France's Macron calls for world order ‘based on law' in Vietnam
French President Emmanuel Macron said a rules-based order was necessary at 'a time of both great imbalance and a return to power-driven rhetoric and intimidation' PHOTO: AFP
HANOI - French President Emmanuel Macron called on May 26 for the preservation of a world order 'based on law', as he started a tour of South-east Asia, a region caught up in the confrontation between the United States and China.
Mr Macron said a rules-based order was necessary at 'a time of both great imbalance and a return to power-driven rhetoric and intimidation', as he met his Vietnamese counterpart Luong Cuong in Hanoi.
He presented France as a reliable alternative for Vietnam, caught between Washington, which is threatening to impose trade levies, and Beijing, an important trade partner with which it is also embroiled in territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
'With France, you have a familiar, safe, and reliable friend ... and in the period we are living in, this alone has great value,' Mr Macron said during a meeting with Mr To Lam, the secretary-general of the Communist Party and Vietnam's top leader.
The two countries signed around a dozen agreements on May 26, including in the field of nuclear power, which Hanoi is keen to develop as it seeks to meet soaring energy demands while reducing carbon emissions.
Budget airline Vietjet also announced an order for 20 widebody Airbus A330-900 planes, doubling its purchases of the model from the aviation giant in a deal worth an estimated US$8 billion (S$10.27 billion).
'It is truly a new page being written between our two countries... a desire to write an even more ambitious page of the relationship between Vietnam and France, between Asean and the European Union,' Mr Macron said.
Call to raise rights issue
Mr Macron arrived in Hanoi late on May 25, the first stop of a six-day trip that will take in Indonesia and Singapore.
After paying tribute on May 26 at a Hanoi war memorial to those who fought against French colonial occupation, Mr Macron had lunch with Mr Lam at the capital's Temple of Literature, where the two watched a traditional music and dance performance.
Mr Lam is considered the most powerful leader in Vietnam, a one-party state which tolerates no dissent and moves quickly to suppress any criticism.
Ahead of Mr Macron's first official visit to the country, Human Rights Watch (HRW) pressed him to voice concerns about 'the Vietnamese government's worsening rights record'.
Vietnam has more than 170 political prisoners who have been charged and convicted under 'draconian laws' that criminalise free expression and peaceful activism for human rights and democracy, HRW said.
A public appeal would be out of character for the French president, who regularly says he prefers to raise sensitive issues behind closed doors.
Vietnam on 'front line'
Mr Macron hopes to sell Hanoi his offer of a 'third way' between Washington and Beijing.
'Vietnam is really on the front line of all the tensions that are growing in the South China Sea,' a senior French diplomatic official told AFP.
Hanoi shares Washington's concerns about Beijing's increasing assertiveness in the contested waterway, but it has close economic ties with its giant neighbour.
Vietnam has also been threatened with a hefty 46 per cent tariff by US President Donald Trump as part of his global trade blitz.
Mr Macron's 'Indo-Pacific strategy' – which proposes a third way to the countries of the region – has gained new relevance due to Mr Trump's trade war, according to the aide.
He said the president was 'defending the idea of international trade rules, we don't want a jungle where the law of the strongest prevails'.
Vietnam has been careful to follow its own balancing act between China and the United States.
