non Aligned Movement NAM International Organisation of the Francophonie La Francophonie and World Trade Organization WTO It also maintains relations with over 650 non governmental organisations 229 As of 2010 Vietnam had established diplomatic relations with 178 countries 230 Vietnam s current foreign policy is to consistently implement a policy of independence self reliance peace co operation and development as well openness diversification multilateralisation with international relations 231 232 The country declares itself a friend and partner of all countries in the international community regardless of their political affiliation by actively taking part in international and regional cooperative development projects 160 231 Since the 1990s Vietnam has taken several key steps to restore diplomatic ties with capitalist Western countries It already had relations with communist Western countries in the decades prior 233 Relations with the United States began improving in August 1995 with both states upgrading their liaison offices to embassy status 234 As diplomatic ties between the two governments grew the United States opened a consulate general in Ho Chi Minh City while Vietnam opened its consulate in San Francisco Full diplomatic relations were also restored with New Zealand which opened its embassy in Hanoi in 1995 235 Vietnam established an embassy in Wellington in 2003 236 Pakistan also reopened its embassy in Hanoi in October 2000 with Vietnam reopening its embassy in Islamabad in December 2005 and trade office in Karachi in November 2005 237 238 In May 2016 US President Barack Obama further normalised relations with Vietnam after he announced the lifting of an arms embargo on sales of lethal arms to Vietnam 239 Despite their historical past today Vietnam is considered to be a potential ally of the United States especially in the geopolitical context of the territorial disputes in the South China Sea and in containment of Chinese expansionism 240 241 242 Military Main article Vietnam People s Armed Forces The Vietnam People s Armed Forces consists of the Vietnam People s Army VPA the Vietnam People s Public Security and the Vietnam Self Defence Militia The VPA is the official name for the active military services of Vietnam and is subdivided into the Vietnam People s Ground Forces the Vietnam People s Navy the Vietnam People s Air Force the Vietnam Border Guard and the Vietnam Coast Guard The VPA has an active manpower of around 450 000 but its total strength including paramilitary forces may be as high as 5 000 000 243 In 2015 Vietnam s military expenditure totalled approximately US 4 4 billion equivalent to around 8 of its total government spending 244 Joint military exercises and war games have been held with Brunei 245 India 246 Japan 247 Laos 248 Russia 249 Singapore 245 and the US 250 In 2017 Vietnam signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons 251 252 Human rights and sociopolitical issues See also Human rights in Vietnam Under the current constitution the CPV is the only party allowed to rule the operation of all other political parties being outlawed Other human rights issues concern freedom of association freedom of speech freedom of religion and freedom of the press In 2009 Vietnamese lawyer Le Cong Định was arrested and charged with the capital crime of subversion several of his associates were also arrested 253 254 Amnesty International described him and his arrested associates as prisoners of conscience 253 Vietnam has also suffered from human trafficking and related issues 255 256 257 Administrative divisionsMain article Subdivisions of Vietnam Vietnam is divided into 58 provinces Vietnamese Tỉnh chữ Han 省 258 There are also five municipalities thanh phố trực thuộc trung ương which are administratively on the same level as provinces 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 Provinces of VietnamIsland areas Bạch Long Vĩ Island Bạch Long Vĩ District Haiphong Municipality 3 Phu Quy Islands Phu Quy District Binh Thuận Province 46 Con Đảo Islands Con Đảo District Ba Rịa Vũng Tau Province 51 Phu Quốc Island Phu Quốc City Kien Giang Province 58 Thổ Chu Islands Thổ Chau Commune Phu Quốc City Kien Giang Province 58 Paracel Islands Hoang Sa District Đa Nẵng Municipality 4 Spratly Islands Trường Sa District Khanh Hoa Province 43 Northwest 6 Điện Bien 22 Hoa Binh 7 Lai Chau 8 Lao Cai 16 Sơn La 12 Yen Bai Northeast 20 Bắc Giang 14 Bắc Kạn 10 Cao Bằng 9 Ha Giang 11 Lạng Sơn 17 Phu Thọ 21 Quảng Ninh 15 Thai Nguyen 13 Tuyen Quang Red River Delta 1 Ha Nội municipality 3 Hải Phong municipality 19 Bắc Ninh 26 Ha Nam 24 Hải Dương 23 Hưng Yen 27 Nam Định 28 Ninh Binh 25 Thai Binh 18 Vĩnh PhucNorth Central Coast 31 Ha Tĩnh 30 Nghệ An 32 Quảng Binh 33 Quảng Trị 29 Thanh Hoa 34 Thừa Thien Huế Central Highlands 41 Đắk Lắk 42 Đắk Nong 38 Gia Lai 37 Kon Tum 44 Lam Đồng South Central Coast 4 Đa Nẵng municipality 39 Binh Định 46 Binh Thuận 43 Khanh Hoa 45 Ninh Thuận 40 Phu Yen 35 Quảng Nam 36 Quảng NgaiSoutheast 2 Hồ Chi Minh City municipality 51 Ba Rịa Vũng Tau 49 Binh Dương 47 Binh Phước 50 Đồng Nai 48 Tay Ninh Mekong Delta 5 Cần Thơ municipality 56 An Giang 62 Bạc Lieu 55 Bến Tre 63 Ca Mau 53 Đồng Thap 59 Hậu Giang 58 Kien Giang 52 Long An 61 Soc Trăng 54 Tiền Giang 60 Tra Vinh 57 Vĩnh Long A Communist Party poster in HanoiProvinces are subdivided into provincial municipalities thanh phố trực thuộc tỉnh city under province townships thị xa and counties huyện which are in turn subdivided into towns thị trấn or communes xa Centrally controlled municipalities are subdivided into districts quận and counties which are further subdivided into wards phường EconomyMain article Economy of Vietnam Historical GDP per capita development of VietnamShare of world GDP PPP 6 Year Share1980 0 21 1990 0 28 2000 0 39 2010 0 52 2020 0 80 Tree map showing Vietnam s exportsThroughout the history of Vietnam its economy has been based largely on agriculture primarily wet rice cultivation 259 Bauxite an important material in the production of aluminium is mined in central Vietnam 260 Since reunification the country s economy is shaped primarily by the CPV through Five Year Plans decided upon at the plenary sessions of the Central Committee and national congresses 261 The collectivisation of farms factories and capital goods was carried out as part of the establishment of central planning with millions of people working for state enterprises Under strict state control Vietnam s economy continued to be plagued by inefficiency corruption in state owned enterprises poor quality and underproduction 262 263 264 With the decline in economic aid from its main trading partner the Soviet Union following the erosion of the Eastern bloc in the late 1980s and the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union as well as the negative impacts of the post war trade embargo imposed by the United States 265 266 Vietnam began to liberalise its trade by devaluing its exchange rate to increase exports and embarked on a policy of economic development 267 Vietnam s tallest skyscraper the Landmark 81 located in Binh Thạnh Ho Chi Minh City Saigon In 1986 the Sixth National Congress of the CPV introduced socialist oriented market economic reforms as part of the Đổi Mới reform program Private ownership began to be encouraged in industry commerce and agriculture and state enterprises were restructured to operate under market constraints 268 269 This led to the five year economic plans being replaced by the socialist oriented market mechanism 270 As a result of these reforms Vietnam achieved approximately 8 annual gross domestic product GDP growth between 1990 and 1997 271 272 The United States ended its economic embargo against Vietnam in early 1994 273 Although the 1997 Asian financial crisis caused an economic slowdown to 4 5 growth per year its economy began to recover in 1999 268 and grew at around 7 per year from 2000 to 2005 one of the fastest in the world 274 275 According to the General Statistics Office of Vietnam GSO growth remained strong despite the late 2000s global recession holding at 6 8 in 2010 Vietnam s year on year inflation rate reached 11 8 in December 2010 and the currency the Vietnamese đồng was devalued three times 276 277 Deep poverty defined as the percentage of the population living on less than 1 per day has declined significantly in Vietnam and the relative poverty rate is now less than that of China India and the Philippines 278 This decline can be attributed to equitable economic policies aimed at improving living standards and preventing the rise of inequality 279 These policies have included egalitarian land distribution during the initial stages of the Đổi Mới program investment in poorer remote areas and subsidising of education and healthcare 280 