Vietnam’s President To Lam arrives in China, set to meet Xi Jinping

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

FILE PHOTO: Vietnamese President To Lam attends a press briefing with Russian President Vladimir Putin (not pictured), at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi, Vietnam, Thursday, June 20, 2024. MINH HOANG/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Vietnamese President To Lam will visit some locations where former president Ho Chi Minh conducted revolutionary activities while in Guangzhou.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

Vietnam’s top leader To Lam arrived in China on Aug 18 for a three-day visit, according to Chinese state media, which Beijing’s Foreign Ministry has said will include meetings with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang.

The Vietnamese President – who was

elevated in August

to the nation’s top position, general secretary of the ruling Communist Party – arrived in Guangzhou, reported state broadcaster CCTV.

Mr Lam will visit some locations where former Vietnamese president Ho Chi Minh conducted revolutionary activities while in Guangzhou, CCTV added.

China and Vietnam forged diplomatic ties in 1950. In 2008, both countries established a comprehensive strategic partnership of cooperation that was jointly fortified in 2013 to address more shared international and regional issues of concern.

The meeting would confirm the close ties between the two communist-run neighbours, which have well-developed economic and trade relations despite occasionally clashing over boundaries in the energy-rich South China Sea.

China painted Mr Lam’s visit as taking

Mr Xi’s December 2023 trip to Vietnam

a step further, citing “a good start” to the building of a “China-Vietnam community of shared future that carries strategic significance” when the Chinese Foreign Ministry announced the trip.

The state visit marks Mr Lam’s first after taking office, which China said “fully reflects the great importance he attaches to the development of ties between both parties and countries”.

Both countries signed more than a dozen agreements in December 2023 that included strengthening railway cooperation and development, and establishing communication to handle unexpected incidents in the South China Sea. The details of the agreements were not made public. REUTERS

See more on