Dredging project at Cua Dai Beach
 Former Party Secretary of Hoi An Town Nguyen Su and Vice Chairman of  Quang Nam Province Le Tri Thanh recently participated in a ceremony to  pray for the erosion to stop and the beach to be restored. Dozens of  ships have appeared at the town recently as the authorities started the  projects to build dykes and add more sand to the beach.
However, the ships that are supposed to add more sand to Cua Dai Beach  are actually taking the sand away. They then sold the sand to sea  encroachment projects in Danang City.
There has been severe erosion in Hoi An since 2013 with 20 hectares of  Cua Dai beach having been washed away. A 300-metre-long section of the  beach was eroded by late 2015. 
At a conference on Cua Dai Beach's erosion, foreign and local experts  agreed that hydropower dams on the Vu Gia-Thu Bon River system might be  hindering sedimentation downstream be and responsible for this severe  erosion. The construction of resorts on the beach and the lack of proper  environmental assessments before dredging occurred in the estuary have  also worsened the situation. 
Le Tri Thanh said they started to build a temporary dyke for emergency  cases in last November. The VND60bn (USD2.6m) dyke will weigh 300  tonnes, 20m long and 5m high. During this time, the Ministry of  Transport also started a VND10bn dredging project at Thu Bon River to  expand the waterway. The local authorities agreed to use the sand from  Thu Bon River to create an artificial beach inside the temporary dyke.
Ships of various firms including Thanh Do, Son Thinh and Thuan Luu  companies from Nam Dinh, Hai Phong and Hung Yen provinces were hired to  carry out the projects. Taking advantages of the busy activities, those  ships have been accused of stealing the sand to be sold to other  projects in Danang City.
On March 4, the border guards in Quang Nam Province had caught four  ships that were carrying sand to Danang. However, the ship owners denied  the claims and said that they had got lost at sea.
Lao Dong Newspaper reported that the sand was sold to Da Phuoc-The  Sunrise Bay urban area project. This project needs five million cubic  metres of sand to fill in part of Danang Bay.
Pham Thanh Ty, director of Thanh Do Company, admitted to the illegal  activities of the ships, but said that he didn't know and failed to  monitor their activities. Further investigation shows that the ships  actually belong to Tuan Sinh Company in Nam Dinh City.
Tuan Sinh Company had signed a VND60bn contract to dredge one million  cubic metres of sand at Cua Dai Beach for Da Phuoc urban area project in  Danang. According to the contract, the company promised to dredge 3,000  cubic metres of sand per day in the first two months of 2017 and 10,000  cubic metres from March to September.
There's no evidence to show that Tuan Sinh's sand is sourced legally.
On March 22, officials of Cua Dai Border Post and other agencies had a  meeting to discuss the management over the dredging projects. About 15  ships are given permits to operate in the areas but only eight ships are  working, seven ships have ended their contracts with the investors and  have their permits withdrawn. However, Cua Dai Border Post wasn't  informed about those ships. There are also shortcomings in the amount of  dredged sand monitoring.