It has adopted a 'bamboo diplomacy' approach of seeking strength through flexibility, or looking to stay on good terms with the world's major powers. AFP
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Spain's Ibiza limits tourist cars, caravans due to overcrowding
From June 1 to Sept 30, the daily number of vehicles used by non-residents in Ibiza is now capped at 20,000. PHOTO: EPA-EFE MADRID – Spain's island of Ibiza – a hugely popular Mediterranean destination – from June 1 started limiting the number of incoming tourist cars and caravans because of the huge numbers of visitors it gets. From June 1 to Sept 30, the daily number of vehicles used by non-residents is now capped at 20,000, the local government explained to one of the island's newspapers, El Periodico de Ibiza y Formentera. Of those, 16,000 are rental cars available on the island, while the rest of the quota is for private cars making ferry crossings, as long as they get a prior authorisation to do so. Caravans also need to show they have a reservation at a camping site, and are not allowed to be parked anywhere in the countryside. Motorbikes are excluded from the seasonal restrictions. The head of Ibiza's government, Mr Vicent Mari, told the newspaper that the change was to 'guarantee the sustainability' of the island, which has 150,000 inhabitants but receives some 3.6 million tourists per year, along with the smaller Formentera island nearby. Official statistics show that the number of vehicles on the island's roads quadrupled over the past two decades, from 51,000 in 2002 to 207,000 in 2022. Mr Mari said various interests operating in Ibiza, including car-rental firms and big companies, resisted the limits, but argued that were necessary 'to regulate and control unsustainable (tourist) flows'. Formentera island already restricts vehicles, and another Balearic islands hotspot, Mallorca, is planning to do so in 2026. Altogether, the Balearic islands attract 19 million tourists per year, a sizable part of the 94 million who visit all of Spain, which is the second-biggest destination for visitors in the world, after France. AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
Britain to build $2.6b in weapons factories as Starmer calls for war readiness
British Pirme Minister Keir Starmer's warning came a day before he publishes a major review of Britain's military capabilities. PHOTO: EPA-EFE Britain to build $2.6b in weapons factories as Starmer calls for war readiness LONDON – Britain must be ready to fight and win a war against states with advanced military forces, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said as his government announced a £1.5 billion (S$2.6 billion) plan to build at least six new weapons and explosives factories. Mr Starmer's warning came a day before he publishes a major review of Britain's military capabilities. Britain and countries across Europe are rapidly trying to boost their defence industries after US President Donald Trump said the continent has to take more responsibility for its own security. 'We are being directly threatened by states with advanced military forces, so we must be ready to fight and win,' Mr Starmer wrote in an article for The Sun on Sunday newspaper, citing as examples Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its cooperation with Iran and North Korea. Defence Minister John Healey announced the munitions investment programme in a BBC interview on June 1, describing it as 'a message to Moscow', as well as a way to stimulate Britain's sluggish economy. The Defence Ministry said it would procure up to 7,000 long-range weapons, built in Britain. The extra investment means Britain will spend around £6 billion on munitions in the current Parliament, the ministry said. The Sunday Times reported the government wanted to purchase US-made fighter jets capable of firing tactical nuclear weapons. The Strategic Defence Review, commissioned by Mr Starmer's Labour government shortly after it won power in July 2024, will set out the threats Britain faces and the military equipment and services needed to meet them. Mr Starmer has already committed to raise defence spending to 2.5 per cent of gross domestic product by 2027 and target a 3 per cent level over the longer term. The government has already announced a £1 billion plan to invest in artificial intelligence that can be used to enhance battlefield decision-making, and has separately committed to spend an extra £1.5 billion to tackle the poor state of housing for the country's armed forces. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
4 hours ago
- Straits Times
Will anger over martial law debacle push Lee Jae-myung into S. Korea's presidential Blue House?
A woman voting at a polling station on the second day of early voting of the presidential elections in Seoul on May 30. PHOTO: AFP – South Koreans head to the polls on June 3 to pick a new leader after former president Yoon Suk Yeol was stripped of his powers by the Constitutional Court for his martial law declaration in December 2024 that triggered months of political chaos . Opposition Democratic Party (DP) candidate Lee Jae-myung is in pole position to clinch the race after maintaining a two-digit lead over his rivals for most of the three-week campaign, analysts said . This election will be Mr Lee's second attempt at the presidency after he lost to Yoon by 0.73 percentage point in the 2022 race, the narrowest margin ever in South Korea's election history . In the last set of opinion polls conducted by research firm Gallup Korea that was released on May 28, Mr Lee clinched 46 per cent, followed by ruling People Power Party's (PPP) candidate, Mr Kim Moon-soo, at 37 per cent, and minor conservative Reform Party's Mr Lee Jun-seok at 11 per cent. In a media briefing on May 27, Gallup Korea research director Heo Jin-jae told journalists that it is quite rare in South Korean politics to see a near-10 percentage point difference between the top two leading candidates, and that based on precedent, it is unlikely for the second leading candidate to close such a gap in just a few days. Kyonggi University's political science and law expert Professor Hahm Sung-deuk predicts that it will be a landslide victory for Mr Lee Jae-myung, with his riding the tide of public anger over the martial law fiasco to the presidential Blue House. 