Matthew Trần:
Ngay trong khi TT VC
Nguyễn Tấn Dũng đang thăm Úc Đại Lợi mà bị TT Úc: Tony Abbott tuyên bố là Úc sẽ
kắt giãm viện cho VGCS thì Nguyễn Tấn Zũng phãi kãm thấy "ĐAU NHI BỊ
LẶT"!!
MT
Sent: Friday, March 20, 2015 10:58 AM
Subject: FW: Úc cắt giảm viện trợ cho Việt Nam !!!
bản tin của báo The Guardian, ngày
18.03.2015
Úc cắt giảm viện trợ cho Việt Nam.
Thủ tướng Úc Tony Abbott không nương tay
với Nguyễn Tấn Dũng, so với thủ tướng Đức bà Merkel trong lần Nguyễn Tấn Dũng
qua Đức tháng 10 năm ngoái. Trong cuộc họp báo thủ tướng Úc nói thẳng với
Nguyễn Tấn Dũng: “ Nếu ông không giữ kinh tế
trong nước được ổn định, thì ra nước ngoài (ông) rất khó được (coi) là người
bạn hay láng giềng tốt”. Thủ tướng Úc còn nhắc nhở Nguyễn Tấn Dũng: "Mục tiêu viện trợ không phải là để
tạo ra một sự lệ thuộc lâu dài,
mục tiêu của viện trợ là để giúp đảm bảo cho các nước tự mở mang phát
triển được cho tới thời điểm họ không cẩn nhận viện trợ nữa.”
Nguyễn Tấn Dũng chỉ cười gượng (small
smile, anh chị em nào dịch dùm được small smile này qua tiếng Việt cho đúng
hơn?) mà không trả lời gì được, khi ký giả hỏi ông ta nghĩ gì về việc Úc cắt
viện trợ. Không biết là người thông dịch có dám dịch đúng những lời ông Tony
Abbott “lên lớp” ông Dũng hay không. Không biêt và không hiểu ngoại ngữ là một
yếu điểm trầm trọng khi làm việc nước, một vần đề không giải quyết được cho các
thành phần trình độ thấp kém đang nắm giữ vận mệnh đất nước ta.
Duong
Hong-An
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Bản
tin của báo The Guardian, ngày 18.03.2015
Tony
Abbott defends $11bn cut to foreign aid during Vietnamese PM's visit
‘If
you don’t have your domestic economic house in order, it’s very difficult to be
a good friend and neighbour abroad,’ Abbott said during joint press conference
Tony Abbott (right) at a joint
press conference with the Vietnamese prime minister, Nguyen Tan Dung, on
Wednesday. Photograph: Mike Bowers for Guardian
Wednesday 18 March 2015 03.23 GMT
Tony Abbott has defended his government’s
decision to cut Australia’s foreign aid budget by $11bn at a joint press
conference with the Vietnamese prime minister, Nguyen Tan Dung.
Dung and Abbott addressed the media after
a formal ceremony, where the former signed a “declaration on enhancing the
comprehensive partnership” between the two countries with the foreign minister,
Julie Bishop.
Asked if he was embarrassed to explain
Australia’s reduced aid budget to Dung, Abbott said Australia had made “modest
reductions” but that remaining aid would focus on countries in the Asia-Pacific
region, including Vietnam.
“Look, obviously it’s important for all
countries to ensure that their own domestic economic house is in order, because
if you don’t have your domestic economic house in order, it’s very difficult to
be a good friend and neighbour abroad,” Abbott said.
Abbott said it was important to remember
the “objective” of aid, saying, “the objective of aid is not to create a
relationship of permanent dependency, the objective of aid is to ensure that
countries are helped to develop to the point where they don’t need aid any
more”.
“And obviously the very strong economic
growth that Vietnam has enjoyed in the past few years, particularly under the
economic stewardship of prime minister Dung, means that the need for this kind
of aid will be less and less as the years go on.”
Dung, who was listening through
a translator and offered a small smile at the end of Abbott’s response,
declined to answer the question directed at him which asked if he was concerned
at the effect aid cuts would have on Vietnamese people.
Australia gave about $140m in
aid to Vietnam in the 2014/15 budget.
The declaration reaffirmed
Australia’s trade, security, education and cultural ties to Vietnam.
Trans-Pacific Partnership: a guide to the most
contentious issues
Speaking through a translator, Dung said
the declaration would “further deepen” ties between the two countries and made
particular reference to the education and agricultural sectors, as well as
increased cooperation in security and defence operations.
Chief among those concerns were freedom
of navigation in the South China Sea and an agreement to “exercise
self-restraint and refrain from anything that may inflame tensions in the
region”.
Abbott said the Australian-Vietnamese
relationship was going “from strength to strength” and would be enhanced by the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, which is still being negotiated.
“We have both prospered in peace over the
last 40 years because of the stability that our region has enjoyed, and
anything which destroys that stability is something we would mutually deplore
and mutually work to ensure didn’t happen,” he said.
A protest against the visit of
Vietnam’s prime minister Nguyen Tan Dung in Canberra on Wednesday. Photograph:
Mick Tsikas/AAP
Dung’s delegation was met by human rights
protesters when it arrived at Parliament House on Wednesday morning. The
protesters, a large number of whom were Vietnamese-Australians, circulated this
month’s report of the UN special rapporteur on the freedom of
religion and belief, which found that “the scope of freedom
of religion and belief remains extremely limited and unsafe” in Vietnam.
The special rapporteur, Heiner
Bielefeldt, said Vietnam breached the terms of his visit to allow him
confidential and unsupervised contact with people, saying some he met with had
suffered “intimidation, police interrogations and even physical injuries”
before and after his visit.
Vietnam did not support the report.
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