Back in 1955, the Bandung Conference—as it became known—enunciated 10 principles, including respect for human rights, national sovereignty, territorial integrity and the equality of all races and ...
Forgetting is easier than confronting the truth that Bandung represents: that freedom is not only the absence of colonial rule, but the commitment to dignity, solidarity, and justice within the nation ...
The Bandung Conference in April 1955 has achieved the status of a mythical moment in the history of the Global South. There have been many accounts that have highlighted its downsides—among them, the ...
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 ...
International Film Festival Rotterdam, which runs Jan. 30 – Feb. 9, has revealed the lineup of its Focus section. Retrospectives are given to the work of Croatian-German documentarian Katja Raganelli ...
The Arab States which will be represented at the Asian-African Conference opening at Bandung, Indonesia, next Monday, have launched a diplomatic drive to have the question of Arab-Israel relations ...
Yugoslav President Marshal Tito and Egyptian President Colonel Nasser endorsed the decisions taken at last year’s Bandung conference, it was reported here today from Yugoslavia where the two men met ...
From sidewalk loudspeakers outside the big Western-style hotels came the scratchy strains of an old Tommy Dorsey recording of Marie. The swarm of delegates arriving in town came in British-and ...
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 ...
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