Vietnamese President’s speech at Nehru Memorial Museum

New Delhi (VNA) - Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang talked with nearly 300 Indian politicians, professors, researchers, scholars and students at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library in New Delhi on March 4 morning (local time) during his three-day State visit to India.
The following is the full text of President Tran
Dai Quang’s speech at the event.
VIETNAM – INDIA: STRENGTHENING COMPREHENSIVE
STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP FOR THE INTEREST OF THE TWO PEOPLES; FOR PEACE, STABILITY
AND PROSPERITY IN THE REGION AND THE WORLD
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Namaste,
I am very pleased to have the opportunity to
be here and speak with the politicians, professors, researchers, scholars, and
students at the Nehru Memorial Museum & Library, the place which enshrines
the historic relics of the life and work of Jawaharlal Nehru - a great Indian
leader whose entire life was devoted to India's freedom and independence, and to peace and friendship among
nations. To President Ho Chi Minh and the people of Vietnam he was a great and
close friend.
At
the beginning may I express my gratitude to the Indian Government, the Indian
Foundation, and to all of you present here, for making possible this meaningful
gathering. Your presence here is a strong expression of the interest in
relations between Vietnam and India and the desire to join hearts and hands for
peace, stability, cooperation, and development in the Indian Ocean and the
Asia-Pacific.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
During
these first two decades of the 21st century our world has witnessed
many rapid, profound, and comprehensive changes. One of the most dramatic and
inspirational of them all is the rise of Asia.
Just
a hundred years ago the vast majority of the continent, India and Vietnam
included, lay engulfed in the long darkness of colonialism, wars, and
backwardness. Few could have imagined that one century from those dark days,
Asia would rise to become a geo-politic, geo-economic, and cultural center of
the world. Almost every global forecast today agrees on one thing: this century
shall be the Asian Century.
Within
only a few decades the world has witnessed the miracles of India, China, Japan,
the Republic of Korea, and the ASEAN countries. It is a fascinating coincidence
that all of these miracles have converged around the Indian Ocean and the
Asia-Pacific.
Along
with globalization and regionalization, the trends of linkage and integration,
and the impacts of the revolution in science and technology, our region in
recent years has yielded a cornucopia of long-term ideas, initiatives, and
strategies for cooperation that are both inter-regional and global in scope. I would
like briefly to name a few: the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership
Agreement between ASEAN and its six partners; India's “Act East” Policy;
China's “Belt and Road Initiative”; Japan's “Free and Open Indo-Pacific
Strategy”; the United States' “Free and Open Indo-Pacific Vision”; and, most
recently, the establishment of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for
Trans-Pacific Partnership, joined by eleven economies on both sides of the
Pacific.
All
these undertakings are raising the status and attractiveness of our region to a
new level never seen before in history. Should all of the aforementioned come
to fruition as per the statements of their founders, we will see the creation
of a new space of security and development, comprising the Indian Ocean, Asia
and the Pacific, hereafter called the Indo-Asia-Pacific. The ever-closer economic,
political, and cultural ties between the Asia-Pacific and the Indian Ocean will
create a new driver for growth and help transform the Asian Century into the Indo-Asia-Pacific
Century.
Consequently,
India and Vietnam shall both be part of a vast community accounting for 60% of
the Earth's land area, 50% of world population, and a greater share of global
GDP, trade, investment, and capacity for innovation. ASEAN and India shall
become an integration hub with an essential role in the region’s future
development.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
The achievements of the past decades in the Indo-Asia-Pacific
provide a solid foundation to further strengthen and foster friendship and
cooperation between countries both within and outside of the region, thus
enabling us to make greater contributions to mankind.
However,
our region is also facing notable intertwined challenges. In addition to being
the convergence point of many initiatives for integration and cooperation, the Indo-Asia-Pacific
is also a core theater in the competition for power and influence among major
powers.
Furthermore,
issues include regional hot-spots; armed conflicts; land, sea, and island
sovereignty disputes; contested natural resources; international terrorism and
transnational crime; and environmental pollution and climate change among
others, all are evolving at an ever-greater scope, frequency, and level, with
more serious characteristics. There remains a stark contrast between
cooperation and competition, between moderation and extremism, between openness
and isolation, between liberalism and protectionism, between development and
stagnation, between independence and dependence, between unity and division.
The desire for peace, stability, cooperation, and development in the Indo-Asia-Pacific
has yet to be truly realized.
Shall
this century become the Indo-Asia-Pacific Century? Shall this region truly
become a hub connecting resources and harmonizing interests for continuous,
more dynamic, and more sustainable development?
This
aspiration will only come true when all countries share a common vision for an
open and rules-based region, and a common interest in the maintenance of peace,
stability, and inclusive prosperity, wherein no country, no nation, and no
group shall be left behind.
This
aspiration will only come true when all countries join together in the effort
to protect the freedom of navigation and unimpeded trade and not let the Indo-Asia-Pacific
be balkanized into spheres of influence manipulated by power politics, hindered
by protectionism, or divided by narrow nationalism.
