Showing posts with label Communist regimes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Communist regimes. Show all posts

Monday, March 12, 2012

It takes a commie regime to maintain solidarity with the Cuban commie regime!

CPP's Heng Samrin exchange pleasantries with Fidel Castro
Cambodia: Epicenter of Solidarity with Cuba in Asia and Pacific

Phnom Penh, Mar 11 (Prensa Latina) The voices in Asia and the Pacific breaking the media silence and disinformation on Cuba will take new solidarity actions in Cambodia this month.

Some 200 delegates from a score of countries from the region have confirmed participation in the 6th Asia-Pacific Solidarity Meeting with Cuba, which will be in session from March 22 to 25 in this capital.

Several participants told Prensa Latina that they will attend the event with initiatives and experiences to share, in order to break the silence on Cuba and its main vindications.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Birds of the same feather block together: Commie Cuba and Commie Nambodia

Cuba eyes cooperation with Cambodia

PHNOM PENH 2012-01-16 (Xinhua) - Cuba wants to cooperate with Cambodia in the fields of agriculture and health in order to strengthen and expand bilateral ties, said the new designated Cuban ambassador to Cambodia Jose Ramon R. Yarona on Monday.

Jose Ramon R. Yarona made the comments during a meeting with Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen at the Peace Palace.

He said Cuba and Cambodia have the possibility of launching cooperation in agriculture, pesticides and health, especially medicines for cancer prevention.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Sacrava's Political Cartoon: The Red Brotherhood

Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at http://sacrava.blogspot.com)
"We must end the activities of those selling the Vietnamese fatherland, looking to make Vietnam the fifth star of China," lamented an anonymous comment on the dissident site "Dan Lam Bao" ("Citizen journalism").

"The Vietnamese Communist Party wants to become a second-class Chinese citizen. This is a damned flag for the Vietnamese people," said another.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Kosal Path - "The economic factor in the Sino-Vietnamese split, 1972–75: An analysis of Vietnamese archival sources"

Kosal Path - The economic factor in the Sino-Vietnamese split, 1972–75: An analysis of Vietnamese archival ...

http://www.scribd.com/full/53392317?access_key=key-1u3hpso4vfj4vu1menvh

Monday, October 29, 2007

North Korean Prime Minister Visits Vietnam

North Korean Prime Minister Kim Yong Il, right, with Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, left, during an official reception in Hanoi, 27 Oct 2007

By Matt Steinglass
VOA Hanoi
29 October 2007


North Korean Prime Minister Kim Yong Il ended his visit to Vietnam, where he traveled from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City. Kim is responsible for running North Korea's economy, and is believed to want to apply lessons from Vietnam's economic reforms to North Korea's failing command economy. In Hanoi, Matt Steinglass has more.

Carp splashed for a meal Monday, as Prime Minister Kim Yong Il of North Korea tossed fish food into the pond in front of the small wooden house where Ho Chi Minh lived when he was President of Vietnam.

In the ceremonial visit Kim referred to the shared Communist roots of North Korea and Vietnam.

Kim said he hoped the two countries could take their historical friendship to a new level.

But the fish desperately fighting for Kim's handouts were an uncomfortable echo of the real reason for his visit: the failure of the North Korean command economy, which has made its people dependent on food aid from abroad.

Paul French is an expert on North Korea, and the director of the market research firm Access Asia. He says one reason for Kim's trip is the North Korean leadership's recognition that it needs to imitate the kinds of economic reforms that have made Vietnam's economy successful.

"There is this reform, technocratic element in North Korea that actually realizes they've got to do some reforms," he said. "At the moment, I think the reformers are probably feeling quite strong, and this is partly why Kim is undertaking these trips."

An earlier round of market-oriented reforms in North Korea failed in 2003. Financial sanctions imposed by the United States in 2006 over Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program deepened the country's isolation.

The U.S. lifted those sanctions in February after Pyongyang agreed to scrap its nuclear weapons program, reviving hopes of economic reform.

Kim's trip, which will take him from Vietnam to Malaysia, Cambodia and Laos, is aimed partly at learning lessons from export-oriented Asian economies.

French says Kim is also trying to curry favor with Southeast Asian countries in order to gain help from international lending institutions.

"They have to resolve this issue of dealing with the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank and people like that," he said. "They're not going to get any serious private investment from investment banks, or from funds, or from anything, until what's called the catalyst lenders, like the World Bank, go in there and do it."

On Sunday, Kim visited a privatized coalmine near Haiphong, part of Vietnam's effort to bring foreign investment into its energy industry. Kim was also scheduled to travel to Ho Chi Minh City to visit an export-processing zone.

Kim's trip has provided Vietnam with a chance to exercise its growing international influence, says Duong Chinh Thuc, Vietnam's former ambassador to North Korea.

Thuc says Vietnam has long wanted to play a role as mediator between North Korea and the rest of the world.