281 Since the early 2000s Vietnam has applied sequenced trade liberalisation a two track approach opening some sectors of the economy to international markets 279 282 Manufacturing information technology and high tech industries now form a large and fast growing part of the national economy Although Vietnam is a relative newcomer to the oil industry it is the third largest oil producer in Southeast Asia with a total 2011 output of 318 000 barrels per day 50 600 m3 d 283 In 2010 Vietnam was ranked as the eighth largest crude petroleum producer in the Asia and Pacific region 284 The US bought the highest amount of Vietnam s exports 285 while goods from China were the most popular Vietnamese import 286 Based on findings by the International Monetary Fund IMF in 2022 the unemployment rate in Vietnam was 2 3 the nominal GDP US 406 452 billion and a nominal GDP per capita 4 086 6 287 Besides the primary sector economy tourism has contributed significantly to Vietnam s economic growth with 7 94 million foreign visitors recorded in 2015 288 Agriculture Terraced rice fields in Sa PaAs a result of several land reform measures Vietnam has become a major exporter of agricultural products It is now the world s largest producer of cashew nuts with a one third global share 289 the largest producer of black pepper accounting for one third of the world s market 290 and the second largest rice exporter in the world after Thailand since the 1990s 291 Subsequently Vietnam is also the world s second largest exporter of coffee 292 The country has the highest proportion of land use for permanent crops together with other states in the Greater Mekong Subregion 293 Other primary exports include tea rubber and fishery products Agriculture s share of Vietnam s GDP has fallen in recent decades declining from 42 in 1989 to 20 in 2006 as production in other sectors of the economy has risen Seafood The overall fisheries production of Vietnam from capture fisheries and aquaculture was 5 6 million MT in 2011 and 6 7 million MT in 2016 The output of Vietnam s fisheries sector has seen strong growth which could be attributed to the continued expansion of the aquaculture sub sector 294 Science and technology Main article Science and technology in Vietnam A Vietnamese made TOPIO 3 0 humanoid ping pong playing robot displayed during the 2009 International Robot Exhibition IREX in Tokyo 295 296 In 2010 Vietnam s total state spending on science and technology amounted to roughly 0 45 of its GDP 297 Vietnamese scientists have made many significant contributions in various fields of study most notably in mathematics Hoang Tụy pioneered the applied mathematics field of global optimisation in the 20th century 298 while Ngo Bảo Chau won the 2010 Fields Medal for his proof of fundamental lemma in the theory of automorphic forms 299 300 Since the establishment of the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology VAST by the government in 1975 the country is working to develop its first national space flight program especially after the completion of the infrastructure at the Vietnam Space Centre VSC in 2018 301 302 Vietnam has also made significant advances in the development of robots such as the TOPIO humanoid model 295 296 One of Vietnam s main messaging apps Zalo was developed by Vương Quang Khải a Vietnamese hacker who later worked with the country s largest information technology service company the FPT Group 303 Vietnamese science students working on an experiment in their university labAccording to the UNESCO Institute for Statistics Vietnam devoted 0 19 of its GDP to science research and development in 2011 304 Vietnam was ranked 44th in the Global Innovation Index in 2021 it has increased its ranking considerably since 2012 where it was ranked 76th 305 306 307 308 Between 2005 and 2014 the number of Vietnamese scientific publications recorded in Thomson Reuters Web of Science increased at a rate well above the average for Southeast Asia albeit from a modest starting point 309 Publications focus mainly on life sciences 22 physics 13 and engineering 13 which is consistent with recent advances in the production of diagnostic equipment and shipbuilding 309 Tourism Main article Tourism in Vietnam Hội An a UNESCO World Heritage Site is a major tourist destination Tourism is an important element of economic activity in the nation contributing 7 5 of the total GDP Vietnam hosted roughly 13 million tourists in 2017 an increase of 29 1 over the previous year making it one of the fastest growing tourist destinations in the world The vast majority of the tourists in the country some 9 7 million came from Asia namely China 4 million South Korea 2 6 million and Japan 798 119 310 Vietnam also attracts large numbers of visitors from Europe with almost 1 9 million visitors in 2017 most European visitors came from Russia 574 164 followed by the United Kingdom 283 537 France 255 396 and Germany 199 872 Other significant international arrivals by nationality include the United States 614 117 and Australia 370 438 310 The most visited destinations in Vietnam is the largest city Ho Chi Minh City with over 5 8 million international arrivals followed by Hanoi with 4 6 million and Hạ Long including Hạ Long Bay with 4 4 million arrivals All three are ranked in the top 100 most visited cities in the world 311 Vietnam is home to eight UNESCO World Heritage Sites In 2018 Travel Leisure ranked Hội An as one of the world s top 15 best destinations to visit 312 InfrastructureTransport Main articles Transport in Vietnam Rail transport in Vietnam and List of airports in Vietnam Much of Vietnam s modern transportation network can trace its roots to the French colonial era when it was used to facilitate the transportation of raw materials to its main ports It was extensively expanded and modernised following the partition of Vietnam 313 Vietnam s road system includes national roads administered at the central level provincial roads managed at the provincial level district roads managed at the district level urban roads managed by cities and towns and commune roads managed at the commune level 314 In 2010 Vietnam s road system had a total length of about 188 744 kilometres 117 280 mi of which 93 535 kilometres 58 120 mi are asphalt roads comprising national provincial and district roads 314 The length of the national road system is about 15 370 kilometres 9 550 mi with 15 085 kilometres 9 373 mi of its length paved The provincial road system has around 27 976 kilometres 17 383 mi of paved roads while 50 474 kilometres 31 363 mi district roads are paved 314 HCMC LT DG section of the North South Expressway Tan Son Nhat International Airport is the busiest airport in the country Bicycles motorcycles and motor scooters remain the most popular forms of road transport in the country a legacy of the French though the number of privately owned cars has been increasing in recent years 315 Public buses operated by private companies are the main mode of long distance travel for much of the population Road accidents remain the major safety issue of Vietnamese transportation with an average of 30 people losing their lives daily 316 Traffic congestion is a growing problem in both Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City especially with the growth of individual car ownership 317 318 Vietnam s primary cross country rail service is the Reunification Express from Ho Chi Minh City to Hanoi a distance of nearly 1 726 kilometres 1 072 mi 319 From Hanoi railway lines branch out to the northeast north and west the eastbound line runs from Hanoi to Hạ Long Bay the northbound line from Hanoi to Thai Nguyen and the northeast line from Hanoi to Lao Cai In 2009 Vietnam and Japan signed a deal to build a high speed railway shinkansen bullet train using Japanese technology 320 Vietnamese engineers were sent to Japan to receive training in the operation and maintenance of high speed trains 321 The planned railway will be a 1 545 kilometres 960 mi long express route serving a total of 23 stations including Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City with 70 of its route running on bridges and through tunnels 322 323 The trains will travel at a maximum speed of 350 kilometres 220 mi per hour 323 324 Plans for the high speed rail line however have been postponed after the Vietnamese government decided to prioritise the development of both the Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City metros and expand road networks instead 319 325 326 The port of Hai Phong is one of the largest and busiest container ports in Vietnam Vietnam operates 20 major civil airports including three international gateways Noi Bai in Hanoi Da Nang International Airport in Đa Nẵng and Tan Son Nhat in Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat