1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
1898- 1976
Southeast Asia
South Asia
Northern Africa
1949-
North America
1909- 1989
-
1918- 1970
1916- 2012
December 29, 1954
Brief report on the secret meeting of the Bogor Conference on the 28th. It was agreed to ask Indonesia to organize the Asian-African Conference in April the following year.
December 20, 1954
Report on plans for the Bogor Conference, including arrival dates of Prime Minister Nehru and other Indian officials, and the mass assembly on the 30th.
December 18, 1954
A review of Indonesian press coverage of the Bogor Conference and plans for the upcoming Asian-African Conference.
December 6, 1954
Ambassador to Indonesia Huang Zhen reports that the prime ministers of India, Burma, Ceylon and Pakistan are planning to attend the Bogor Conference. Ceylon's request that China, Japan, Israel and Turkey not be invited to the Asian-African Conference has been rejected.
April 21, 1955
Zhang Hanfu’s telegrams to PRC Foreign Ministry reporting on the Chinese Delegation's Activities at the Afro-Asian conference on April 20 and 21
December 3, 1957
The Indonesian ambassador observed that there would not be wide consensus as in the first Asian-African conference and proposed a second conference composed only of major countries.
February 11, 1957
The Chinese Ambassador to Syria and the Syrian Foreign Minister discuss the timing of the Second Asian-African Conference and the Arab-Israeli conflict
April 10, 1957
In a meeting with the Indonesian ambassador, Zhou Enlai emphasized that it was important that many countries would attend the second Asian-African conference and that China wanted the conference to bolster solidarity rather than be a place for argument.
July 12, 1955
The PRC Foreign Ministry proposes to develop relations with, strengthen propaganda work toward, and expand the study of countries in Asia and Afica.
May 23, 1955
A Chinese speech highlights the Bandung Conference's contribution to world peace.