But country's top communist rebuffs calls for more freedom
Published:
20 November 2000 y., Monday
Concluding a historic visit, U.S. President Bill Clinton urged this communist nation Sunday to open its economy and allow greater individual freedoms, saying the rewards of a free-market system "should be embraced, not feared."
But the nation's top Communist Party official told him, in politer terms, to mind his own business. After a two-day visit to Hanoi where he nurtured long-bitter U.S.-Vietnam relations and got the Communist Party's upbeat view of post-war Vietnam from the party's top leader, Clinton arrived in the city once known as Saigon to cheers of thousands of people who lined the streets late at night.
In the final hours of the president's visit to the country, Clinton stopped at a shipping dock on the Saigon River. Under the shadow of two giant cranes, he spoke at a container terminal that is a joint venture between a Vietnamese state-owned company and a multinational firm.Clinton said Vietnam's own government acknowledges that state-owned enterprises cannot create enough jobs for Vietnam, one of the poorest countries in the world with an average annual income of $372.
Vietnam's Communist Party chief brushed aside Clinton's calls for greater political openness and more extensive economic reform, making clear it was not the business of the United States to lecture Vietnam.
In comments to Clinton at a meeting on Saturday in Hanoi, which a senior U.S. official described as "the language of old socialism," Le Kha Phieu reminded the United States that Vietnam had fought a long war to end occupation by "imperialists."
Šaltinis:
MSNBC
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
October 14, Vice Minister of National Defence Vytautas Umbrasas and Chief of Defence of Lithuania Maj. Gen. Arvydas Pocius left for a two-day visit in Afghanistan.
more »
On 13 October in Paris during the 35th session of the General Conference of United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the list of anniversary celebrations with which UNESCO will be associated in 2010-2011 was approved.
more »
On 14 October, the European Commission presented its annual package of documents on the European Union enlargement.
more »
On 15-17 October, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vygaudas Ušackas is paying a working visit to Afghanistan.
more »
President Dalia Grybauskaitė extended on behalf of herself and the people of Lithuania congratulations to King Juan Carlos I of Spain on National Day.
more »
We have been assured that NATO is still interested in investing in defence of the Baltic region, says President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė having met with NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen.
more »
October 8, Minister of National Defence Rasa Juknevičienė and Transport Minister of the Russian Federation Igor Levitin will sign an agreement between the Governments of the Russian Federation and the Republic of Lithuania on joint actions of preventing pollution of the Baltic Sea with oil and other hazardous materials.
more »
On October 9 President of the Republic of Lithuania H.E. Dalia Grybauskaitė and NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen will visit Aviation Base of the Lithuanian Air Force in Šiauliai.
more »
On 8 October, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vygaudas Ušackas received International Relations and Cooperation Deputy Minister of the Republic of South Africa Susan van der Merwe, who came to Lithuania for political consultations.
more »
Lithuania and Denmark concluded an agreement, under which Lithuania would represent Denmark in Kaliningrad when issuing Schengen visas.
more »