is the country s largest airport handling the majority of international passenger traffic 327 According to a government approved plan Vietnam will have another seven international airports by 2025 including Vinh International Airport Phu Bai International Airport Cam Ranh International Airport Phu Quoc International Airport Cat Bi International Airport Can Tho International Airport and Long Thanh International Airport The planned Long Thanh International Airport will have an annual service capacity of 100 million passengers once it becomes fully operational in 2025 328 Vietnam Airlines the state owned national airline maintains a fleet of 86 passenger aircraft and aims to operate 170 by 2020 329 Several private airlines also operate in Vietnam including Air Mekong Bamboo Airways Jetstar Pacific Airlines VASCO and VietJet Air As a coastal country Vietnam has many major sea ports including Cam Ranh Đa Nẵng Hải Phong Ho Chi Minh City Hạ Long Qui Nhơn Vũng Tau Cửa Lo and Nha Trang Further inland the country s extensive network of rivers plays a key role in rural transportation with over 47 130 kilometres 29 290 mi of navigable waterways carrying ferries barges and water taxis 330 Energy Main articles Energy in Vietnam and List of power stations in Vietnam Sơn La Dam in northern Vietnam the largest hydroelectric dam in Southeast Asia 331 Vietnam s energy sector is dominated largely by the state controlled Vietnam Electricity Group EVN As of 2017 EVN made up about 61 4 of the country s power generation system with a total power capacity of 25 884 MW 332 Other energy sources are PetroVietnam 4 435 MW Vinacomin 1 785 MW and 10 031 MW from build operate transfer BOT investors 333 Most of Vietnam s power is generated by either hydropower or fossil fuel power such as coal oil and gas while diesel small hydropower and renewable energy supplies the remainder 333 The Vietnamese government had planned to develop a nuclear reactor as the path to establish another source for electricity from nuclear power The plan was abandoned in late 2016 when a majority of the National Assembly voted to oppose the project due to widespread public concern over radioactive contamination 334 The household gas sector in Vietnam is dominated by PetroVietnam which controls nearly 70 of the country s domestic market for liquefied petroleum gas LPG 335 Since 2011 the company also operates five renewable energy power plants including the Nhơn Trạch 2 Thermal Power Plant 750 MW Phu Quy Wind Power Plant 6 MW Hủa Na Hydro power Plant 180 MW Dakdrinh Hydro power Plant 125 MW and Vũng Ang 1 Thermal Power Plant 1 200 MW 336 According to statistics from British Petroleum BP Vietnam is listed among the 52 countries that have proven crude oil reserves In 2015 the reserve was approximately 4 4 billion barrels ranking Vietnam first place in Southeast Asia while the proven gas reserves were about 0 6 trillion cubic metres tcm and ranking it third in Southeast Asia after Indonesia and Malaysia 337 Telecommunication Main article Telecommunications in Vietnam Telecommunications services in Vietnam are wholly provided by the Vietnam Post and Telecommunications General Corporation now the VNPT Group which is a state owned company 338 The VNPT retained its monopoly until 1986 The telecom sector was reformed in 1995 when the Vietnamese government began to implement a competitive policy with the creation of two domestic telecommunication companies the Military Electronic and Telecommunication Company Viettel which is wholly owned by the Vietnamese Ministry of Defence and the Saigon Post and Telecommunication Company SPT or SaigonPostel with 18 of it owned by VNPT 338 VNPT s monopoly was finally ended by the government in 2003 with the issuance of a decree 339 By 2012 the top three telecom operators in Vietnam were Viettel Vinaphone and MobiFone The remaining companies included EVNTelecom Vietnammobile and S Fone 340 With the shift towards a more market orientated economy Vietnam s telecommunications market is continuously being reformed to attract foreign investment which includes the supply of services and the establishment of nationwide telecom infrastructure 341 Water supply and sanitation Main article Water supply and sanitation in Vietnam In rural areas of Vietnam piped water systems are operated by a wide variety of institutions including a national organisation people committees local government community groups co operatives and private companies Vietnam has 2 360 rivers with an average annual discharge of 310 billion m The rainy season accounts for 70 of the year s discharge 342 Most of the country s urban water supply systems have been developed without proper management within the last 10 years Based on a 2008 survey by the Vietnam Water Supply and Sewerage Association VWSA existing water production capacity exceeded demand but service coverage is still sparse Most of the clean water supply infrastructure is not widely developed It is only available to a small proportion of the population with about one third of 727 district towns having some form of piped water supply 343 There is also concern over the safety of existing water resources for urban and rural water supply systems Most industrial factories release their untreated wastewater directly into the water sources Where the government does not take measures to address the issue most domestic wastewater is discharged untreated back into the environment and pollutes the surface water 343 In recent years there have been some efforts and collaboration between local and foreign universities to develop access to safe water in the country by introducing water filtration systems There is a growing concern among local populations over the serious public health issues associated with water contamination caused by pollution as well as the high levels of arsenic in groundwater sources 344 The government of Netherlands has been providing aid focusing its investments mainly on water related sectors including water treatment projects 345 346 347 Regarding sanitation 78 of Vietnam s population has access to improved sanitation 94 of the urban population and 70 of the rural population However there are still about 21 million people in the country lacking access to improved sanitation according to a survey conducted in 2015 348 In 2018 the construction ministry said the country s water supply and drainage industry had been applying hi tech methods and information technology IT to sanitation issues but faced problems like limited funding climate change and pollution 349 The health ministry has also announced that water inspection units will be established nationwide beginning in June 2019 Inspections are to be conducted without notice since there have been many cases involving health issues caused by poor or polluted water supplies as well unhygienic conditions reported every year 350 Health Main article Health in Vietnam Development of life expectancy in Vietnam since 1950By 2015 97 of the population had access to improved water sources 351 In 2016 Vietnam s national life expectancy stood at 80 9 years for women and 71 5 for men and the infant mortality rate was 17 per 1 000 live births 352 353 354 Since the partition North Vietnam has established a public health system that has reached down to the hamlet level 355 After the national reunification in 1975 a nationwide health service was established 164 In the late 1980s the quality of healthcare declined to some degree as a result of budgetary constraints a shift of responsibility to the provinces and the introduction of charges 280 Inadequate funding has also contributed to a shortage of nurses midwives and hospital beds in 2000 Vietnam had only 24 7 hospital beds per 10 000 people before declining to 23 7 in 2005 as stated in the annual report of Vietnamese Health Ministry 356 The controversial use of herbicides as a chemical weapon by the US military during the war left tangible long term impacts upon the Vietnamese people that persist in the country today 357 358 For instance it led to three million Vietnamese people suffering health problems one million birth defects caused directly by exposure to the chemical and 24 of Vietnam s land being defoliated 359 Since the early 2000s Vietnam has made significant progress in combating malaria The malaria mortality rate fell to about five per cent of its 1990s equivalent by 2005 after the country introduced improved antimalarial drugs and treatment 360 Tuberculosis TB cases however are on the rise TB has become the second most infectious disease in the country after respiratory related illness 361 With an intensified vaccination program better hygiene and foreign assistance Vietnam hopes to reduce sharply the number of TB cases and new TB infections 362 In 2004 government