Greetings to French leaders on France’s National Day

Hanoi (VNA) – President Tran Dai Quang on July 13
sent greetings to his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron on the occasion of the
229th National Day of France (July 14, 1789 - 2018).
The same day, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc also cabled his congratulations to French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe.
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh extended his greetings to French Minister of Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Yves Le Drian on the occasion.
In the messages, the Vietnamese leaders emphasised the importance of the year 2018 when the two countries mark the 45th anniversary of their diplomatic relations and five years of the bilateral strategic partnership.
The leaders expressed their delight at the strong progress of the Vietnam-France relationship over the past time, and proposed that the two countries work closely together for the stronger and more effective development of bilateral ties in the interests of both peoples and for the sake of peace, cooperation and development.
Vietnam and France officially set up diplomatic ties on April 12, 1973.
The two nations decided to establish the Strategic Partnership in 2013.
In recent years, the two sides
have maintained the exchange of high-ranking visits and various cooperation
mechanisms. Notably, apart from organising the Vietnam-France Defence Policy
Dialogue, the two countries have also maintained high-level economic dialogues
and financial and economic forums.
France was the first Western
country to have a defence attaché in Vietnam in 1991. In November 2009, the two
ministries of defence signed an agreement on annual rotating organisation of
the Vietnam-France Joint Committee on National Defence Cooperation, which was
renamed “the Defence Policy Dialogue” with its first meeting in November 2016.
Trade links between the two sides
has witnessed strong development in recent years. Vietnam has enjoyed a trade
surplus in exports to the French market. Two-way trade hit 4.6 billion USD in
2017, up 11.6 percent from the previous year.
France began investing in Vietnam
in 1988. In 2017, France ranked third among European countries, and 16th among
125 countries and territories investing in Vietnam, with 513 valid projects
worth 2.8 billion USD. France’s direct investment in Vietnam mainly focuses on
IT and processing and manufacturing industries.
France is a leading European ODA
provider for Vietnam, and Vietnam is the second largest beneficiary nation of
French ODA in Asia, with total committed capital of 18.4 billion USD since
1993.
Regarding educational
cooperation, France regards education and training as a priority in its
cooperation with Vietnam, focusing on French language teaching and human
resources training at tertiary and post-graduate levels in various areas like
economic management, banking, finance, law and new technology.
The French Government allocates
about 5 million EUR (6.1 million USD) for cultural cooperation with Vietnam
each year, including support for French culture centres in Hanoi (L’Espace), Ho
Chi Minh City (Institute of Cultural Exchange with France – IDECAF), Hue and Da
Nang.
With 14 projects worth 188
million USD, France ranks seventh among countries and territories in terms of
tourism investment in Vietnam, which considers the EU nation as a key source of
tourists.
Beginning in early 1990s,
cooperation among localities of the two countries has become a special feature
in the bilateral relations. As many as 38 French localities have established
partnerships with 18 provinces and cities of Vietnam. Since 1990, there have
been 235 projects between localities of Vietnam and France, focusing on health
care, education, water and hygiene, heritage preservation, French-speaking
community, rural and sustainable development.
As members of the International
Francophone Organisation (OIF), the two sides have many cooperation activities
within the organisation, especially in teaching French, higher education and
parliamentary activities.
Currently, around 300,000
Vietnamese people are living, studying and working in France, 40,000 of whom
have tertiary or postgraduate degrees. Many of them are working in universities,
research institutes and administrative agencies of France.-VNA