Vietnamese
Vietnamese
English
French
Русский
Listen to An News
Nghe An Daily
Nghe An Weekend
Log in
Nghe An Newspaper:
Nghe An Television:
Latest
Current Affairs
Forum
Human Resources
Party building
Protecting the ideological foundation
Economy
Industrial
Agriculture
Market
Real estate
Car
International
Comment
News
Society
Bridge of Compassion
Religion - Beliefs
Culture
National Defense
Tourism
Poetry - Stories
Putting the resolution into practice.
Education
Law
Security and Order
Advise
Case file
Sport
SLNA
Highlight
Domestic
Nghe An Newspaper Cup
International
Business networking
Classified ads
Video
Society
Sport
National defense and security
Feature stories - Documentary
Cars and life
Current Affairs
Discover
Entertainment
The people ask, the authorities answer.
TV
Image
Health
Advise
Medicine & Nutrition
Health & Beauty
News
Labor
Job
Entertainment
Showbiz
Short Video
false information
News updates related to fake news.
The Tam Dong commune police fined an individual 5 million VND for providing and sharing false information.
The police in Tam Dong commune (Nghe An province) have issued an administrative penalty decision against citizen T.D.T. for the act of "providing and sharing false information and untrue information."
Law
Cadillac Escalade IQ 2028: Goodbye CarPlay, Android Auto
GM has confirmed it will remove Apple CarPlay and Android Auto from new models, starting with the computing-centric platform launching on the 2028 Cadillac Escalade IQ; petrol vehicles will switch later.
The truth behind the video of a 90-year-old veteran being prevented from watching a parade on Nguyen Thai Hoc Street.
LTA acknowledged its wrongdoing, removed the post, and issued an apology to veterans and law enforcement officers.
The driver made a false report that he was strangled with a rope by three passengers who then robbed him of his vehicle.
On August 4th, the Ho Chi Minh City Police Staff Office announced that the Tay Nam Ward Police had dealt with an individual who had made a false and misleading report…
The information that e-commerce transactions are subject to a 10% tax is fake.
Information circulating on social media regarding a 10% tax on e-commerce transactions is inaccurate.
POWERED BY
FREE
CMS
- A PRODUCT OF
NEKO
×
Log in
Log in with Google