{keywords}
Members of a club named Câu Lạc Bộ Chuyến Xe Nghĩa Tình Chữ Thập Đỏ, run by the Vietnam Red Cross Society chapter at Quang Trung College in HCM City, transport a three-day-old baby to his relatives in the Central Highlands province of Dak Lak after the parents tested positive for COVID-19. Photo courtesy of the club

“At that time, I saw that the city needed vehicles to  transport food, medical equipment and other necessities donated by organisations, companies, religious establishments and charity kitchens,” Ba, vice rector of Quang Trung College, said.

Ba asked his friends, who are mostly entrepreneurs and teachers, and who have cars and pickup trucks, to set up a team to assist the city’s Vietnam Red Cross Society.

The team named its club 'Câu Lạc Bộ Chuyến Xe Nghĩa Tình Chữ Thập Đỏ' run by Vietnam Red Cross Society chapter at Quang Trung College.

“Legally, the club’s members who wear the red uniform of Vietnam Red Cross Society were able to travel in their vehicles with the logo in the city and between provinces, especially in the period of strict social distancing,” Ba said.  

In August, when the club was launched, its members transported food, vegetables and other necessities to locked-down areas. They also transported medical equipment to hospitals treating COVID-19 patients.   

“The club became more popular and many people contacted me to ask for help. We also transported pregnant women and newborn babies so they could return to their hometowns,” Ba said.

“I was told that one three-day-old baby needed to be taken to his relatives in the Central Highlands province of Dak Lak because his parents had contracted COVID-19,” he added.

After hearing this, the club’s members took COVID-19 tests to ensure safety. Ba was in charge of administrative and logistical procedures to get permission to travel from the city to the province because there were many checkpoints on the way.

After the 500-kilometre trip, the baby was brought to his relatives safely.

{keywords}
Nguyen Dinh Ba, who set up a club named Câu Lạc Bộ Chuyến Xe Nghĩa Tình Chữ Thập Đỏ in HCM City, helps a man from the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap pick up his newborn from Tu Du Hospital during the period of strict social distancing in HCM City. Photo courtesy of the club

Having heard about the club's charity activities, a man from the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap contacted Ba to ask for transport of his five-day-old baby from Tu Du Obstetrics Hospital in the city. His wife, who had contracted COVID-19, had to be quarantined.

“I took him to Tu Du Hospital to pick up his baby and then to go to his friend in Binh Tan District,” he said. “It was the first time that I held a newborn who was not a relative in my arms. The father’s happiness was mine also."

“We were ready to help, especially in difficult circumstance,” he added.   

The club’s members have also helped transport pregnant women to return to southern Binh Duong and Dong Nai provinces.

One pregnant woman working in Binh Duong whose husband had died due to COVID-19 was near her delivery date. She and her six-year-old daughter needed to be transported to her hometown in Dong Thap Province. The club’s members helped her to return to her hometown safely. 

Tu Du Hospital’s staff also asked the club to transport donated bags of breast-milk from mothers in the Mekong Delta province of Long An. The hospital was lacking breast milk at the time for premature babies.

Le Thu, one of the club’s members, who is a teacher, said she did the volunteer activities "out of love". During transport, police and agencies at checkpoints on the way created favourable conditions for her.

The club also worked with Hung Vuong Hospital to help pregnant women with financial difficulties return to their hometowns after delivering their babies.

In addition, the club at times picked up relatives of pregnant women who had contracted COVID-19 and took them back to their hometowns with the newborn babies.

{keywords}
The club’s members prepare to transport a pregnant woman back to her hometown in Dong Thap Province. She was working in Binh Duong province when her husband died due to COVID-19. Photo courtesy of the club

“This shows the love between people. The club’s vehicles are filled with warmth and love. Transporting children to their relatives is very important,” Ba added.

The club also helped foreigners who had faced difficulties caused by the pandemic in the city and other provinces.  

The Vietnam Red Cross Society in the city has honoured the club members as "unsung heroes" and called them "the flowers of charitable activities” for their contributions to the city’s COVID-19 prevention and control programme.

Source: Vietnam News

'Trips of love': business owner organizes transport for needy

'Trips of love': business owner organizes transport for needy

“My kid is going to be discharged from hospital today, but I don’t know how we can go to our hometown. We are running out of money and cannot lease a car, while Hanoi is in social distancing. Please help us."

Driver covers thousands of kilometres returning post-treatment patients to their homes

Driver covers thousands of kilometres returning post-treatment patients to their homes

Le Thi Nhung, 29, drove a car for 32 hours covering a distance of 1,200km to take poor patients back to their homes.