This is the second of a three-part series looking at Vietnam as it evolved from a poverty-stricken post-war country into the tourist destination it is today.
Vietnam’s first post-war tourists from non-socialist and non-Communist countries were strictly chaperoned and could only stay in approved accommodation. After a number of reforms at the end of the 1980s and early 90s, tourists could choose where they went and where they stayed.
As we taxied to the terminal we passed wrecked planes, including many US military aircraft from the war, that had been pushed to the sides of the runway and just left there.

There were a few stalls selling Zippo lighters, which, if you believed the seller, were all taken from dead American soldiers. Others sold jewellery made from bullet casings and other oddities.