February is Black History Month. Throughout this month The Royal Gazette will feature people, events, places and institutions that have contributed to the shaping of African history The Afro-Asian ...
Philippine delegate Carlos Romulo delivers the closing speech at the Asian-African Conference, in Bandung, Indonesia, April 24, 1955 (AP photo). Back in 1955, the Bandung Conference—as it became known ...
HANOI -- The 1955 Asian-African Conference was a driving force of the struggle of more Asian and African countries for independence, said Vietnamese deputy minister of foreign affairs Ha Kim Ngoc. In ...
Then-premier and foreign minister Zhou Enlai signs autographs for admirers on the sidelines of the Asian-African Conference, also known as the Bandung Conference, Bandung, Indonesia in April 1955.
The Bandung Conference of 1955: it’s hard to think of another event on which so much ink has been spilled in exchange for such little knowledge. Ten years after the Conference, the Indian diplomat G.H ...
Seventy years ago, representatives from 29 Asian and African countries gathered in Bandung, Indonesia from April 18 to 24 for the historic Bandung Conference. The meeting laid the foundation for what ...
Bandung 1955 was a historical marker that broke the ground for third-world internationalism to develop against the logic of cold-war geopolitical monopoly. It preceded the non-aligned movement that ...
The 1955 Bandung conference that took place in Indonesia signified the start of a global and non-aligned movement that brought Asian and African nations and independence movements closer than ever ...
At the 60th anniversary of the Asian African Conference in Indonesia, leaders strongly defended principles of self-determination against modern day imperialism but barely mentioned democracy and human ...