
Last week, Francis Van Hoi and two of his friends and business partners visited the island: Hoang Vu Nguyen and Nikolaus Martin, sales director and Key Account Manager at Kreyenhop & Kluge. The picture shows them next to the great wooden containers where the sauce is won by fermenting fish for several months – which you can smell if you are there. As a short glimpse into the list of brands of the enterprise illustrates, Kreyenhop & Kluge is one of the biggest importers of Asian food for the German and European wholesale and retail market. To be sure, 90 % of the Asian food trade in Europe is in Vietnamese hands. Yet, not even 10 % of the imported products originate in Vietnam. This state of affairs is something Francis Van Hoi has found unfortunate for a long time.
Here is his “own voice” from his emails:
A Vietnamese farmer works hard and does not earn enough money to send his children to school; (in Vietnam, around 75% of the population are farmers). It is also the fault of the Vietnamese living abroad, because they are greedy and want ever more profit. So they take Thai products to market. It is the fault of the chief buyers abroad. They cause a dumping of retail prices. It is also the fault of the Vietnamese at home, who either slumber away their opportunities or work arrogantly.

Incidentally, Francis Van Hoi is currently sitting in the bus from Saigon to Thai Binh via Ha Noi. In Thai Binh, the catholic bishop Peter Nguyen Van De, who initiated the aid project for adolescent agent-orange victims in North Vietnam, has his office. Going by bus, it takes about 50 hours to cover the 3,000 kilometres. For the equivalent of around 180 €, meals, beverages, two drivers and an aeromechanic included, you get your money’s worth of adventure …
MS
(Translated by EG)


