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Gambling turns isolated Vietnamese Women to crime PDF Print E-mail

Gambling turns isolated Vietnamese Women to crime

Pokies to Prison

By Grant Reynolds.

 

Growing numbers of Vietnamese women are ending up in prison for crimes to pay off gambling debts, according to Australian Vietnamese Women's Association chief executive Cam Nguyen.

As of last week, there were 45 Vietnamese women in Victorian prisons, according to Department of Justice figures obtained by Ms Nguyen.

Corrections Victoria data for 2008-2009 reveals female prisoners born in Vietnamese represented 13.8 per cent - 39 out of 282 total prisoners - of the women prisoner population on June 30 last year. Yet Vietnamese women prisoners represent a massive 87% of all women prisoners born in non-English-speaking countries. Figures for 2009 - 2010 are not yet available.

The AVWA often visited prisons through its prison support network role and found numbers had grown in the past decade. Most charges were related to supplying or carrying drugs and possession of stolen goods.

"When you scratch below the surface, they often say that they had to do these things to get money to pay off gambling debts to loan sharks. The interest is so high, there's no way they can pay it off." said Ms Nguyen, adding that the problem had become more prevalent in the past 10 years, since about the time Crown Casino opened.

She said women who spoke little English and had few social outlets. They felt at home at the casino pokies, where they felt they had escape from their social isolation.

The AVWA - started by Ms Nguyen 27 years ago with officers now in Footscray and Richmond - offers recreation groups, but more help is needed to break the cycle of isolation.

"They don't have much recreation because sport doesn't play a big role in Vietnamese community".

She said pokies at local gaming venues were less of a problem.

"They don't like pubs. The casino is an attractive place full of light and they feel welcome. When they are playing they don't know whether it's day or night. They may also be dealing with a relationship breakdown."

The Special Broadcasting Service has 14 hours of Vietnamese programming a week on its Melbourne network and seven hours on its national network.

A dedicated news program was dropped when Vietnamese community members complained about the source of its content.

Census data for 2006 showed 48% of Vietnamese women in Victoria declared they spoke little or no English. "It would need the federal government to make the learning of English an obligation of people receiving social benefits," Ms Nguyen said.

Although the 6000 or more Vietnam-born residents are still the largest overseas-born group in Maribyrnong, Ms Nguyen disputed the notion that Footscray was the Vietnamese "capital" of the west.

Brimbank has since taken over as families move father out to find larger and more affordable housing.

But the largely hidden gambling and crime problem knows no boundaries.

"People keep quiet about it. If a young person is involved, the parents would never mention it to their friends and acquaintances."

Ms Nguyen said the association's support services were largely self-funded. She called on Maribyrnong and Brimbank councils to help fund family support workers.

Maribyrnong Council community well-being acting general manager Andrew Day said the council provided counselling and referral services.

Mr Day said a gambling problem was not always apparent and other signs such as inability to pay bills, increased stress, and domestic violence could point to gambling addiction. When gambling was identified as a cause, the individual and family were referred to local gamblers help services, which had bilingual staff.

The council was also trying to get more detailed research on the impact of pokie machines, he said.

Mr Day said the council had a long history of providing support to the AVWA through provision aged-care services for older Vietnamese residents referred by AVWA.

"Council is always willing to assist the AVWA to enhance and expand their programs and services." 

 

Original article : The MAIL on June 30th 2010

 
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  Successful rebellion leaders & teen queens in 1st century AD

By Cam Nguyen, M.A. (Cambridge), Dip.Ed (Hawthorn), Dip.Ed. Admin(Melbourne)
July 2010

As it is likely, although by no means assured, that Australia is on the verge of electing its first female prime minister, it is timely to look at instances of women’s leadership in history.


To promote understanding of the nature & extent of women’s leadership throughout history, it is unlikely that any researcher would think of looking at Asian history in general & Vietnamese history in particular. And yet, in the 1st century AD, two Vietnamese sisters of the Trung family succeeded in not only driving back the armed forces occupying the land which is now the heartland of North Vietnam but also in keeping them at bay for 3 years during which time, they reigned as the “Trung Queens”. The occupying forces belonged to no less than the enormous Chinese Han Empire which spread from Mongolia in the West to Korea in the East, from Siberia in the North to North Vietnam in the South.   
“The Trung sisters” have been so revered through Vietnamese history that they are perceived more like superhero deities rather than flesh & blood  women. This attitude is a shame as it denies to women, especially young Vietnamese women, the opportunity to identify & be inspired by “Hai Ba’’ (The 2 ladies). Trung Nhi was unmarried, in an age when girls were married soon after the onset of puberty, in their early or mid-teens. There was no record of Trung Trac’s age or how long she had been married before her husband was executed for rebellion.  But as she had no children, it would be fair to guess that she was probably in her late teens or early twenties. As young women leaders, they should be re-assessed through the lens of not only scholars & specialists of various professional background but also through the lens of ordinary 21st century men & women, old & young.
How did two young women succeed in convincing so many, presumably older, men & women to become their followers & join their barefoot “guerrilla” army? That army raised & equipped  on a shoestring was able to inflict such casualties on Chinese occupying forces that these ran away. It took them three years to progressively re-conquer the province. It is true that the sisters & Trac’s husband were from the local gentry, the leading class but, then as now, there should not have been any dearth of would be male older leaders. How did the sisters overcome the twin handicap of youth & femaleness? How could such extraordinary charisma  be explained ? 