This
aspiration will only come true when countries stand side by side to build a
common space for co-existence and development in the belief that the Indo-Asia-Pacific
is vast enough for every country to flourish and prosper.
This
aspiration will only come true when all countries make the effort to establish
effective mechanisms to maintain peace, stability, and the rule of law, so as to
ensure the common security, prevent conflict and war, and effectively address
security challenges both traditional and non-traditional.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
The Indian national hero Mahatma Gandhi once urged
“You
must be the change you wish to see in the world”. This could not be truer: the realization of this
aspiration depends to a large extent on the capacity and the will of all
countries in the region -- India, Vietnam, and ASEAN included -- to join hands
in cooperation.
Geographically, India and ASEAN lie at the heart of the Indo-Asia-Pacific. Historically, over the last
twenty centuries the peoples of India and Southeast Asia have come together
bound by the values of peace, humanism, and fraternity. Today, India is marked
by rapid and sustainable development that makes an ever-greater contribution to
peace, stability, and prosperity in the region. ASEAN is characterized by being
resilient, united, cohesive, well-integrated, and open in its cooperation, playing
an expanding role in the region. These work together as paramount components of
peace, cooperation, and development in the region as a whole. Herein lies our
common interests and shared vision, one in line with the path to development and
the constantly-growing status and stature of both India and ASEAN in the
international arena.
For these reasons, ASEAN has strong faith and great expectations
in the vigorous growth of India, a power that is deeply aware of her
responsibilities and duties towards the international community. India shall
become a new pole of development, an important engine for peace, prosperity, and
integration both in the Indo-Asia-Pacific and the world at large.
We wish to express our gratitude for, and most highly
appreciate, The Honorable Prime Minister Narendra Modi's statement at the
ASEAN–India Summit in November last year: that India's “Act East” policy “is shaped around ASEAN, and its centrality in
the regional security architecture of the Indo-Pacific region”. With this policy, India
has been making efforts to forge substantive links, engage in deeper economic
and political integration, and foster people-to-people ties with the ASEAN
countries. It is obvious that only through ever-closer connectivity in
infrastructure, trade and investment, culture, education and training, and science
and technology, and many other fields can India and ASEAN amplify their
strength, building together upon their roles and status so as to build a common
development space for peace, stability, cooperation, and development, one that
can more effectively respond to external shocks and challenges. The 25 years of
ASEAN-India relations stand as a testimony to this. Over the next 25 years,
given new opportunities and challenges, strengthening ASEAN-India ties must be
both an objective necessity and a strategic choice for our two sides.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Vietnam–India diplomatic relations are about to celebrate their
semi-centennial, yet the close ties between our two lands and peoples have
existed for thousands of years. Such links stem not only from shared interests
but also from the profound and enduring cultural values that we share.
As early as the 1st century CE, the venerable monk
Mahajivaka introduced Buddhism from India to Vietnam. The religion spread
rapidly, for its cultural and spiritual values resonated well with our native
beliefs. The ideas of equality, fraternity, anattā / anātman (non-self), and altruism that
Buddhism represents have since taken root in the consciousness of the
Vietnamese people and become in themselves inseparable parts of Vietnamese
culture.
Since the 2nd century, Hinduism has also been
present in Vietnam, its mark well-preserved in the Cham cultural relics in
central Vietnam, the timeless epic of Ramayana, the character of Sita gifted
with beauty and intellect, and the discipline of Yoga that is becoming ever-more
popular in everyday Vietnamese life.
Today the works of the renowned cultural personality, poet,
and philosopher Rabindranath Tagore - the first Asian Nobel Laureate in
Literature -- still enchant the hearts of millions of Vietnamese with verses
that hold within them profound philosophies about the universe, humanity,
happiness, and love.
During the early 20th century the paths of our
two countries' leaders converged in the struggle against colonialism for our
two peoples' independence and freedom. As early as 1943, although imprisoned,
the Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh composed these heartfelt verses addressed to
Indian leader Jawaharlal Nehru:
“My
cause striven, yours assayed,
To
prison you went, in jail I stayed;
Though
countless miles our meeting part,
Our
sympathy, no words need impart.”
Exactly eleven years later, on 17 October 1954 -- just one
week after the liberation of Ha-noi -- Prime Minister Nehru at the cordial
invitation of President Ho Chi Minh became the first foreign head of state to
pay a visit to Vietnam.
The image of our Indian brothers taking to the streets in
support of the righteous resistance against American imperialism of the
Vietnamese people, the slogan “Amar Nam, Tomar
Nam, Vietnam, Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh, Dien Bien Phu” on their lips, shall be
forever etched in the consciousness of the Vietnamese people. From the bottom
of our hearts, we wish to express our deepest gratitude for the pure and
sincere love, unfazed by hardship and unshaken by storm as it is, that the
people of India have given to the people of Vietnam over the years.