subsidies covering about 15 of health care expenses 363 That year the United States announced Vietnam would be one of 15 states to receive funding as part of its global AIDS relief plan 364 By the following year Vietnam had diagnosed 101 291 human immunodeficiency virus HIV cases of which 16 528 progressed to acquired immune deficiency syndrome AIDS 9 554 have died 365 The actual number of HIV positive individuals is estimated to be much higher On average between 40 and 50 new infections are reported daily in the country In 2007 0 4 of the population was estimated to be infected with HIV and the figure has remained stable since 2005 366 More global aid is being delivered through The Global Fund to Fight AIDS Tuberculosis and Malaria to fight the spread of the disease in the country 362 In September 2018 the Hanoi People s Committee urged the citizens of the country to stop eating dog and cat meat as it can cause diseases like rabies and leptospirosis More than 1 000 stores in the capital city of Hanoi were found to be selling both meats The decision prompted positive comments among Vietnamese on social media though some noted that the consumption of dog meat will remain an ingrained habit among many people 367 Education Main article Education in Vietnam Vietnam has an extensive state controlled network of schools colleges and universities and a growing number of privately run and partially privatised institutions General education in Vietnam is divided into five categories kindergarten elementary schools middle schools high schools and universities A large number of public schools have been constructed across the country to raise the national literacy rate which stood at 90 in 2008 368 Most universities are located in major cities of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City with the country s education system continuously undergoing a series of reforms by the government Basic education in the country is relatively free for the poor although some families may still have trouble paying tuition fees for their children without some form of public or private assistance 369 Regardless Vietnam s school enrolment is among the highest in the world 370 371 The number of colleges and universities increased dramatically in the 2000s from 178 in 2000 to 299 in 2005 In higher education the government provides subsidised loans for students through the national bank although there are deep concerns about access to the loans as well the burden on students to repay them 372 373 Since 1995 enrolment in higher education has grown tenfold to over 2 2 million with 84 000 lecturers and 419 institutions of higher education 374 A number of foreign universities operate private campuses in Vietnam including Harvard University United States and the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Australia The government s strong commitment to education has fostered significant growth but still need to be sustained to retain academics In 2018 a decree on university autonomy allowing them to operate independently without ministerial control is in its final stages of approval The government will continue investing in education especially for the poor to have access to basic education 375 DemographicsMain articles Demographics of Vietnam Vietnamese people and Ethnic groups in Vietnam Vietnam population pyramid in 2019Ethnic groups of Vietnam 376 Vietnamese 85 32 Other 14 68 As of 2021 update the population of Vietnam stands at approximately 97 5 million people 377 The population had grown significantly from the 1979 census which showed the total population of reunified Vietnam to be 52 7 million 378 According to the 2019 census the country s population was 96 208 984 2 Based on the 2019 census 65 6 of the Vietnamese population live in rural areas while only 34 4 live in urban areas The average growth rate of the urban population has recently increased which is attributed mainly to migration and rapid urbanisation 2 The dominant Viet or Kinh ethnic group constitute 82 085 826 people or 85 32 of the population 2 Most of their population is concentrated in the country s alluvial deltas and coastal plains As a majority ethnic group the Kinh possess significant political and economic influence over the country 376 Despite this Vietnam is also home to various ethnic groups of which 54 are officially recognised including the Hmong Dao Tay Thai and Nung 379 Many ethnic minorities such as the Muong who are closely related to the Kinh dwell in the highlands which cover two thirds of Vietnam s territory 380 Since the partition of Vietnam the population of the Central Highlands was almost exclusively Degar including more than 40 tribal groups however the South Vietnamese government at the time enacted a program of resettling Kinh in indigenous areas 381 382 The Hoa ethnic Chinese and Khmer Krom people are mainly lowlanders 376 383 Throughout Vietnam s history many Chinese people largely from South China migrated to the country as administrators merchants and even refugees 384 Since the reunification in 1976 an increase of communist policies nationwide resulted in the nationalisation and confiscation of property especially from the Hoa in the south and the wealthy in cities This led many of them to leave Vietnam 385 386 Urbanisation See also List of cities in Vietnam District 1 Ho Chi Minh CityThe number of people who live in urbanised areas in 2019 is 33 122 548 people with the urbanisation rate at 34 4 2 Since 1986 Vietnam s urbanisation rates have surged rapidly after the Vietnamese government implemented the Đổi Mới economic program changing the system into a socialist one and liberalising property rights As a result Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City the two major cities in the Red River Delta and Southeast regions respectively increased their share of the total urban population from 8 5 and 24 9 to 15 9 and 31 respectively 387 The Vietnamese government through its construction ministry forecasts the country will have a 45 urbanisation rate by 2020 although it was confirmed to only be 34 4 according to the 2019 census 2 Urbanisation is said to have a positive correlation with economic growth Any country with higher urbanisation rates has a higher GDP growth rate 388 Furthermore the urbanisation movement in Vietnam is mainly between the rural areas and the country s Southeast region Ho Chi Minh City has received a large number of migrants due mainly to better weather and economic opportunities 389 Urbanisation in west HanoiA study also shows that rural to urban area migrants have a higher standard of living than both non migrants in rural areas and non migrants in urban areas This results in changes to economic structures In 1985 agriculture made up 37 2 of Vietnam s GDP in 2008 that number had declined to 18 5 390 In 1985 industry made up only 26 2 of Vietnam s GDP by 2008 that number had increased to 43 2 Urbanisation also helps to improve basic services which increase people s standards of living Access to electricity grew from 14 of total households with electricity in 1993 to above 96 in 2009 390 In terms of access to fresh water data from 65 utility companies shows that only 12 of households in the area covered by them had access to the water network in 2002 by 2007 more than 70 of the population was connected Though urbanisation has many benefits it has some drawbacks since it creates more traffic and air and water pollution 390 Many Vietnamese use mopeds for transportation since they are relatively cheap and easy to operate Their large numbers have been known to cause traffic congestion and air pollution in Vietnam In the capital city alone the number of mopeds increased from 0 5 million in 2001 to 4 7 million in 2013 390 With rapid development factories have sprung up which indirectly pollute the air and water for example in the 2016 Vietnam marine life disaster 391 The government is intervening and attempting solutions to decrease air pollution by decreasing the number of motorcycles while increasing public transportation It has introduced more regulations for waste handling The amount of solid waste generated in urban areas of Vietnam has increased by more than 200 from 2003 to 2008 Industrial solid waste accounted for 181 of that increase One of the government s efforts includes attempting to promote campaigns that encourage locals to sort household waste since waste sorting is still not practised by most of Vietnamese society 392 vte Largest cities and municipalities in Vietnam Source 2019 Vietnamese census 393 National Assembly note 1 Rank Name Province Pop Rank Name Province Pop Ho Chi Minh City Hanoi 1 Ho Chi Minh City Municipality 8 993 082 11 Tan Uyen Binh Dương 466 053 Haiphong Cần Thơ2 Hanoi Municipality 8 053 663 12 Nha Trang Khanh Hoa 