Etiquette guide

This recent article http://e.vnexpress.net/news/travel-life … 24661.html describes a guide being given to new arrivals on folding fans.  It asks for tourists to queue up nicely and to not throw rubbish.  Of course this is based on customs of the locals who are never know to cut in line or dump their rubbish in the street.   :whistle:

Leading by example would be a good start.

Visitors given code of conduct while locals throw rocks at tourist boats on Saigon canal

While boat tours on Ho Chi Minh City’s iconic Nhieu Loc-Thi Nghe canal are falling victim to rock-throwing locals, the city has recently published a code of conduct to adjust visitors’ behavior.

Incidents involving locals throwing rocks and bottles of urine at tourist gondolas traveling the city’s Nhieu Loc-Thi Nghe canal have been reported by the Department of Tourism, which added that the boats often gets caught in illegal fishing lines along the canal banks.

The gondola tour service, launched in September 2015, offers two-hour tours on Gondola boats along a 4.5-kilometer strip of the 8.7-kilometer canal, snaking its way through District 1, District 3, Binh Thanh District, Phu Nhuan District, and Tan Binh District.

The most recently reported attack happened on the night of December 20, according to the Department, when locals fishing and drinking along the canal near the Bong Bridge chased the boat, hurling rocks and vulgar words at the victims on board.

The attackers then mounted motorbikes, following the boat for a few hundred meters before being cut off.

No tourists were hurt in the attack, though the gondolier had her leg injured and the Gondola’s canopy was torn by the rocks, the report said.

Tran Vinh Tuyen, deputy chairman of Ho Chi Minh City People’s Committee, requested that police investigate the situation and take measures to prevent similar attacks in the future.

Meanwhile, the tourism authority of Ho Chi Minh City issued an official Code of Conduct on Thursday for the city’s visitors aimed at providing tourists with information on local social norms and etiquette during their visit.

The fan-folded handbooks are available in Vietnamese, English, Chinese, Korean, and Russian, and will be widely available at the airport, local hotels, tourist information desks, travel agencies, and diplomatic bodies.

The Code of Conduct was also made into a video set to be broadcast on TV, at the airport, on tourist buses, and at hotels.

http://tuoitrenews.vn/society/38896/vis … onic-canal

If it made sense it wouldn't be Vietnam would it?

just the same here in Perth just a simple xin loi is enough to embarrass the Que jumpers

Closed