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Gambling turns Vietnamese Woman to crime and The woman inside by IAN MUNRO at THE AGE Jun 23rd 2010


  Gambling turns women to crime Gambling turns women to crime

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Khám đường Úc đông tù nhân người Việt

 

 

Nhiều phụ nữ gốc Việt tại Úc vào sòng bài để giải sầu và mắc nợ lớn. Nhiều phụ nữ gốc Việt tại Úc vào sòng bài để giải sầu và mắc nợ lớn.

 Tính đến giữa tháng Sáu, có 45 nữ tù nhân người Úc gốc Việt trong hệ thống nhà tù tiểu bang Victoria, Úc châu.

Số nữ tù nhân tại tiểu bang có dân số đông thứ nhì tại nước Úc là 312, báo The Age đưa tin.

Phụ nữ gốc Việt chiến 16 phần trăm sĩ số tù nhân. Trong khi người Việt định cư tại tiểu bang vùng Đông bộ Úc châu chiếm có 1,6 phần trăm dân số.

Theo một chuyên gia cộng đồng tại tiểu bang Victoria, con đường vào tù của một số chị em khá giống nhau. Đó là không nói được tiếng Anh, ở nhà thấy buồn, vào sòng bài giải sầu, dẫn đến mắc nợ lớn. Nhiều người dính đến hoạt động phi pháp để lấy tiền trả nợ.

“Trồng cần sa, gian lận trợ cấp xã hội, buôn bán ma túy, nhiều cách kiếm tiền không chính đáng đã đẩy một số chị em vào cảnh tù đầy,” bà Huỳnh Bích Cẩm, Tổng giám đốc Hội Phụ nữ Việt Úc cho BBC Việt Ngữ biết trong cuộc phỏng vấn ngày 23/6.

Lý do đưa đẩy những người này đến sòng bài (casino) theo bà Cẩm là do nhiều tác động khác nhau.

“Một phần những người đó họ không rành tiếng Anh. Họ không dùng dịch tư vấn, giúp đỡ của người Úc, của cộng đồng, mỗi khi gặp khó khăn trong chuyện gia đình.

“Họ cho rằng đi vào casino là tốt nhất. Không gian, lối trang trí và cách mời chào của sòng bài làm cho họ mất cảm giác phân biệt ngày đêm. Sòng bài hầu như là cách giải trí duy nhất của một số người không nói được tiếng Anh.”

“Khi bị thua, xuất hiện một số người đề nghị cho vay tiền. Đó là những kẻ cho vay nóng với lãi suất cao (loan shark). Một khi mắc nợ rất khó trả dứt, vì lãi suất rất cao.” 

 Original Article : BBC Vietnamese News

 
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Spike in number of Vietnamese women in Australian prisons

 It's emerged that a disproportionate number of Vietnamese women are currently being held in Australian prisons. In the south-eastern state of Victoria, for example, Vietnamese-born women make up the fastest-growing group within the women's prisoner population They make up about one per cent of the general population but once behind bars, they account for about 14 per cent. And often there's a common thread linking their crimes: gambling.


Presenter: Helene Hofman 

Speakers: Cam Nguyen, Founder and CEO, Australian Vietnamese Women's Association; Than Nguyen, lawyer and Vice-President, Vietnamese Community in Australia, New South Wales Chapter; Dinh Trong Dang, Counsellor, Vietnamese Community in Australia Problem Gambling Project, New South Wales

Listen: Link from ABC Radio

HELENE HOFMAN: Their crimes range from fraud to drug smuggling to theft and worse, but there is one thing many of the Vietnamese women in Australia's jails have in common and that's gambling.

Community leaders can't explain exactly why, but in the last ten years an increasing number of young Vietnamese women have been drawn to casinos and slot machines.

The result is mounting debts, isolation from their families and community, and increasingly: prison.

Cam Nguyen is the founder and CEO of the Australian Vietnamese Women's Association, based in the state capital of Victoria, Melbourne.

She has been looking out for Vietnamese women in the city's prison for about 25 years, and says that in the last five years there's been a worrying spike in numbers.

CAM NGUYEN: 13, 15 years ago there were 1 or 2 and then 8,9 years ago there would be 5 or 6 or something like that. But now there would be 45. The numbers have increased tremendously. Women are in there for a variety of offences but when you get to know them, when our workers get to know them, under the layer of various crimes we learn that they committed those crimes because they needed the money because they had gambled and lost and were the victims of loan sharks.

HELENE HOFMAN: And the problem isn't just limited to the state of Victoria.

Futher north, community leaders in New South Wales have noticed a similar trend. 

Than Nguyen is a lawyer and vice-president of the Vietnamese Community in Australia's New South Wales chapter.

He says the problem of gambling-related crimes is escalating, and needs to be urgently addressed.

THAN NGUYEN: Gambling has always been a big problem among the Asian community, but more particularly in the Vietnamese community. The problem has always been there but it's getting to a stage where the adddiction is getting more and more serious. Gambling can cause so much damage to families, to the fabric of our society and it leads to criminal activity and it has a huge cost to society as a whole.

HOFMAN: In fact in the last ten years, the problem has become so prounounced in Western Sydney that a dedicated gambling support program for the Vietnamese community has been in place since 1999.

Until last year, the Vietnamese Community in Australia Problem Gambling Project was manned by one counsellor, Dinh Trong Dang.

However, the demand for the service has been so strong - paricularly from women - that last year, an additional female counsellor was hired to work part-time. 

 

Original Article:ABC Radio 

 
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