New recruits quickly adapt to the military environment.
After receiving the new recruits, the Mobile Training Battalion of the Nghe An Border Guard Command has settled their living quarters and organized health checkups for them, ensuring that the new recruits have sufficient health and mental capacity for the upcoming training days.
Young soldier Tran Quoc Trung, from Hung Dung ward, Vinh city, has graduated from university, is working, and has started a family. He is more mature and responsible than his fellow recruits. In his early days in the army, Tran Quoc Trung was very happy to see the regular, well-equipped facilities and to receive a thoughtful welcome. He was assisted by the officers from the entrance, who showed him the living quarters, training grounds, and offices. He felt very reassured when the military medical officers helped with health checks and disease prevention.

Meanwhile, soldier Moong Van Nhan from Huoi Tho village, Huu Kiem commune, Ky Son district, shared: "With the attention of superiors at all levels, we will be determined to successfully complete our training nhiệm vụ."
Tran Quoc Trung and Moong Van Nhan, along with more than 100 new recruits at the Mobile Training Battalion of the Nghe An Border Guard, quickly settled into their assigned living quarters and accommodations. Battalion officers guided them through military discipline and regulations, organized extracurricular activities such as introducing the traditions of the Border Guard and the People's Army, explaining daily routines, ceremonies, and military conduct, and organizing cultural and artistic activities, as well as agricultural production.

Lieutenant Colonel Nguyen Manh Hung, Battalion Commander of the Mobile Training Battalion, Nghe An Border Guard, said: "To prepare well for the training of new recruits, in addition to organizing training, selecting cadre officers, preparing facilities, training grounds, practice areas, and training models, the unit has also prepared accommodation and meals, and arranged audio-visual equipment to serve the cultural and spiritual life of the soldiers."
After receiving new recruits from various localities, the unit coordinated the verification and cross-checking of records, organized health examinations and re-examinations, distributed military equipment right at their bedsides, and assigned them to platoons. All preparations were carried out meticulously to ensure that the soldiers felt secure in the military environment.


To ensure hygiene, disease prevention, and the health of soldiers, especially during the current transitional season when the risk of disease outbreaks remains complex, unit commanders are always closely monitoring the preparation and distribution of military equipment.
.jpg)

The Border Guard Force is characterized by working in remote, isolated areas with difficult access and harsh climates. Therefore, soldiers need to have good physical fitness to successfully complete their tasks. Thus, when new recruits arrive at the Mobile Training Battalion of the Nghe An Border Guard, the unit organizes health check-ups, educates them on disease prevention and control, shares health care experiences, helps them overcome initial anxieties, quickly gain confidence, clearly understand their duties, and strive to achieve high results in training.
Lieutenant Colonel, Doctor Tran Nam Thang, Head of the Medical Department of the Nghe An Border Guard Command