'Mr Lee is a very lucky man. He will get elected not because he is popular, not because of his abilities, but simply because of the martial law incident. In a way, you can say that Yoon turned out to be Mr Lee's biggest supporter because he caused this snap election,' said Prof Hahm. He added that while Mr Lee's legal troubles and past controversies once made voters hesitant about picking him to lead the country, the post-martial law political turmoil has left voters angry and yearning for stability. 'The moderates who make up 30 per cent of the electorate are always the key to winning the election. Even if they have doubts about Mr Lee, they hate Yoon even more because of the martial law,' said Prof Hahm. The rest of the electorate is split equally between conservatives and liberals, with 35 per cent each. Salt was further rubbed into South Korean's martial law wounds when the police suspected that former prime minister Han Duck-soo and former deputy prime minister Choi Sang-mok had made false statements regarding their involvement in Yoon's actions, and slapped travel bans on both of them on May 27. The pair, who were both acting presidents at different periods of Yoon's four-month suspension, had previously denied knowledge of Yoon's martial law plans, but recent CCTV footage obtained by the authorities appeared to show otherwise. Yoon is currently undergoing a criminal trial on insurrection charges, while Mr Han attempted to run in the presidential election but eventually dropped out. Prof Hahm believes this development will only push more people to support DP's Mr Lee, while Gallup Korea's Mr Heo, who has overseen polls and analysed results for the past seven presidential elections, said such 'situational factors' would likely play a decisive role in the election. 'Considering how 69 per cent of South Koreans had supported the former president's impeachment, you can say that the conditions are all favourable towards DP and Mr Lee,' said Mr Heo. While the ruling conservative camp is still holding out hopes for a campaign merger with minor conservative Reform Party's Mr Lee Jun-seok, both parties had failed to reach an agreement before early voting took place on May 29 and 30. The PPP and Mr Kim believe that unifying the conservatives' votes would place Mr Kim in a better position to compete against DP's Mr Lee. But Prof Hahm believes such a merger would work only if Mr Lee Jun-seok leads the conservatives and not former labour minister Mr Kim, who is struggling to emerge from Yoon's shadow. As the only Cabinet minister who refused to apologise in Parliament for the martial law fiasco, he is seen as a Yoon supporter. Prof Hahm said: 'Lee Jun-seok represents the future of South Korea politics because he is younger and not tainted by the martial law scandal. The PPP and Mr Kim, on the other hand, made the crucial mistake of not denouncing Yoon and his martial law action right from the start.' In the last of three sessions of the presidential debate on May 28, which was predominated by mudslinging rather than policy debates, Mr Kim was attacked for just that, with DP's Mr Lee calling him Yoon's 'avatar'. Taxi driver Yoon Chung-rae, in his 60s, has been a card-carrying PPP member for more than 20 years but cannot bring himself to vote for PPP's Mr Kim this time round. 'First, we had martial law and then we had the party infighting over the candidate. We look so bad in comparison with the DP, which has supported its candidate Lee Jae-myung since the beginning and never once wavered,' he told The Straits Times. 'I told myself I should give Mr Lee a chance. We need to set things right in this country and I don't have confidence in PPP right now.' The most decisive factor shaping voter sentiment, said Sogang University's Associate Professor Hannah Kim, lies in Yoon's martial law bungle and his subsequent impeachment. 'In the wake of this political turmoil, many voters are looking for a new president who can restore stability, pursue democratic reforms, and tackle pressing economic and foreign policy issues that were sidelined during the crisis,' the academic from the Graduate School of International Studies in Seoul told ST. Domestic woes have seen South Korea's economic growth forecast for 2025 adjusted downwards for the third time this year, from 1.9 per cent to 1.5 per cent and now 0.8 per cent, as announced by the Bank of Korea on May 29. This was on account of tariff talks with the United States not being resolved yet, and domestic consumption remaining in a slump. DP's Mr Lee has pledged that, if elected, among his first tasks would be to lead an emergency task force to fight the domestic recession head-on. For this purpose, there is talk that Mr Lee has identified current Bank of Korea governor Rhee Chang-yong as his prime minister candidate. Wendy Teo is The Straits Times' South Korea correspondent based in Seoul. She covers issues concerning the two Koreas. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.