Voice of Vietnam
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Voice of Vietnam
Summary
Voice of Vietnam is a broadcaster[1]. It ranks in the top 0.6% of broadcaster entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (24,056 views/month, #2 of 333).[2]
Key Facts
- Voice of Vietnam is in the country of Vietnam[3].
- Voice of Vietnam's instance of is recorded as broadcaster[4].
- Voice of Vietnam's instance of is recorded as state media[5].
- Voice of Vietnam's instance of is recorded as government agency[6].
- Voice of Vietnam's instance of is recorded as government agency of Vietnam[7].
- Voice of Vietnam is owned by Ministry of Finance[8].
- Voice of Vietnam's headquarters location is recorded as Hanoi[9].
- Voice of Vietnam's Commons category is recorded as Voice of Vietnam[10].
- September 7, 1945 marks the founding of Voice of Vietnam[11].
- Voice of Vietnam's official website is recorded as https://vov.vn/[12].
- Voice of Vietnam's official website is recorded as https://english.vov.vn/[13].
- Voice of Vietnam's official website is recorded as https://vovworld.vn/[14].
- Voice of Vietnam's official website is recorded as https://vovworld.vn/ja-JP.vov[15].
- Voice of Vietnam's official website is recorded as https://m.vovworld.vn/[16].
- Voice of Vietnam's official website is recorded as https://vov.gov.vn[17].
- Voice of Vietnam's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'vi', 'text': 'Đài Tiếng nói Việt Nam'}[18].
- Voice of Vietnam's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'vi-hani', 'text': '臺㗂吶越南'}[19].
Body
Founding
September 7, 1945 marks the founding of Voice of Vietnam[11].
Operations
Voice of Vietnam's headquarters location is recorded as Hanoi[9].
Ownership
Voice of Vietnam is owned by Ministry of Finance[8].
Why It Matters
Voice of Vietnam ranks in the top 0.6% of broadcaster entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (24,056 views/month, #2 of 333).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] It is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]