Showing posts with label VN invasion of Cambodia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VN invasion of Cambodia. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Chinese soldiers nearly done with landmine sweeping on Sino-Vietnam border

December 31, 2008
Xinhua

In a joint statement in 2005, China and Vietnam pledged to make the border a "peaceful and friendly" one with long-term stability. But that goal has been threatened by landmines and explosives.

Since 1979, almost 6,000 Chinese in Wenshan Prefecture along the border died or were injured by landmines, according to the local government. No figures were available on Vietnamese casualties.

According to the headquarters of the PLA Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Regional Military Area Command, China cleared 130,000 sq km with more than 6,800 landmines along the Friendship Pass. That eliminated threats to the local civilians, many of whom lost limbs or even lives when they crossed the border to trade with the Vietnamese.

Sharen Village in the prefecture's Funing County is internationally known as a landmine-ridden village. Most of the 87villagers have lost one or both legs to landmines.

Farmland has also been endangered, with thousands of hectares off limits because of mines underneath.

"During the first mission, our task was mainly to remove mines along the border pass and roads where frontier defense soldiers usually patrolled," Fu recalled. Experts came all the way from Beijing to offer expertise and equipment such as metal detectors.

"Each time we completed de-mining, we always stomped and walked along the area before we turned it over to local governments," he said.

The first mission, between 1992 and 1994, removed mines in 102.8 sq km and closed off mined areas of 159.46 sq km to prevent injuries. Fu said, from then on, the number of human mine-related accidents fell, although livestock were often killed.

The second campaign, which the PLA said was the largest in world military history, was conducted between 1997 and 1999 on the border in two southwestern autonomous regions of Yunnan and Guangxi.

With experience and an unspecified increase in spending, better results were obtained, the local military area command said.

More than 500,000 landmines and 180,000 explosives were unearthed. At the Sino-Vietnam War's main battlefield, the smell of thousands of hectares of tea plants grown after 1999 replaced the previous choking smoke caused by exploded mines.

Mine removal has paved the way for prosperous border trade. China has been Vietnam's largest trade partner for more than two years, with trade hitting 16.6 billion U.S. dollars in the first 10 months of this year, surpassing the total 2007 figure, according to the Chinese government. Leaders of the two countries have set a target of 25 billion U.S. dollars by 2010, it said.

They also pledged to speed the creation of sub-regional economic areas, including a China-ASEAN (the Association of Southeast Asian Nations) free trade zone and trade corridors along the Mekong River, which originates in China, runs through Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam and empties into the South China Sea.

"A peaceful border is part of any promising relationship between two armies and two countries and provides opportunities for increasing mutual respect and trust," said Jiang Yi, research fellow with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

However, the danger of landmines has not been completely eliminated. It was estimated there were about 40 sq km of mined fields after two previous de-mining missions, with more than 500,000 mines and explosives remaining.

Monday, December 31, 2007

Vietnam does not live up to its international responsability, especially because of its mistreatment of Khmer Krom and Montagnard people

Vietnam's New Foreign Policy Activism

December 31, 2007
Eye on Asia
Radio Singapore International

In January, Vietnam will become a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council for the first time. This is a crowning achievement for Hanoi and caps a ten-year effort to build up Vietnam’s international profile.

However, Vietnamese leaders are wary about the kinds of new responsibilities that will come with Security Council membership. Rather than sit back and react to global developments, Vietnam has deliberately sought to make an active contribution to peace on the Korean peninsula. In doing so, Vietnam has received the backing of South Korea and encouragement from the United States.

The Cold War left both Vietnam and Korea divided. Hanoi and Pyongyang exchanged diplomatic relations in 1950. In 1957, Kim Il-sung and Ho Chi Minh exchanged presidential visits. During the Vietnam War, North Korea secretly sent pilots to help defend North Vietnam. Some perished in combat.

