Vietnamese Pay a High-Level Visit to China
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Special to The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/1990/09/20/world/vietnamese-pay-a-high-level-visit-to-china.html
Published: September 20, 1990
Correction Appended
BEIJING, Sept. 19—
A Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister arrived today to
attend the Asian Games beginning Saturday in the highest-level official
visit here by a Vietnamese since Beijing and Hanoi fought a brief border
war in 1979. Both sides said they hoped for a normalization of
relations.
Relations between China and Vietnam have been
gradually improving in recent years, and the arrival today of Deputy
Prime Minister Vu Nguyen Giap seemed intended to take ties one step
closer. In welcoming Mr. Giap, Chinese officials dropped their normal
criticism of Vietnam.
''We in China would like to see Sino-Vietnamese
relations improve gradually until normalization is realized, and this is
the will of the Chinese people,'' Gu Mu, a vice chairman of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference, told Mr. Giap at a
welcoming meeting tonight, according to the official New China News
Agency.
The arrival of Mr. Giap follows an unannounced
summit meeting between Chinese and Vietnamese leaders on Sept. 3 and 4,
apparently in either Nanning or Chengdu in southwestern China, diplomats
said. That meeting, which neither side has yet officially confirmed as
having taken place, was held to discuss a settlement to the Cambodian
war, but it is not clear if any major agreement was reached, the
diplomats said.
Li Reported on Hand
The Chinese side reportedly was represented at the
summit meeting by Jiang Zemin, the Communist Party General Secretary,
and by Prime Minister Li Peng. The Vietnamese were led by Nguyen Van
Linh, the Communist Party leader, and Prime Minister Du Muoi, diplomats
said.
The Communist parties of Vietnam and China were
close in the 50's and 60's, and China gave North Vietnam considerable
help during the Vietnam War.
Traditional rivalries between Vietnam and China
resurfaced after the United States withdrawal from Indochina, and
officials in Beijing were furious when Vietnam invaded Cambodia at the
end of 1978 to oust the Chinese-backed Khmer Rouge forces there. In
early 1979, China mounted a brief border war against Vietnam to punish
it, and although diplomatic relations were never cut, they have been
strained ever since.
China has long said that no normalization of
relations is possible until a political settlement is reached in
Cambodia. Nevertheless, trade has increased sharply in recent years.
Mr. Giap, who played a key role in outmaneuvering
both French and American forces in Vietnam, told reporters at the
Beijing airport that the time had come to normalize relations, Reuters
reported.
''The time is ripe for this,'' Reuters quoted him as saying.
Cambodian Talks Collapse
BANGKOK, Thailand, Sept. 19 (AP) - Talks between
Cambodia's warring factions collapsed today over disagreements on how to
bring rebel leader Prince Norodom Sihanouk onto a council seeking to
end 11 years of civil war.
The factions accused each other of sabotaging the
Supreme National Council, formed last week to join members of the
Vietnamese-installed Government and the three-party guerrilla coalition.
The 12-seat council held its opening session Monday
at the Cambodian Embassy in Bangkok. Progress quickly stalled when the
Government side rejected guerrilla demands that Prince Sihanouk be the
council's 13th member and its chairman.
The council, established under a United
Nations-drafted peace plan, has six seats for the Government and two for
each of the three rebel factions. The plan also allows for a 13th seat
for a chairman.
Ek Sereywath, a spokesman for Sihanouk, expressed
optimism the dispute would be settled before the Oct. 18 deadline for
Cambodia's new credentials to the General Assembly of the United
Nations. The Supreme National Council is supposed to replace the rebel
coalition in the United Nations seat.
Correction: September 21, 1990, Friday, Late Edition - Final
An article yesterday about the Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister's
visit to China misidentified him. He is Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap.
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