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US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks to US Embassy staff after touring the Cooperative Orthotic Prosthetic Enterprise Center (COPE), in Vientiane, Laos, Wednesday, July 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Brendon Smialowski, Pool) |
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US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks to US Embassy staff after touring the Cooperative Orthotic Prosthetic Enterprise Center (COPE), in Vientiane, Laos, Wednesday, July 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Brendon Smialowski, Pool) |
Meets with Embassy Staff and Their Families
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
COPE Center
Vientiane, Laos
July 11, 2012
Well,
it is wonderful to be here and especially to be the first Secretary of
State since 1955. I am excited by the work that you are doing every day,
helping to shape our relationship with Laos. This is a quick first stop
for me to demonstrate the high-level commitment that we have to this
relationship and our desire to broaden and deepen it. I couldn’t leave
without thanking all of you for what you do every single day. I want to
thank Ambassador Karen Stewart. Karen and I went to the same college;
we’re both Wellesley College alums. This is the third assignment for her
in Laos, and I have to tell you that her performance at the Laos Street
Jamz festival will go down in history.
I have been now in 102
countries, and I can count on one hand those countries where the head of
state or government thanks me for the ambassador we’ve sent. And that
has happened today with both the Foreign Minister and the Prime Minister
because of Ambassador Stewart’s great devotion to this country, her
knowledge of the language and the customs. It’s really making a
difference.
I also want to thank the locally employed staff. And I
just had a chance to take a picture with them, including our
longest-serving locally employed staff for now 36 years, and we are
grateful. Please stand. We will give you a round of applause.
(Applause.) We could not do our work without you. We are very, very
grateful to each and every one of you for being part of this mission.
When
I met with the Foreign Minister, we traced the arc of our relationship,
from addressing the tragic legacies of the past, to finding new ways to
partner for the future. And through trips like this one, the United
States is deepening our engagement in the Asia Pacific. We’re practicing
what I call forward-deployed diplomacy, using all of our diplomatic
assets in a whole-of-government approach represented by so many agencies
and departments in order to make our presence known and to be an
effective partner.
Now here in Laos, the past is always with us. I
just finished touring COPE, a painful reminder of the legacy of the
Vietnam War era. An estimated 80 million unexploded cluster bombs remain
scattered across Laos, and they continue to kill or injure about a
hundred people a year, which is good because that’s down from several
hundreds a year, but it still is unacceptable. And since 1995, the U.S.
has provided nearly $59 million to help remove more than a million of
these cluster munitions along with larger ordnance, clearing some 23,000
hectares of land that can now be used for farming or development. This
year, we are increasing our financial commitment by $4 million, and I
hope others in the international community will join us in our efforts
to bring this legacy of the Vietnam War era to a safe end and give the
people, particularly the children of this nation, the opportunity to
live their lives safe from these unexploded bombs.
Now
collectively, you are doing so much. You’ve been to every province,
teaching English to government officials and students, connecting U.S.
business leaders with entrepreneurs, helping rural provinces prepare for
natural disasters, delivering tons of rice and cereal to hundreds of
thousands of school children. And with 70 percent of the population
under the age of 30, we are looking to the next generation of leaders to
continue developing their country, to fighting corruption, opening up
the political system to women and minorities, and strengthening reforms.
Now
through the Ambassador’s Fund for Cultural Preservation, a program near
and dear to my heart, we will be providing $215,000 in additional
preservation work to the iconic Wat Xieng Thong Temple. Through the
Lower Mekong Initiative, we are expanding regional cooperation and we’re
trying to open new markets in Laos through our economic statecraft
agenda. We are expanding cooperation between our militaries, we’ve
renewed our in-country USAID presence, upping the tempo of our fight
against HIV/AIDS, and doing so much more.
We had excellent
bilateral dialogue just a few weeks ago and we are pleased by the
progress we are making together. With your help, we are writing a new
chapter in our relationship and building a new, comprehensive
partnership for the 21st century. I’m grateful for your long
hours, your hard work, and your commitment. And I hope that we will
continue to see progress from the multiple efforts that each of you is
engaged in. And now, I think we’re going to take a couple of pictures.