422 6013 Haiphong Municipality 2 028 514 13 Dĩ An Binh Dương 403 7604 Cần Thơ Municipality 1 235 171 14 Buon Ma Thuột Đắk Lắk 375 5905 Da Nang Municipality 1 134 310 15 Thanh Hoa Thanh Hoa 359 9106 Bien Hoa Đồng Nai 1 055 414 16 Vũng Tau Ba Rịa Vũng Tau 357 1247 Thủ Đức Ho Chi Minh City 1 013 795 17 Thai Nguyen Thai Nguyen 340 4038 Huế Thừa Thien Huế 652 572 18 Vinh Nghệ An 339 1149 Thuận An Binh Dương 508 433 19 Thủ Dầu Một Binh Dương 321 60710 Hải Dương Hải Dương 508 190 20 Hạ Long Quảng Ninh 300 267 Some cities were established or expanded after the 2019 census was conducted including Thủ Đức 394 Huế 395 Thuận An 396 Hải Dương 397 Dĩ An 396 and Hạ Long 398 Religion Main article Religion in Vietnam Religion in Vietnam 2019 2 Vietnamese folk religion or no religion 86 32 Buddhism 4 79 Catholicism 6 1 Protestantism 1 0 Hoahaoism 1 02 Caodaism 0 58 Islam 0 07 Others 0 12 Under Article 70 of the 1992 Constitution of Vietnam all citizens enjoy freedom of belief and religion 399 All religions are equal before the law and each place of worship is protected under Vietnamese state law Religious beliefs cannot be misused to undermine state law and policies 399 400 According to a 2007 survey 81 of Vietnamese people did not believe in a god 401 Based on government findings in 2009 the number of religious people increased by 932 000 402 The official statistics presented by the Vietnamese government to the United Nations special rapporteur in 2014 indicate the overall number of followers of recognised religions is about 24 million of a total population of almost 90 million 403 According to the General Statistics Office of Vietnam in 2019 Buddhists account for 4 79 of the total population Catholics 6 1 Protestants 1 0 Hoahao Buddhists 1 02 and Caodaism followers 0 58 2 Other religions includes Islam Bahaʼis and Hinduism representing less than 0 2 of the population The majority of Vietnamese do not follow any organised religion though many of them observe some form of Vietnamese folk religion Confucianism as a system of social and ethical philosophy still has certain influences in modern Vietnam Mahayana is the dominant branch of Buddhism while Theravada is practised mostly by the Khmer minority About 8 to 9 of the population is Christian made up of Roman Catholics and Protestants Catholicism was introduced to Vietnam in the 16th century and was firmly established by Jesuits missionaries mainly Portuguese and Italian in the 17th centuries from nearby Portuguese Macau 68 French missionaries from the Paris Foreign Missions Society together with Spanish missionaries from the Dominican Order of the neighbouring Spanish East Indies actively sought converts in the 18th 19th and first half of the 20th century 404 405 406 A significant number of Vietnamese people especially in the South are also adherents of two indigenous religions of syncretic Caodaism and quasi Buddhist Hoahaoism 407 Protestantism was only recently spread by American and Canadian missionaries in the 20th century 408 the largest Protestant denomination is the Evangelical Church of Vietnam Around 770 000 of the country s Protestants are members of ethnic minorities 408 particularly the highland Montagnards 409 and Hmong people Although it is one of the country s minority religions Protestantism is the fastest growing religion in Vietnam expanding at a rate of 600 in recent decades 408 410 Several other minority faiths exist in Vietnam these include Bani Sunni and non denominational sections of Islam which is practised primarily among the ethnic Cham minority 411 There are also a few Kinh adherents of Islam other minority adherents of Baha i as well as Hindus among the Cham s 412 413 Languages The national language of the country is Vietnamese a tonal Austroasiatic language Mon Khmer which is spoken by the majority of the population Vietnam s minority groups speak a variety of languages including Tay Mường Cham Khmer Chinese Nung and Hmong The Montagnard peoples of the Central Highlands also speak a number of distinct languages some belonging to the Austroasiatic and others to the Malayo Polynesian language families 414 In recent years a number of sign languages have developed in the major cities Vietnamese calligraphy in Latin alphabetThe French language a legacy of colonial rule is spoken by many educated Vietnamese as a second language especially among the older generation and those educated in the former South Vietnam where it was a principal language in administration education and commerce Vietnam remains a full member of the International Organisation of the Francophonie La Francophonie and education has revived some interest in the language 415 Russian and to a lesser extent German Czech and Polish are known among some northern Vietnamese whose families had ties with the Eastern Bloc during the Cold War 416 With improved relations with Western countries and recent reforms in Vietnamese administration English has been increasingly used as a second language and the study of English is now obligatory in most schools either alongside or in place of French 417 418 The popularity of Japanese Korean and Mandarin Chinese have also grown as the country s ties with other East Asian nations have strengthened 419 420 421 Third graders can choose one of seven languages English Russian French Chinese Japanese Korean German as their first foreign language 422 423 424 In Vietnam s high school graduation examinations students can take their foreign language exam in one of the above mentioned languages 425 CultureMain article Culture of Vietnam The Temple of Literature in Hanoi The Imperial City of Huế The Municipal Theatre Saigon Opera House in Ho Chi Minh City Vietnamese culture is considered part of Sinosphere Vietnam s culture has developed over the centuries from indigenous ancient Đong Sơn culture with wet rice cultivation as its economic base 33 36 Some elements of the nation s culture have Chinese origins drawing on elements of Confucianism Mahayana Buddhism and Taoism in its traditional political system and philosophy 426 427 Vietnamese society is structured around lang ancestral villages 428 all Vietnamese mark a common ancestral anniversary on the tenth day of the third lunar month 429 430 The influence of Chinese culture such as the Cantonese Hakka Hokkien and Hainanese cultures is more evident in the north where Buddhism is strongly entwined with popular culture 431 Despite this there are Chinatowns in the south such as in Chợ Lớn where many Chinese have intermarried with Kinh and are indistinguishable among them 432 In the central and southern parts of Vietnam traces of Champa and Khmer culture are evidenced through the remains of ruins artefacts as well within their population as the successor of the ancient Sa Huỳnh culture 433 434 In recent centuries Western cultures have become popular among recent generations of Vietnamese 427 Vietnamese traditional white school uniform for girls in the country the ao dai with the addition of non la a conical hatThe traditional focuses of Vietnamese culture are based on humanity nhan nghĩa and harmony hoa in which family and community values are highly regarded 431 Vietnam reveres a number of key cultural symbols 435 such as the Vietnamese dragon which is derived from crocodile and snake imagery Vietnam s national father Lạc Long Quan is depicted as a holy dragon 429 436 437 The lạc is a holy bird representing Vietnam s national mother Au Cơ Other prominent images that are also revered are the turtle buffalo and horse 438 Many Vietnamese also believe in the supernatural and spiritualism where illness can be brought on by a curse or sorcery or caused by non observance of a religious ethic Traditional medical practitioners amulets and other forms of spiritual protection and religious practices may be employed to treat the ill person 439 In the modern era the cultural life of Vietnam has been deeply influenced by government controlled media and cultural programs 427 For many decades foreign cultural influences especially those of Western origin were shunned But since the recent reformation Vietnam has seen a greater exposure to neighbouring Southeast Asian East Asian as well to Western culture and media 440 The main Vietnamese formal dress the ao dai is worn for special occasions such as weddings and religious festivals White ao dai is the required uniform for girls in many high schools across the country Other examples of traditional Vietnamese clothing include the ao tứ than a four piece woman s dress the ao ngũ a form of the than in five piece form mostly worn in the north of the country the yếm a woman s undergarment the ao ba ba rural working pyjamas for men and women the ao gấm a formal brocade tunic for government receptions and the ao the a variant of the ao gấm worn by