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
Guinness World Records officially declares that an Australian man has the world's largest feet.
more »
It's a sniffer dog with a difference: a military Belgian Shepherd that has been trained to detect signs of prostate cancer in patients' urine. According to French scientists, the dog can do it far more accurately than any currently available scientific technique.
more »
This week marks the beginning of hurricane season in the United States and scientists will be watching closely in the wake of extreme weather patterns that have devastated the Midwest. One of the questions they're trying to answer focuses on the impact of climate change and global warming.
more »
Spanish cucumbers are being blame for an E.coli outbreak that killed 10 people in Germany and sickened hundreds.
more »
Protesters clash with police as pro Mladic rallies continue in the Serbian capital.
more »
Japan, Geiger counters, radiation leak, Fuji Electric
more »
Chinese artist Qi Baishi's ink-wash work is auctioned for 65.4 million U.S. Dollars (425 million yuan) in Beijing, setting a new record for contemporary Chinese painting.
more »
Georgian police wearing full riot gear used water cannons and rubber bullets to disperse protesters in Tiblisi.
more »
CT scanning has allowed scientists to identify and recreate in stunning three-dimensional detail, an ancient spider trapped in amber for 50 million years...
more »
Researchers in Chicago have developed a new barcoding system that can identify and track zebras by their unique stripe patterns. The scientists say their computer program can also be modified to keep track of endangered species like tigers and some giraffe species.
more »