Written by Bích Phương
Photo: Ha Anh's Facebook
Born in 1995 in Gia Lai, Hạ Anh first rose to prominence after winning the Fashion Star contest in 2011 and becoming a Miss Photo Vietnam finalist in 2012.
Written by Bích Phương
Photo: Ha Anh's Facebook
An amateur photographer from the United Kingdom has won the top prize at the 2026 Photographer of the Year competition with a striking image captured in Vietnam, organisers announced.
Gia Lai province will pilot a new tourism model, the “Gia Lai Coffee & Culture Weekend Market”, from March to August 2026 in Pleiku Ward, as part of efforts to diversify tourism offerings and attract visitors during the National Tourism Year - Gia Lai 2026.
The “Vietnam-France Encounter 2026” exhibition opened at the Ho Chi Minh City Museum of Fine Arts on Tuesday, bringing together dozens of artists from both countries in a cross-cultural showcase of contemporary art.
The National Tourism Year - Gia Lai 2026 will officially open on March 28 with a large-scale live art performance, a mega concert featuring leading young artists, and a fireworks display, organisers said.
Gia Lai’s signature dried phở (Vietnamese noodle soup) and traditional dishes from the Jrai and Bahnar ethnic communities will take the spotlight at the Gia Lai Culinary Festival, part of the opening week of National Tourism Year 2026, bringing the culinary heritage of Central Highlands to visitors.
The steady rhythm of handlooms continues to echo through villages in Vietnam’s Central Highlands, where Jrai and Bana women are preserving centuries-old brocade weaving traditions while adapting them to modern tourism and markets.
A series of community cultural events including folk dance performances, an áo dài fashion show and a free outdoor film screening drew crowds to Cho Nho Night Market in Pleiku Ward, Gia Lai Province, on March 7.
A series of cultural activities are taking place across the province as agencies, organizations and local communities mark “Ao Dai Week” 2026, part of celebrations for the 116th anniversary of International Women’s Day on March 8.
Gia Lai Province in Vietnam’s Central Highlands is marking Lunar New Year with vibrant traditions upheld by northern ethnic minority communities who migrated south decades ago.
Residents of the coastal community of Nhơn Hải opened their annual Thanh Minh Festival on 27 February with a series of ancestral rites at the Phương Mai communal house, maintaining traditions passed down through generations.
Gia Lai province opened its annual Khai Sơn Cầu Ngư (Mountain opening and whale worship) Festival on February 25, bringing thousands of residents and visitors to the Lăng Ông Nam Hải - Vạn Đầm Xương Lý in the Lý Chánh quarter of Quy Nhơn Đông ward.
The People’s Committee of Gia Lai has issued Plan No. 78/KH-UBND outlining a series of initiatives for 2026 to preserve and promote the value of the Central Highlands Gong Cultural Space heritage.
The anniversaries of the Tây Sơn peasant movement and the Ngọc Hồi–Đống Đa victory have renewed attention on Emperor Thái Đức Nguyễn Nhạc, the leader who initiated the 1771 uprising and laid the political foundations for the Tây Sơn dynasty.
Beneath long-standing bamboo groves in Nhơn Hòa, a commune in An Nhơn, memories of village life linger in the aroma of Bàu Đá rice wine, an enduring symbol of a land shaped by centuries of change.
Traditional bài chòi performances energized spring festivals across Tuy Phước commune and Quy Nhơn city during the Lunar New Year, drawing crowds of residents and tourists to the region’s rustic bamboo huts, poetry-infused melodies and rhythmic bamboo clappers.
A rare 11th-century Cham sandstone relief unearthed in the south-central province of Bình Định is offering fresh insight into the region’s martial past, featuring one of the most dynamic portrayals of war horses found in Champa art.
The decisive speed of Emperor Quang Trung’s spring 1789 campaign, culminating in the victory at Ngọc Hồi–Đống Đa, owed not only to his strategic brilliance but also to the powerful mobility of the Tây Sơn cavalry, a force that became a symbol of the military heritage and the martial tradition.
A grassroots podcast launched by a group of young creators in Gia Lai is emerging as a rare space for local youth to speak candidly about pressures, ambitions and the uncertainties of early adulthood.
Crowds gathered in the early spring mist on the first morning of the Lunar New Year for the annual Gò Market Spring Festival, a centuries-old fair where trade is guided less by profit than by wishes for peace and prosperity.
Thousands of residents and visitors gathered at two central squares in Gia Lai province on the evening of February 16 to welcome the Year of the Horse 2026 with a New Year’s Eve art program and a 15-minute fireworks display.
As the Year of the Horse 2026 approaches, practitioners in the martial arts heartland of Gia Lai are reflecting on a symbol that has shaped their discipline for centuries: the warhorse.
Gia Lai province’s traditional brocade weaving is gaining new commercial momentum as Bahnar and Jrai artisans transform heritage craft into certified market products under Vietnam’s One Commune One Product (OCOP) programme.
Schools across Gia Lai province are recreating traditional Lunar New Year celebrations on campus, combining hands-on cultural activities with fundraising initiatives to support disadvantaged students.
In a small home in Lam Truc 2 neighborhood, old glass bottles are being transformed into intricate miniature worlds.