General Secretary of
the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) Nguyen Phu
Trong left Hanoi on April 7 for his official four-day visit to China.
The
Party General Secretary is accompanied by Politburo member, Secretary
of CPV Central Committee and Head of the CPV Central Committee’s
Commission for Popularisation and Education Dinh The Huynh, Politburo
member and National Assembly Vice Chairwoman Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan,
Politburo member and Minister of National Defence General Phung Quang
Thanh, Politburo member and Minister of Public Security General Tran Dai
Quang, Secretary of CPV Central Committee and Head of the CPV Central
Committee’s Administrative Office Tran Quoc Vuong, Deputy Prime Minister
and Minister of Foreign Affairs Pham Binh Minh, CPV Central Committee
member and Minister of Industry and Trade Vu Huy Hoang; and other senior
officials.
This is the first official visit made by a Vietnamese
Party General Secretary since the 18th national congress of the
Communist Party of China in 2012.
The trip is aimed at building
up momentum for the healthy development of Vietnam-China relations,
particularly in the context of diplomatic ties entering their 65th year
(January 18, 1950).
Party chief’s China visit to boost stable, healthy ties
The
forthcoming visit to China by Party leader Nguyen Phu Trong, the first
official visit to the country made by a Vietnamese Party General
Secretary since the 18th national congress of the Communist Party of
China, aims to build up momentum for the healthy development of
Vietnam-China relations, particularly in the context of the two
countries’ diplomatic ties entering their 65th year (January 18,
1950-2015).
Since the 1991 normalisation, the ties have grown
fast and profound in all aspects with frequent meetings of high-ranking
officials held and many cooperation agreements signed, enhancing mutual
understanding and facilitating the long-term and result-oriented
partnership.
The sides have thus far organised ten ideology
workshops between the two parties and seven conferences of the joint
steering committee for bilateral cooperation, while the defence,
security and national defence sectors have signed and implemented many
cooperative agreements. Provinces of both countries have worked together
in many fields, and various people-to-pepole exchanges held including 6
people’s forums and 14 youth friendship festivals.
During the
last ten years, China has continually been Vietnam’s largest trade
partner while Vietnam has become the second biggest ASEAN trade partner
of China, after Indonesia. In 2014, the two-way trade revenue reached
US$58.87 billion. A total investment of US$7.94 billion in 1,082
projects made China the ninth largest foreign investor in Vietnam by the
end of last year.
A five-year economic-trade pact (2012-2016)
was inked during the 2011 visit of the Vietnamese Party General
Secretary. In 2013, when Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang made a
working trip to Vietnam, the sides agreed to beef up economic-commercial
engagement focusing on several key infrastructure and transport
projects. They also set goals to bring bilateral trade revenue to US$60
billion in 2015 and US$100 billion in 2017.
Bilateral ties in
education and tourism are growing, with around 13,500 Vietnamese
students in China and 4,000 Chinese students in Vietnam. Some 1 million
Vietnamese travel to China every year, while 1.94 million Chinese
visited Vietnam in 2014 alone.
Regarding territory and border
issues, the two countries have signed an agreement on basic principles
for settling territory and border issues. So far, the two have signed a
treaty on land border delimitation (in 1999), an agreement on the
delimitation of the Tonkin Gulf (in 2000), another on fishery
cooperation in the Tonkin Gulf (in 2000), and a protocol on fishery
cooperation in the Tonkin Gulf (in 2004).
On the East Sea issue,
the two countries have signed an agreement on basic principles guiding
the settlement of sea-related issues. The ASEAN, of which Vietnam is a
member, and China signed the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in
the East Sea (DOC) in 2002. The bloc is expeditiously working towards an
early conclusion of the Code of Conduct in the East Sea (COC), with the
first official consultation at Senior Official Meeting level held in
September 2013.
However, complicated developments in the East Sea
put considerable impacts on Vietnam-China cooperative ties in various
fields and hindered the implementation of a number of exchange and
cooperative programmes despite certain improvements in the bilateral
relationship.
The visit of Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu
Trong is hoped to strengthen the friendly and stable situation,
facilitating the settlement of existing problems between the two
countries.
VNA
All comments [ 10 ]
The relations between the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) provide a political foundation for strengthening the relationship between the two countries.
the stable and sustainable development of friendly co-operation with China was a consistent priority in Viet Nam's foreign policy.
There's still the South China Sea issue between two countries, we need to settle it peacefully for both countries' interests.
Since the normalisation of ties, Viet Nam and China have set forth a vision to push ties between the two Parties and countries forward in the spirit of "good neighbours, good friends, good comrades and good partnerships".
No matter what we still can't believe China.
Regarding sea issues, the two sides underscored the need to strictly implement the "Agreement on basic principles guiding the settlement of sea-related issues between Viet Nam and China".
We are aware of he way that China operates as we’ve seen is to, say one thing and do another, so cunning!
For now, we still need to keep relations well with China for our developments.
Vietnam has strengthened its military relationship with old enemy the United States since the South China Sea dispute has heated up following Xi's assumption of power in 2013.
Enhanced diplomatic, national defence and security engagements alongside joint economic and trade activities will build a solid foundation for our relations.
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