.

Mobile food stands around schools pose threats to students' health

DA NANG Today
Published: April 03, 2015

Many schools in Ho Chi Minh City have turned into food zones because they are now surrounded by mobile stands selling food of unknown origin, and even conducting gambling activities.

The area on Dang Van Ngu Street in Phu Nhuan District that stretches from Le Van Sy to Nguyen Trong Tuyen Streets has become a promised land for street food sellers as there are three schools there: Han Thuyen High School, Dang Van Ngu Elementary School, and Ngo Tat To Middle School.

Despite the schools’ effort to call on students not to eat food of unknown origin bought from the mobile stands of these peddlers, the school gates are frequently filled with such stands.

There are often around 13-14 mobile booths on the 4m-5m-long sidewalk in front of those schools in the late afternoon waiting for their customers.

They sell various foods, including snacks and soft drinks, and toys.

During rush hour, those stands work at full capacity. Each can serve 50 students, mainly schoolgirls, in 20 minutes.

Students gather at a food stand in front of a school in Ho Chi Minh City. ( Photo:Tuoi Tre)
Students gather at a food stand in front of a school in Ho Chi Minh City. ( Photo:Tuoi Tre)

Although some schools even put banners at their gates to urge students not to buy street food, those students who do not pay much attention to their health seem to be fascinated by what is on sale at these booths.

However, they have no idea what they are downing.

“It’s very hot, so I drink it because lots of my friends do so,” a student answered when asked about the origin of the cup of red water fetching VND7,000 she was sipping one day.

Other unpackaged foods like rice paper and jerky also give consumers no clue about where and how they were produced.

Those mobile stands also cause social disorder since they even conduct gambling activities in addition to selling food that can adversely affect students’ health, according to Doan Ba Cuong, principal of Ngo Tat To Middle School.

Cuong added that some of his students have been duped into theft and robbery by these peddlers as well.

(Source: Tuoi Tre News)

.
.
.
.