grooms at weddings 441 442 Traditional headwear includes the standard conical non la and the lampshade like non quai thao 442 443 In tourism a number of popular cultural tourist destinations include the former Imperial City of Huế the World Heritage Sites of Phong Nha Kẻ Bang National Park Hội An and Mỹ Sơn coastal regions such as Nha Trang the caves of Hạ Long Bay and the Marble Mountains 444 445 Literature Main articles Vietnamese literature Vietnamese poetry and Vietnamese fairy tales Vietnamese dragon on Emperor Khải Định s c 1917 scroll in British Library collectionVietnamese literature has centuries deep history and the country has a rich tradition of folk literature based on the typical six to eight verse poetic form called ca dao which usually focuses on village ancestors and heroes 446 Written literature has been found dating back to the 10th century Ngo dynasty with notable ancient authors including Nguyễn Trai Trần Hưng Đạo Nguyễn Du and Nguyễn Đinh Chiểu Some literary genres play an important role in theatrical performance such as hat noi in ca tru 447 Some poetic unions have also been formed in Vietnam such as the tao đan Vietnamese literature has been influenced by Western styles in recent times with the first literary transformation movement of thơ mới emerging in 1932 448 Vietnamese folk literature is an intermingling of many forms It is not only an oral tradition but a mixing of three media hidden only retained in the memory of folk authors fixed written and shown performed Folk literature usually exists in many versions passed down orally and has unknown authors Myths consist of stories about supernatural beings heroes creator gods and reflect the viewpoint of ancient people about human life 449 They consist of creation stories stories about their origins Lạc Long Quan and Au Cơ culture heroes Sơn Tinh and Thủy Tinh which are referred to as a mountain and water spirit respectively and many other folklore tales 432 450 Music Main article Music of Vietnam Ca tru trio performance in northern VietnamTraditional Vietnamese music varies between the country s northern and southern regions 451 Northern classical music is Vietnam s oldest musical form and is traditionally more formal The origins of Vietnamese classical music can be traced to the Mongol invasions in the 13th century when the Vietnamese captured a Chinese opera troupe 452 Throughout its history Vietnam has been the most heavily impacted by the Chinese musical tradition along with those of Japan Korea and Mongolia 453 Nha nhạc is the most popular form of imperial court music Cheo is a form of generally satirical musical theatre while Xẩm or hat xẩm xẩm singing is a type of Vietnamese folk music Quan họ alternate singing is popular in the former Ha Bắc Province which is now divided into Bắc Ninh and Bắc Giang Provinces and across Vietnam Another form of music called Hat chầu văn or hat văn is used to invoke spirits during ceremonies Nhạc dan tộc cải bien is a modern form of Vietnamese folk music which arose in the 1950s while ca tru also known as hat ả đao is a popular folk music Ho can be thought of as the southern style of Quan họ There is a range of traditional instruments including the đan bầu a monochord zither the đan gao a two stringed fiddle with coconut body and the đan nguyệt a two stringed fretted moon lute In recent times there have been some efforts at mixing Vietnamese traditional music especially folk music with modern music to revive and promote national music in the modern context and educate the younger generations about Vietnam s traditional musical instruments and singing styles 454 Bolero music has gained popularity in the country since the 1930s albeit with a different style a combination of traditional Vietnamese music with Western elements 455 In the 21st century the modern Vietnamese pop music industry known as V pop incorporates elements of many popular genres worldwide such as electronic dance and R amp B 456 457 Cuisine Main article Vietnamese cuisine Some of the notable Vietnamese cuisine clockwise from top right phở noodle che thai fruit dessert chả gio spring roll and banh mi sandwichTraditionally Vietnamese cuisine is based around five fundamental taste elements Vietnamese ngũ vị spicy metal sour wood bitter fire salty water and sweet earth 458 Common ingredients include fish sauce shrimp paste soy sauce rice fresh herbs fruits and vegetables Vietnamese recipes use lemongrass ginger mint Vietnamese mint long coriander Saigon cinnamon bird s eye chilli lime and basil leaves 459 Traditional Vietnamese cooking is known for its fresh ingredients minimal use of oil and reliance on herbs and vegetables it is considered one of the healthiest cuisines worldwide 460 The use of meats such as pork beef and chicken was relatively limited in the past Instead freshwater fish crustaceans particularly crabs and molluscs became widely used Fish sauce soy sauce prawn sauce and limes are among the main flavouring ingredients Vietnam has a strong street food culture with 40 popular dishes commonly found throughout the country 461 Many notable Vietnamese dishes such as gỏi cuốn salad roll banh cuốn rice noodle roll bun rieu rice vermicelli soup and phở noodles originated in the north and were introduced to central and southern Vietnam by northern migrants 462 463 Local foods in the north are often less spicy than southern dishes as the colder northern climate limits the production and availability of spices 464 Black pepper is frequently used in place of chillis to produce spicy flavours Vietnamese drinks in the south also are usually served cold with ice cubes especially during the annual hot seasons in contrast in the north hot drinks are more preferable in a colder climate Some examples of basic Vietnamese drinks include ca phe đa Vietnamese iced coffee ca phe trứng egg coffee chanh muối salted pickled lime juice cơm rượu glutinous rice wine nước mia sugarcane juice and tra sen Vietnamese lotus tea 465 Media Main article Media of Vietnam Vietnam Television VTV the main state television stationVietnam s media sector is regulated by the government under the 2004 Law on Publication 466 It is generally perceived that the country s media sector is controlled by the government and follows the official communist party line though some newspapers are relatively outspoken 467 468 The Voice of Vietnam VOV is the official state run national radio broadcasting service broadcasting internationally via shortwave using rented transmitters in other countries and providing broadcasts from its website while Vietnam Television VTV is the national television broadcasting company Since 1997 Vietnam has regulated public internet access extensively using both legal and technical means The resulting lockdown is widely referred to as the Bamboo Firewall 469 The collaborative project OpenNet Initiative classifies Vietnam s level of online political censorship to be pervasive 470 while Reporters Without Borders RWB considers Vietnam to be one of 15 global internet enemies 471 Though the government of Vietnam maintains that such censorship is necessary to safeguard the country against obscene or sexually explicit content many political and religious websites that are deemed to be undermining state authority are also blocked 472 Holidays and festivals Main articles Public holidays in Vietnam and List of traditional festivals in Vietnam Special Tết decoration in the country seen during the holidayThe country has eleven national recognised holidays These include New Year s Day on 1 January Vietnamese New Year Tết from the last day of the last lunar month to fifth day of the first lunar month Hung Kings Festival on the 10th day of the third lunar month Reunification Day on 30 April International Workers Day on 1 May and National Day on 2 September 473 474 475 During Tết many Vietnamese from the major cities will return to their villages for family reunions and to pray for dead ancestors 476 477 Older people will usually give the young a li xi red envelope while special holiday food such as banh chưng rice cake in a square shape together with variety of dried fruits are presented in the house for visitors 478 Many other festivals are celebrated throughout the seasons including the Lantern Festival Tết Nguyen Tieu Mid Autumn Festival Tết Trung Thu and various temple and nature festivals 479 In the highlands Elephant Race Festivals are held annually during the spring riders will ride their elephants for about 1 6 km 0 99 mi and the winning elephant will be given sugarcane 480 Traditional Vietnamese weddings remain widely popular 481 Sports Main articles Sport in Vietnam and List of Vietnamese traditional games Mỹ Đinh National Stadium in HanoiThe Vovinam kim ke and binh định martial arts are widespread in Vietnam 