30-year-old Kim Tuyen reported that her brother broke her arm and repeatedly hit her in the head with a plastic chair because she refused to return to live with their family.
Residents of Ro Koi commune use red clay, sand, and straw to build ovens that dry forest bamboo shoots, preserving their sweetness and aroma, and sell them for 180,000 VND per kilogram.
The 140-meter high Siu Puong waterfall, with its seven tiers cascading through the old-growth forest like a silken ribbon, is considered a sacred dwelling place of the gods by the Xo Dang people.
At the end of July, the terraced rice fields at the peak of Ngoc Linh mountain, 2,600 meters high, the highest peak in Nam Truong Son, are painted gold as the rice enters harvest season.
Nearly 600 stone and ceramic artifacts from the 30,000-year-old Lung Leng archaeological site are exhibited at the former Kon Tum Museum, demonstrating a dynamic and open region.
A young woman and her brother were rescued from the Dak Bla river on the morning of 20/7 after he jumped in to save her, despite not being able to swim.
Several households in Phuc Minh village, Nghia Hanh commune, reported being charged 500,000 to 600,000 VND for the collection and disposal of pigs that died from African swine fever.
A massive fire erupted at a 1,000 m2 plastics factory in Mo Cay Commune, Nghia Hanh District, sending a plume of black smoke hundreds of meters into the air. Firefighters battled the blaze through the night.