Politics & Law
|
| Minister of Foreign Affairs Lê Hoài Trung. — VNA/VNS Photo |
HÀ NỘI — General Secretary of the Communist Party of Việt Nam Central Committee and State President Tô Lâm’s state visits to India from May 5–7 and to Sri Lanka from May 7–8 achieved comprehensive outcomes of both long-term strategic significance and practical substance, helping to elevate Việt Nam’s role and standing in South Asia and the world, while opening a new phase of deeper, more effective and more comprehensive relations with the two countries, Minister of Foreign Affairs Lê Hoài Trung has said.
Speaking to the press, Trung described the visits as particularly important and historic, taking place at a meaningful moment as Việt Nam and India mark the 10th anniversary of their Comprehensive Strategic Partnership and just one month after the top leader of Việt Nam assumed his new position. For Sri Lanka, this was the highest-level visit by a Vietnamese leader since the two countries established diplomatic relations.
Substantial outcomes were recorded. Việt Nam and India agreed to elevate ties to an Enhanced Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, while Việt Nam and Sri Lanka upgraded their relations to a Comprehensive Partnership, creating new political frameworks to strengthen mutual trust and understanding.
More than 50 cooperation documents signed with India and 11 with Sri Lanka reflected the strong commitment of all sides and are expected to provide important momentum for bilateral relations. Vietnamese, Indian, and Sri Lankan leaders also discussed measures to strengthen ties between the Communist Party of Việt Nam and the two countries’ ruling parties, parliamentary cooperation and people-to-people diplomacy.
According to the minister, strategic orientations aimed at removing bottlenecks, expanding markets, strengthening economic connectivity, investment, infrastructure, science and technology, innovation and supply chains received particular attention from the leaders, accompanied by highly specific cooperation proposals. The sides also affirmed their determination to further deepen defence and security cooperation while identifying the economy and science and technology as new pillars of cooperation, alongside practical programmes and plans to enhance education and training cooperation.
With India, the outcomes of the visit have elevated bilateral relations to a new height, opening up significant potential for cooperation in security and defence, trade and investment, science and technology, education and training, culture and people-to-people exchanges, promising to usher bilateral ties into a “golden era”.
Regarding Sri Lanka, both sides committed to further strengthening friendship and cooperation, building a high level of political trust and expanding collaboration in a comprehensive and substantive manner across all sectors. They also agreed to increase bilateral trade turnover to five times its current level within the next few years. Sri Lanka’s recent economic stabilisation has also created new opportunities in trade, minerals, manufacturing, seaports and other sectors.
Amid increasing global uncertainties and volatility, Tô Lâm and leaders of the two countries agreed on the need to strengthen close coordination and mutual support on the basis of respect for international law and the United Nations Charter, while promoting multilateralism.
Trung stressed that the visits represented a concrete implementation of Việt Nam’s foreign policy of independence, self-reliance, peace, friendship, cooperation and development, as well as diversification and multilateralisation of external relations, including efforts to deepen ties with traditional friends and strengthen relations with major and important partners in the Asia-Pacific region.
The foreign minister noted that in the coming period, Việt Nam will work closely with India and Sri Lanka to effectively implement high-level agreements and signed documents, while proactively removing bottlenecks and barriers to cooperation in order to achieve more tangible and measurable results.
Cooperation with India will focus on economic connectivity, trade, investment, strategic infrastructure development, logistics and supply chains, science and technology, innovation, culture and tourism. With Sri Lanka, priority areas include infrastructure, telecommunications, high-tech agriculture, fisheries, green transition and tourism, particularly spiritual tourism. — VNA/VNS