Today, in a rapidly changing world we are proud to witness
the traditional, faithful friendship between our two countries and peoples not just
remaining true but even flourishing. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has stressed that,
Vietnam is the top priority in the effort to strengthen India's relations with
the Asia-Pacific. As seen from Vietnam’s foreign policy, India has always been
one of the most important partners.
Exactly sixty years ago during his visit to India, our
beloved President Ho Chi Minh asserted that “India is an independent and mighty
nation that has made many invaluable contributions to peace in Asia and the
world”. This observation remains relevant today. We are glad to note that in
recent years India's rise has been closely linked with the prosperity and
affluence of Asia as a whole. India's peaceful development has always worked as
an important and constructive factor to regional peace and stability. With her vast
potential and great contributions, India surely deserves a greater role in the Indo-Asia-Pacific
region and the world.
For this reason, Vietnam welcomes India continuing to play
her important role in the region. We consistently support your active
participation in regional linkages and cooperation mechanisms, including APEC,
as well as India’s becoming a Permanent Member of the United Nations Security
Council.
Today our two countries have established a Comprehensive
Strategic Partnership, setting forth our similar interests and values as well
as our understanding and position regarding regional and global issues. Our two
sides are working towards implementing the 2017-2020 Action Plan, already
recording significant results. Political, defense, and security cooperation has
all been expanded and become strategic pillars in our bilateral relations. Economic and trade cooperation is growing
dramatically as well. Development cooperation and joint efforts in education,
training, culture, tourism, and people-to-people exchanges are deepening,
creating an enduring social foundation for our bilateral ties.
2017 was the “Friendship Year” celebrating the 45th anniversary of Vietnam–India cooperation. Our relations have entered a new
period of development, and this requires renewed efforts and determination from
both sides in order to realize always-greater achievements and live up to the
expectations of our two peoples. The goal of our Comprehensive Strategic
Partnership is nothing other than a strong and prosperous Vietnam that develops
sustainably; a powerful India with growing prestige and status in the
international arena; and our joint contribution towards the maintenance of
peace, stability, cooperation, and development in the region and the world.
To this end, I wish to share with you some of my thoughts
on the future direction of Vietnam–India relations.
First, we need to strengthen economic and trade
connectivity as a pillar and driver of the Vietnam–India Comprehensive
Strategic Partnership. Accordingly, we need to overcome the mentality of
protectionism, promote trade/investment liberalization, and upgrade infrastructure,
maritime and aviation connectivity in both the bilateral context and the
framework of sub-regional and regional plans. Vietnam supports and will coordinate
accordingly so that India will become an important element in the ASEAN
Connectivity Master Plan, finalizing the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership Agreement in 2018.
We should promote maritime connectivity as a key area, not just
in bilateral relations but also in the context of peace, stability and
development in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. Our two sides need to engage in regular
information exchanges, experience-sharing, and capacity-building in handling
maritime security matters. We should
work together to develop a “blue-sea economy” through maritime connectivity,
port cooperation, and environmental protection and the sustainable use of
maritime resources. We should also make efforts to foster the maritime order and
settle disputes peacefully on the basis of international law, including the
1982 United Nations' Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
Furthermore, we should strengthen connectivity in realizing
the SDGs in both countries, closely linking the United Nations' 2030 Action
Agenda to regional cooperation frameworks including the Mekong-Ganga mechanism.
Vietnam hopes to effectively and substantively work with India in such areas as
green agriculture, green technology, clean and renewable energy, capacity
enhancement in information technology, disaster prevention and relief, and
climate change response.
We should continue to work closely together in building a
new and open regional architecture that is inclusive and shares the values and
interests of peace. We should effectively implement all elements of the Vietnam–India
Comprehensive Strategic Partnership and the ASEAN–India Strategic Partnership
with a new vision. Good strategic partnership at all levels will yield benefits
not only for Vietnam and India but also for peace and development in the
region.
In addition, our two countries need to work together more
closely in multilateral forums, in particular in UN and ASEAN mechanisms. We
should more actively take part in building and shaping of cooperation
frameworks and norms, making substantive contributions to the common efforts of
the international community to ensure peace, cooperation and development, thus
bringing about a brighter future for the Indo-Asia-Pacific.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Prime Minister Nehru, the
great friend of President Ho Chi Minh and the Vietnamese people, once said: “Time is not measured by the passing of years
but by what one does, what one feels, and what one achieves”.
From the history spanning thousands of years of our two
peoples' enduring cultural ties, from the heartfelt friendship between us, from
our shared vision for the future -- and given the strong effort and
determination of our two countries' leaders and peoples -- there is every
reason to believe in an ever-flourishing Comprehensive Strategic Partnership
between Vietnam and India. This indeed will become a pillar of regional
integration and development, playing a key role in the 21st-century miracles of
the Indo-Asia-Pacific and making significant contributions to peace, stability,
cooperation and development in the region and the world.
May the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library continue to
flourish, thus disseminating the values of humanism, fraternity, and peace that
so characterize India to the region and to the world.
I wish you good health, happiness and success.
Thank you for your attention.-VNA