But not all has been smooth sailing between these communist states. Relations were strained during Vietnam’s decade long occupation of Cambodia in the 1980s. North Korea provided sanctuary to Norodom Sihanouk, the leader of the anti-Vietnamese resistance. Relations soured again in 1992 when Vietnam recognized Seoul and developed a substantial commercial relationship.

And relations were frayed in 2004 when Vietnam permitted several hundred North Korean refugees who arrived on its soil to be resettled in South Korea.

Since then, the situation on the Korean Peninsula has moved through several periods of crisis before entering its current positive phase within the framework of the Six Party Talks between China, Japan, Russia, the United States and the two Koreas.

As a spin off to these talks, Vietnam hosted bilateral discussions on normalization between Japan and North Korea.

Vietnam has also initiated its own diplomacy towards Pyongyang. In mid-October this year, party Secretary General Nong Duc Manh and Deputy Prime Minister Pham Gia Khiem paid an official visit to North Korea.

Manh and Khiem then traveled to Seoul to further develop the already substantial bilateral commercial relationship. South Korea is currently Vietnam’s leading foreign investor. Manh briefed his counterpart on his visit to Pyongyang and declared that Vietnam was ready to play an active role in enhancing stability on the Korean peninsula.

In late October, Premier Kim Yong-Il made a reciprocal visit to Vietnam. In addition to holding discussions with his hosts, Kim visited the coal mining province of Quang Nam, tourism facilities in Ha Long Bay, the port of Hai Phong and the commercial hub of Ho Chi Minh City.

From all these diplomatic initiatives signs are emerging that North Korea is looking closely and seriously at Vietnamese economic reforms known collectively as doi moi. The Chinese language media in Hong Kong reported that President Kim Jong-Il reportedly told Secretary General Manh that North Korea would adopt the Vietnamese model of reform and openness.

Perhaps more significantly, Vietnam has been able to ally some of Pyongyang’s suspicions about opening up to the outside world. During a research trip to Hanoi earlier this month, I was able to learn first hand from Vietnamese diplomats how isolated and distrustful North Korean officials really are about the motives of their closest neighbours as well as the United States.

Vietnam has been able to share some pertinent lessons from its experiences in dealing with Washington. After all, Vietnam suffered from a U.S.-imposed embargo that lasted three decades before both sides normalized diplomatic relations and developed a growing commercial relationship.

What is in store in the immediate future? Presidents Kim Jong-Il and Nguyen Minh Triet are likely to exchange visits in the new year. Vietnamese officials report that North Korea will send junior diplomats to study at the Institute of International Relations in Hanoi. Vietnam will quietly encourage North Korea on its present path. Both sides will also seek to promote cooperation in agriculture and science and technology.

The world has long become accustomed to Vietnam’s economic success and its rise as Asia’s next dragon. As Vietnam’s new foreign policy activism indicates, economic success has bred political confidence. Vietnam has shrewdly chosen the Korean issue to demonstrate that it can contribute to resolving international issues and is therefore worthy of a seat on the UN Security Council.

This is Carlyle Thayer, Professor of Politics at The University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy in Canberra.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Vietnam Dismisses Khieu Samphan's Claims [-VN didn't take over Cambodia in 1975, it only did it in 1979]

Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
01 August 2007


A Vietnamese Embassy official Wednesday rejected the views of Khieu Samphan, former nominal head of the Khmer Rouge, who claimed Cambodia's eastern neighbor would have taken over Cambodia in 1975 if the regime had not protected the country.

Trinh Ba Kim, first secretary of the Vietnamese mission in Phnom Penh, said Khieu Samphan's claims, made to VOA Khmer earlier this week, were untrue.

Former Khmer Rouge leaders have routinely used the Vietnamese as scapegoats, and, when the regime began its spiraling self destruction, many cadre were accused of being Vietnamese agents. They were then tortured and killed.

Government spokesman Khieu Kanharith called Khieu Samphan an intellectual who should not have said such things.