11 July 2012
By Jo Biddle | AFP
US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks in a press conference with
Vietnamese Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh at the Government Guest House
in Hanoi. Clinton met with Vietnam's top communist leaders Tuesday for
talks aimed at boosting trade as the US seeks to shore up its stuttering
economy with an Asia-focused export drive
US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) and Vietnam's Prime Minister
Nguyen Tan Dung shake hands at the Government Office in Hanoi. Clinton
made a strong push for improved human rights
US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) is greeted by Vietnam's Foreign
Minister Pham Binh Minh at the Government Guest House in Hanoi. Clinton
witnessed the signing of two deals between General Electric and
Vietnam's biggest state-owned telecoms group Vietnamese National Power
Transmission Corporation, and a private Vietnamese company
Hillary Clinton met with
Vietnam's top communist leaders Tuesday for talks aimed at boosting
trade as the US seeks to shore up its stuttering economy with an
Asia-focused export drive.
But the Secretary of State, who
arrived from a trip to Mongolia, also made a strong push for improved
human rights, arguing: "Democracy and prosperity go hand-in-hand.
Political reform and economic growth are linked."
Clinton held talks with Foreign
Minister Pham Binh Minh and had a landmark meeting with communist party
head Nguyen Phu Trong at which she pressed human rights concerns, US
officials said.
She also witnessed the signing
of two deals between US company General Electric and Vietnam's biggest
state-owned telecoms group Vietnamese National Power Transmission
Corporation, and a private Vietnamese company.
There have been "remarkable"
changes in Vietnam and the cooperation between the two countries is
"steadily growing", Clinton said, adding that they shared "important
strategic interests" on issues like the South China Sea.
Vietnam has made clear it
welcomes a closer relationship with its former wartime enemy amid
territorial disputes with its historic rival China.
Minh said the two sides had held
"interesting, open and constructive talks on several issues of
bilateral relations and regional issues".
They agreed disputes in the
South China Sea should be resolved through "peaceful measures" and Minh
said he hoped the bilateral relationship would "grow rigorously" in
years to come.
Later this week Clinton will
host a meeting of American business leaders in the Cambodian city of
Siem Reap, on boosting US exports to the region and taking advantage of
the region's growing middle class.
At a forum in a Hanoi hotel she
urged American and Vietnamese business leaders "let's get to work",
adding, "there is so much untapped potential".
Since 2010 the US-Vietnam trade
partnership has expanded 40 percent, Clinton told the gathering. Annual
bilateral trade now stands at some $22 billion with the US being the
seventh largest foreign investor in Vietnam, she said.
"The United States is now
Vietnam's largest market for exports and we are very proud of that. And
American companies are poised to help Vietnam take on many of its
current challenges."
However, a US official confirmed
that the relationship was lopsided, with US exports to Vietnam
accounting for some $4.3 billion, while Vietnamese imports to the United
States were worth $17.4 billion.
"There is no doubt that American business is eager to invest more in Asia," Clinton told the forum.
"Companies are taking advantage
of an improving business climate and setting up shop to serve the needs
of Asia's growing middle class."
Vietnam, where the pace of
economic growth slowed to a three-year low of 4.38 percent in the first
half of 2012, could benefit significantly if a regional Trans-Pacific
Partnership is finalised by the end of the year, Clinton stressed
earlier in the day at a joint press conference with Minh.
But the accord called for
"higher standards", and Vietnam must "create more space for the free
exchange of ideas, strengthen the rule of law and respect the universal
rights of all its workers, including the right to unionise", she said.
Clinton has come under pressure
to speak out more on human rights, with one US congressman Monday
demanding the removal of Washington's ambassador to Vietnam, accusing
him of failing to press the issue.
A top US official confirmed
Tuesday that at Washington's request Clinton had met with party head
Trong, saying that there were "elements within the politburo that are
deeply wary about the relationship with the United States".
"Secretary Clinton made an
incredibly clear, very firm case... with specific names and concerns...
and underscored that we have been raising these cases now in some cases
for years with little progress," the official said.
At the press conference Clinton
stressed she had raised issues such as human rights and the lack of
freedom of information and online freedoms.
1 comment:
US playing war's economy on Vietnam...
Post a Comment