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Vietnam will likely to import the petroleum |
HANOI nike air force 1 nere bianche scontate , June 27 (Xinhua) -- Vietnam will continue to annually import an average of 0.8 million tons of petroleum products and 1.8 million tons of diesel in the next five years, local media reported on Tuesday.
Vietnam will likely to import the petroleum products and diesel oil in the next five months from countries including China nike air force 1 nere mid scontate , Malaysia, Singapore nike air force 1 nere basse scontate , South Korea and Thailand, newspaper Thoi Bao Kinh Te Sai Gon (The Saigon Times) quoted Binh Son Refining and Petrochemical Company nike air force 1 nere scontate , which manages and runs Vietnam's biggest oil refinery named Dung Quat in central Quang Ngai province, as saying.
According to the company nike air force 1 bianche basse scontate , Vietnam's annual demand for petroleum products will stand at some 6.5 million tons, and for diesel around 8.5 million tons in the 2018-2022 period.
Nghi Son oil refinery with a design capacity of processing 10 million tons of crude oil a year in central Thanh Hoa province is scheduled to become operational next year. It will annually provide the domestic market with around 2.3 million tons of petroleum products nike air force 1 bianche mid scontate , and nearly 3.7 million tons of diesel oil.
Since it became operational fully in 2011, Dung Quat oil refinery has produced over 47 million tons of products nike air force 1 bianche scontate , mainly liquefied petroleum gas, petroleum nike air force 1 off White scontate , diesel oil and jet fuel.
Vietnam imported nearly 5 million tons of petroleum products worth over 2.6 billion U.S. dollars in the first five months of this year, down 6.8 percent in volume but up 27.4 percent in value against the same period last year www.airforce1scontate.it , said the country's General Statistics Office.
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TOKYO, March 11 (Xinhua) -- "There were times I wanted to kill myself, I really did. I used to think about it all the time, it became an obsession that grew and grew as the daily torments became harsher and more wicked," Yuki Endo said solemnly from the edge of a sofa in his nondescript apartment in Chiba Prefecture near Tokyo, Japan.
Clutching a large cushion close to his chest, the 14-year old added, "It was far worse at the first school, but it was still pretty bad at the second too. I study at home now with my mom and younger sister."
"There's no bullying here and my sister is safe too. It's quiet, but I have no friends," the young lad said, sniffling slightly and failing to make eye contact, as he pulled the cushion even closer to his chest.
Yuki lives with his father, mother and sister in a residential town on the outskirts of Matsudo, in Tokyo's neighboring Chiba region and they moved to the area around four years ago.
Prior to that, Yuki's family, as thousands of other families, was forced to join the exodus from Fukushima Prefecture in the wake of the earthquake-triggered nuclear disaster there that began six years ago. They were essentially internal refugees, temporarily based with friends and family members away from the potential danger.
According to the latest figures provided to Xinhua by Fukushima Gov. Masao Uchibori, there are still some 80,000 people living as refugees away from Fukushima. While the numbers returning to different parts of the embattled prefecture vary, in some cases, even where the radiation restriction has been lifted, only 10 percent of residents have opted to return.
Indeed, official figures also show that of school-aged children, as of May 2016, 7,800 students who originated from Fukushima Prefecture have yet to return and remain scattered across the country, some leading miserable lives, both due to and in spite of their plight.
"Yuki had to change schools twice, and that was after the upheavals of having to leave his home, then live with relatives he barely knew. He's still just a child. Kaori's now only 11 and has had a tough time too, but not quite as bad. She hasn't had to change schools," said Yasuko Endo.
"as a mother it was my decision to leave Fukushima. I did it for my children."
She went on to explain that when Yuki enrolled in his first school in the Kanto region, the other children were quick to single him out as being the "new kid" but as soon as they found out he was from Fukushima started to harass him on an increasingly frequent basis.
They would call him all sorts of names like "radiation boy" and "vermin", which, may not have seemed too vicious at first, but when it became routine was devastating to the young boy's self-esteem.
And it would continue outside of school too, she said. They would follow him home and taunt him, coming up with new "nicknames" related to the nuclear accident and at one time got physical too, a palpably despondent Yasuko remembered.
Along with her husband, she complained to the school and said that things calmed down for a while and that Yuki seemed to be doing better, but then the bullying escalated again and Yuki suffered a mental breakdown.
"Some of the children refused to get into the swimming pool with him during a sports class and complained to the teacher that they were worried they would be infected' with radiation if they shared water with Yuki."
"They said it half-jokingly, I think, but for Yuki it was just too much, he couldn't cope, nor was he being effectively cared for by his teachers. He broke down and was under medical supervision for around a month after that," Yasuko said, the painful memory etched into the furrows of her brow.
"Children can be so cruel," she lamented, swiftly wiping a single tear away, so as not to let her kids see. "But we're getting through this aren't we?" . Wholesale Authentic Jerseys Wholesale Authentic Jerseys Jerseys Wholesale NHL Jerseys Wholesale Baseball Jerseys Cheap Hockey Jerseys Wholsale Football Jerseys Wholesale Football Jerseys Wholesale College Baseball Jerseys Cheap Replica Jerseys From China
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