
THE POLITICS OF PEACE AND THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE GENEVA AGREEMENT IN HOI AN, QUANG NAM, AFTER 1954
Author(s) -
Dinh Thi kim Ngan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
xã hội và nhân văn
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2615-9724
pISSN - 2588-1213
DOI - 10.26459/hueuni-jssh.v128i6b.4980
Subject(s) - promulgation , political science , politics , reactionary , government (linguistics) , public administration , constitution , law , negotiation , resistance (ecology) , political economy , sociology , philosophy , linguistics , ecology , biology
In pursuit of American policy, the Saigon administration carried out extremely reactionary policies, such as refusing general consultation, refusing to reestablish normal relations between the North and the South, refusing the election of the Constituent Assembly (March 31, 1956), the promulgation of the Constitution (October 26, 1956), the establishment of the Can Lao People's Party, the National Revolutionary Movement and the Republican Youth. The Saigon government tried to terrorize peace advocates, resistance fighters and those who fought for the Geneva Accords (1954). The conspiracy and tactics that the US and Diem Ngo Dinh government as ways of refusing to negotiate with the general election made ethnic conflicts and social conflicts increasingly severe. Thus, a political fight for peace and the enforcement of the Geneva agreement between the people of Hoi An and the United States and the Saigon government became inevitable.