482 483 while football is the country s most popular sport 484 Its national team won the ASEAN Football Championship twice in 2008 and 2018 and reached the quarter finals of 2019 AFC Asian Cup 485 486 487 its junior team of under 23 became the runners up of 2018 AFC U 23 Championship and reached fourth place in 2018 Asian Games while the under 20 managed to qualify the 2017 FIFA U 20 World Cup for the first time in their football history 488 489 The national football women s team also traditionally dominates the Southeast Asian Games along with its chief rival Thailand Other Western sports such as badminton tennis volleyball ping pong and chess are also widely popular Vietnam has participated in the Summer Olympic Games since 1952 After the partition of the country in 1954 only South Vietnam competed in the games sending athletes to the 1956 and 1972 Olympics Since the reunification of Vietnam in 1976 it has competed as the Socialist Republic of Vietnam attending every Summer Olympics from 1988 onwards The present Vietnam Olympic Committee was formed in 1976 and recognised by the International Olympic Committee IOC in 1979 490 Vietnam has never participated in the Winter Olympic Games In 2016 Vietnam won their first gold medal at the Olympics 491 Basketball has become an increasingly popular sport in Vietnam especially in Ho Chi Minh City Hanoi and Soc Trăng 492 See alsoIndex of Vietnam related articles Outline of VietnamNotes In effect since 1 January 2014 4 The spelling Viet Nam or the full Vietnamese form Việt Nam is sometimes used in English by local and government operated media Viet Nam is in fact formally designated and recognized by the Government of Vietnam the United Nations and the International Organization for Standardization as the standardized country name See also other spellings Alternatively the Socialist Republic of Viet Nam with the different spelling for Vietnam Vietnamese Cộng hoa xa hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam a b At first Gia Long requested the name Nam Việt but the Jiaqing Emperor refused 10 17 Neither the American government nor Ngo Đinh Diệm s State of Vietnam signed anything at the 1954 Geneva Conference The non communist Vietnamese delegation objected strenuously to any division of Vietnam however the French accepted the Việt Minh proposal 108 that Vietnam be united by elections under the supervision of local commissions 109 The United States with the support of South Vietnam and the United Kingdom countered with the American Plan 110 which provided for United Nations supervised unification elections The plan however was rejected by Soviet and other communist delegations 111 See List of countries and dependencies by area References Vietnam The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency 18 April 2023 Retrieved 27 April 2023 a b c d e f g h i General Statistics Office of Vietnam 2019 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom Vietnam U S Department of State Việt Nam News 2014 Tổng cục Thống ke Dan số Việt Nam đa vượt 100 triệu người vao thang 4 General Statistics Office Vietnam s population exceeded 100 million people in April Zing News 19 June 2023 Archived from the original on 19 June 2023 a b c d e f International Monetary Fund World Bank 2018c Human Development Report 2021 2022 PDF United Nations Development Programme 8 September 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b Brindley Erica Fox 2015 Ancient China and the Yue Perceptions and Identities on the Southern Frontier c 400 BCE 50 CE Cambridge University Press p 27 The term Yue survives today in the name of the Vietnamese state yue nan 越南 or Viet south Viet of the South as the Vietnamese likely took it or South of the Viet as the Chinese likely took it a b Woods 2002 p 38 a b c Norman amp Mei 1976 a b c d Meacham 1996 Yue Hashimoto 1972 p 1 Knoblock amp Riegel 2001 p 510 Lieberman 2003 p 405 Phan 1976 p 510 Shaofei amp Guoqing 2016 a b Ooi 2004 p 932 Tonnesson amp Antlov 1996 p 117 Tonnesson amp Antlov 1996 p 126 Derevianko A P Kandyba A V Nguyen Khac Su Gladyshev S A Nguyen Gia Doi Lebedev V A Chekha A M Rybalko A G Kharevich V M Tsybankov A A 21 September 2018 The Discovery of a Bifacial Industry in Vietnam Archaeology Ethnology amp Anthropology of Eurasia 46 3 3 21 doi 10 17746 1563 0110 2018 46 3 003 021 S2CID 229297187 Marwick Ben Pham Son Thanh Brewer Rachel Wang Li Ying 14 August 2021 Tektite geoarchaeology in mainland Southeast Asia PCI Archaeology doi 10 31235 osf io 93fpa S2CID 243640447 McKinney 2009 Akazawa Aoki amp Kimura 1992 p 321 Rabett 2012 p 109 Dennell amp Porr 2014 p 41 Matsumura et al 2008 p 12 Matsumura et al 2001 Oxenham amp Tayles 2006 p 36 Nguyen 1985 p 16 Karlstrom amp Kallen 2002 p 83 Oxenham amp Buckley 2015 p 329 a b Higham 1984 a b Nang Chung amp Giang Hai 2017 p 31 de Laet amp Herrmann 1996 p 408 a b c Calo 2009 p 51 Kiernan 2017 p 31 Cooke Li amp Anderson 2011 p 46 Pelley 2002 p 151 Cottrell 2009 p 14 Đức Trần amp Thư Ha 2000 p 8 Yao 2016 p 62 Holmgren 1980 Taylor 1983 p 30 Pelley 2002 p 177 Cottrell 2009 p 15 Thai Nguyen amp Mừng Nguyẽ n 1958 p 33 Chesneaux 1966 p 20 anon 1972 p 24 sfn error no target CITEREFanon 1972 help Tuyet Tran amp Reid 2006 p 32 sfn error no target CITEREFTuyet TranReid2006 help Hiẻ n Le 2003 p 65 Hong Lien amp Sharrock 2014 p 55 a b Kiernan 2017 p 226 Cottrell 2009 p 16 Hong Lien amp Sharrock 2014 p 95 Keyes 1995 p 183 Hong Lien amp Sharrock 2014 p 111 Hong Lien amp Sharrock 2014 p 120 Kiernan 2017 p 265 Anderson amp Whitmore 2014 p 158 a b Vo 2011 p 13 Ooi amp Anh Tuan 2015 p 212 a b Phuong Linh 2016 p 39 Anderson amp Whitmore 2014 p 174 Leonard 1984 p 131 a b Ooi 2004 p 356 a b c Hoang 2007 p 50 a b Tran 2018 Hoang 2007 p 52 Hoang 2007 p 53 Li 1998 p 89 Lockard 2010 p 479 Tran 2017 p 27 McLeod 1991 p 22 Woods 2002 p 42 Cortada 1994 p 29 Mojarro Jorge 10 March 2020 The day the Filipinos conquered Saigon The Manila Times Keith 2012 p 46 Keith 2012 pp 49 50 McLeod 1991 p 61 Ooi 2004 p 520 Cook 2001 p 396 Frankum 2011 p 172 Nhu Nguyen 2016 p 37 Richardson 1876 p 269 Keith 2012 p 53 Anh Ngo 2016 p 71 sfn error no target CITEREFAnh Ngo2016 help Quach Langlet 1991 p 360 Ramsay 2008 p 171 Zinoman 2000 Lim 2014 p 33 Largo 2002 p 112 Khanh Huỳnh 1986 p 98 Odell amp Castillo 2008 p 82 Thomas 2012 Miller 1990 p 293 Gettleman et al 1995 p 4 Thanh Nien 2015 Vietnam Net 2015 a b Joes 1992 p 95 a b c d e Pike 2011 p 192 Gunn 2014 p 270 Neville 2007 p 175 Smith 2007 p 6 Neville 2007 p 124 Tonnesson 2011 p 66 Waite 2012 p 89 Gravel 1971 p 134 Gravel 1971 p 119 Gravel 1971 p 140 Kort 2017 p 96 Olson 2012 p 43 DK 2017 p 39 a b c van Dijk et al 2013 p 68 Guttman John 25 July 2013 Why did Sweden support the Viet Cong History Net Retrieved 25 September 2019 Moise 2017 p 56 Vu 2007 Turner 1975 p 143 Heneghan 1969 p 160 Turner 1975 p 177 Crozier 1955 Turner 1975 pp 174 178 Gilbert 2013 p 292 a b Jukes 1973 p 209 a b Olsen 2007 p 92 Khoo 2011 p 27 Muehlenbeck amp Muehlenbeck 2012 p 221 Willbanks 2013 p 53 Duy Hinh amp Dinh Tho 2015 p 238 Isserman amp Bowman 2009 p 46 Alterman 2005 p 213 Lewy 1980 Gibbons 2014 p 166 Li 2012 p 67 Gillet 2011 Dallek 2018 Turner 1975 p 251 Frankum 2011 p 209 Eggleston 2014 p 1 History 2018 Tucker 2011 p 749 Brigham 1998 p 86 The New York Times 1976 Hirschman Preston amp Manh Loi 1995 Shenon 1995 Obermeyer Murray amp Gakidou 2008 Dohrenwend et al 2018 p 69 VIETNAM REFUGEES PUT AT 1 4 MILLION The New York Times 26 January 1975 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Elliott 2010 pp 499 512 513 Sagan amp Denny 1982 Spokesman Review 1977 p 8 Moise 1988 p 12 Kissi 2006 p 144 Meggle 2004 p 166 Hampson 1996 p 175 Khoo 2011 p 131 a b BBC News 1997 Văn Phuc 2014 Murray 1997 pp 24 25 a b c Bich Loan 2007 Howe 2016 p 20 Goodkind 1995 Gallup 2002 a b Wagstaff van Doorslaer amp Watanabe 2003 Nasuchon 2008 p 7 Protected Areas and Development Partnership 2003 p 13 Frohlich et al 2013 p 5 Natural Resources and Environment Program 1995 p 56 sfn error no target CITEREFNatural Resources and Environment Program1995 help AgroViet Newsletter 2007 Huu Chiem 1993 p 180 Minh Hoang et al 2016 Huu Chiem 1993 p 183 Hong Truong Ye amp Stive 2017 p 757 Vietnamese Waters Zone Cosslett amp Cosslett 2017 p 13 Van De et al 2008 Hong Phuong 2012 p 3 Việt Nam News 2016 Vietnam National Administration of Tourism 2014 Boobbyer amp Spooner 2013 p 173 Cosslett amp Cosslett 2013 p 13 Anh 2016a The Telegraph Vu 1979 p 66 Riehl amp Augstein 1973 p 1 a b Buleen 2017 Vietnam Net 2018a Vietnamese amazed at snow capped northern mountains VnExpress 11 January 2021 a b Thi Anh Overland 2017 Report Flooded Future Global vulnerability to sea level rise worse than previously understood climatecentral org 29 October 2019 Retrieved 3 November 2019 a b c d e f Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment UNESCO World Heritage Convention 1994 UNESCO World Heritage Convention 2003 Pha Le 2016 sfn error no target CITEREFPha Le2016 help BirdLife International 2016 Kinver 2011 a b Dall 2017 Dang Vu amp Nielsen 2018 Nam Dang amp Nielsen 2019 Banout et al 2014 a b Cerre 2016 Brown 2018 Agence France Presse 2016 MacLeod 2012 United States Agency for International Development Stewart 2018 Việt Nam News 2018a Nikkei Asian Review 2018 NHK World Japan 2018 Agent Orange Record Grantham H S et al 2020 Anthropogenic modification of forests means only 40 of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity Supplementary Material Nature Communications 11 1 5978 Bibcode 2020NatCo 11 5978G doi 10 1038 s41467 020 19493 3 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 7723057 PMID 33293507 Berg et al 2007 Merola et al 2014 Miguel amp Roland 2005 Government of the United Kingdom 2017 LM Report 2000 United Nations Development Programme 2018 United States Department of State 2006 Van Thanh 2016 a b c d e f Government of Vietnam II Greenfield 1994 p 204 Baccini Impullitti amp Malesky 2017 The Economist 2008 Embassy of Vietnam in USA Ministry of Justice 1999 a b c Thayer 1994 Thanh Hai 2016 p 177 Ministry of Foreign Affairs 2018 Ministry of Foreign Affairs 2013 a b Ministry of Foreign Affairs 2007 Ministry of Foreign Affairs 2014 Dayley 2018 p 98 Mitchell 1995 Green 2012 Smith 2005 p 386 Institute of Regional Studies 2001 p 66 sfn error no target CITEREFInstitute of Regional Studies2001 help Ministry of Foreign Affairs Garamone 2016 Hutt 2020 Corr 2019 Tran 2020 Taylor amp Rutherford 2011 p 50 Yan 2016 a b Voice of Vietnam 2016 The Economic Times 2018 The Japan Times 2015 Voice of Vietnam 2018b Ministry of Defence Russia 2018 The Telegraph 2012 United Nations Treaty Collection Giap 2017 a b BBC News 2009 Mydans 2009 VIET NAM UN ACT UN Act Women children and babies human trafficking to China is on the rise Asia News 11 July 2019 Vietnam s Human Trafficking Problem Is Too Big to Ignore The Diplomat 8 November 2019 Japan Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism Cornell University Kim Phuong 2014 p 1 Kimura 1986 Adhikari Kirkpatrick amp Weiss 1992 p 249 Ngoc Vo amp Le 2014 p 7 sfn error no target CITEREFNgoc VoLe2014 help Van Tho 2003 p 11 Litvack Litvack amp Rondinelli 1999 p 31 Freeman 2002 Litvack Litvack amp Rondinelli 1999 p 33 a b Van Tho 2003 p 5 Hoang Vuong amp Dung Tran 2009 Hoang Vuong 2014 Largo 2002 p 66 International Monetary Fund 1999 p 23 sfn error no target CITEREFInternational Monetary Fund1999 help Cockburn 1994 Pincus 2015 p 27 this article refers to the so called Vent for surplus theory of international trade Quang Vinh p 13 Asian Development Bank 2010 p 388 Thanh Nien 2010 Vierra amp Vierra 2011 p 5 a b Vandemoortele amp Bird 2010 a b Cuong Le et al 2010 p 23 H Dang amp Glewwe 2017 p 9 Vandemoortele 2010 UPI com 2013 Fong Sam 2010 p 26 Việt Nam News 2018b Vietnam News Agency 2018 Tuổi Trẻ News 2012 Vietnam Net 2016a Mai 2017 Voice of Vietnam 2018c Nielsen 2007 p 1 Summers 2014 Truong Vo amp Nguyen 2018 p 172 Fisheries Country Profile Vietnam Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center June 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2021 a b DigInfo 2007 a b Borel 2010 Việt Nam News 2010 Koblitz 2009 p 198 CNRS 2010 Koppes 2010 Vietnam National Space Centre 2016 Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology 2017 Raslan 2017 UNESCO Media Services 2016 Global Innovation Index 2021 World Intellectual Property Organization United Nations Retrieved 5 March 2022 Global Innovation Index 2019 www wipo int Retrieved 2 September 2021 RTD Item ec europa eu Retrieved 2 September 2021 Global Innovation Index INSEAD Knowledge 28 October 2013 Archived from the original on 2 September 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2021 a b UNESCO Publishing pp 713 714 a b Vietnam National Administration of Tourism 2018 Quy 2018 Terzian 2018 Crook 2014 p 7 a b c General Statistics Office of Vietnam 2010 Huu Duc et al 2013 p 2080 General Statistics Office of Vietnam 2011 Linh Le amp Anh Trinh 2016 Sohr et al 2016 p 220 a b Chin 2018 The Japan Times 2009 Vietnam 2008 The New York Times 2018 a b Vietnam Net 2018b South East Asia Iron and Steel Institute 2009 Chi 2017 Tatarski 2017 Hoang 2016 p 1 Vietnam Investment Review 2018 Ha Giang amp Denslow 2012 Index Mundi 2018 Intellasia 2010 Electricity of Vietnam 2017 p 10 a b Electricity of Vietnam 2017 p 12 Nguyen et al 2016 Nikkei Asian Review Viet Trung Quoc Viet amp Van Chat 2016 p 70 Viet Trung Quoc Viet amp Van Chat 2016 p 64 a b Pham 2015 p 6 Pham 2015 p 7 Việt Nam News 2012 Oxford Business Group 2017 British Business Group Vietnam 2017 p 1 a b British Business Group Vietnam 2017 p 2 University of Technology Sydney 2018 Government of the Netherlands 2016 Government of the Netherlands 2018 Anh 2018 UNICEF 2015 Việt Nam News 2018c Việt Nam News 2018d Index Mundi 2016 World Bank 2016a sfn error no target CITEREFWorld Bank2016a help World Bank 2016b World Bank 2017 The Harvard Crimson 1972 Trung Chien 2006 p 65 BBC News 2005 Haberman 2014 Gustafsson 2010 p 125 Van Nam et al 2005 Trinh et al 2016 a b McNeil 2016 Lieberman amp Wagstaff 2009 p 40 Manyin 2005 p 4 Vietnam Women s Union 2005 World Bank 2018a BBC News 2018 UNICEF Ha Tran 2014 World Bank 2013 World Bank 2015 Pham 2012 Chapman amp Liu 2013 de Mora amp Wood 2014 p 55 Vietnam Net 2016b a b c Jones 1998 p 21 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Fraser 1980 Ministry of Citizenship and Immigration 2013 p 1 Government of Vietnam I Cultural Orientation Resource Centre p 7 Montagnard Human Rights Organisation Koskoff 2008 p 1316 Dodd amp Lewis 2003 p 531 Amer 1996 Feinberg 2016 United Nations Population Fund 2009 p 117 sfn error no target CITEREFUnited Nations Population Fund2009 help World Bank 2002 United Nations Population Fund 2009 p 102 sfn error no target CITEREFUnited Nations Population Fund2009 help a b c d Cira et al 2011 p 194 Tiezzi 2016 Trương 2018 p 19 General Statistics Office 2019 Kết quả Toan bộ Tổng điều tra dan số va nha ở năm 2019 Completed Results of the 2019 Viet Nam Population and Housing Census Statistical Publishing House ISBN 978 604 75 1532 5 Archived from the original PDF on 10 January 2021 Retrieved 20 October 2021 Nghị quyết số 1111 NQ UBTVQH14 năm 2020 về việc sắp xếp cac đơn vị hanh chinh cấp huyện cấp xa va thanh lập thanh phố Thủ Đức thuộc Thanh phố Hồ Chi Minh 9 December 2020 Archived from the original on 9 January 2021 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Nghị quyết số 1264 NQ UBTVQH14 năm 2021 về việc điều chỉnh địa giới hanh chinh cac đơn vị hanh chinh cấp huyện va sắp xếp thanh lập cac phường thuộc thanh phố Huế tỉnh Thừa Thien Huế 27 April 2021 Archived from the original on 20 May 2021 Retrieved 23 July 2021 a b Nghị quyết số 857 NQ UBTVQH14 năm 2020 về việc thanh lập thanh phố Dĩ An thanh phố Thuận An va cac phường thuộc thị xa Tan Uyen tỉnh Binh Dương 10 January 2020 Archived from the original on 22 April 2021 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Nghị quyết số 788 NQ UBTVQH14 năm 2019 về việc sắp xếp cac đơn vị hanh chinh cấp huyện cấp xa thuộc tỉnh Hải Dương 16 October 2019 Archived from the original on 3 December 2019 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Nghị quyết số 837 NQ UBTVQH14 năm 2019 về việc sắp xếp cac đơn vị hanh chinh cấp huyện cấp xa thuộc tỉnh Quảng Ninh 17 December 2019 Archived from the original on 30 December 2019 Retrieved 23 July 2021 a b Ministry of Justice 1992 Ministry of Justice 2004b Zuckerman 2007 p 11 General Statistics Office of Vietnam 2009 Bielefeldt 2014 Woods 2002 p 34 Keith 2012 pp 42 72 Lamport 2018 p 898 Largo 2002 p 168 a b c Van Hoang 2017 p 1 Cultural Orientation Resource Centre pp 5 7 United States Department of State 2005 Kỳ Phương amp Lockhart 2011 p 35 Levinson amp Christensen 2002 p 89 Sharma 2009 p 48 Cultural Orientation Resource Centre p 10 French Senate 1997 Van Van p 8 Van Van p 9 Government of the United Kingdom 2018 Wai ming 2002 p 3 Anh Dinh 2016 p 63 Hirano 2016 Thống Nhất Nha trường chọn 1 trong 7 thứ tiếng lam ngoại ngữ 1 Hanộimới Archived from the original on 21 June 2022 Retrieved 21 June 2022 Nguyễn Tuệ 8 March 2021 Vi sao tiếng Han tiếng Đức la ngoại ngữ 1 trong trường phổ thong Thanh Nien Archived from the original on 21 June 2022 Retrieved 21 June 2022 Ngọc Diệp 4 March 2021 Tiếng Han tiếng Đức được đưa vao chương trinh phổ thong học sinh được tự chọn Tuổi Trẻ Archived from the original on 21 June 2022 Retrieved 21 June 2022 Phạm Mai 20 April 2022 Cac trường hợp được miễn thi ngoại ngữ kỳ thi tốt nghiệp THPT 2022 Exemption from the fo, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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