Admirers Swarm Bill Clinton in Hanoi
  
By BEN STOCKING, Associated Press Writer
  
Dec. 6, 2006

HANOI, Vietnam - Former President Clinton was swarmed
for autographs, handshakes and photographs on the
streets of Hanoi Wednesday by throngs of admirers whose
warm welcome contrasted sharply with the restrained
reception given President Bush last month.
  
Clinton, in town to sign an agreement between his
foundation and the Vietnamese to get more AIDS drugs to
children, left the Hilton Hotel in the center of Hanoi, crossed
an intersection buzzing with motorbikes, and strolled toward
Hoan Kiem Lake, the spiritual heart of the city.

The United States normalized relations with its former foe
under Clinton, who was greeted by adoring crowds when in
2000 he became the first U.S. president to visit Vietnam since
the war ended in 1975.

"It feels great to be back," Clinton said as he set off for his
stroll.

The feeling among most Vietnamese was mutual.

"I love you!" a young man shouted, reaching over the
crowd for a handshake.

"There are no words to describe how happy I am," squealed
17-year-old Nguyen Thu Hang, jumping up and down and
clutching Clinton's freshly signed autograph. "I'm going to
frame this and hang it on my bedroom wall!"
  
Bush didn't emerge from inside tight security to mingle
with crowds during his four-day visit to attend the
21-nation Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.

Outside of official meetings, the president's touring included
a visit to Vietnam's stock exchange, where he struck a gong
to open a day of trading. He then met with a group of
Vietnamese and American businessmen.

Clinton came to Hanoi to sign an agreement with the
Vietnamese government under which his Clinton
Foundation will increase the amount of pediatric drugs it is
providing to Vietnamese children living with HIV and
AIDS.
  
The foundation provided medicine for 400 children in 2006,
but plans to triple the number of children it is helping by the
end of 2007.

Followed by Secret Service agents and Vietnamese police,
Clinton stopped along a half-mile route to chat with his
Vietnamese admirers before making his way to an art gallery
in Hanoi's Old Quarter and then to the tomb of Ho Chi Minh,
who led Vietnam's communist revolution.

After he and Health Minister Tran Thi Trung Chien signed the
pediatric AIDS agreement, Clinton took part in a discussion
about AIDS with several university students and a young
woman living with HIV.

The Vietnamese government estimates that 260,000
Vietnamese people were infected with HIV last year, but
public health experts think the actual number is higher. In
Vietnam, most infections are linked to intravenous drug use
and unprotected sex for money.

The Clinton Foundation's activities are being financed by
UNITAID, an organization formed by France and 19 other
nations that have earmarked a small portion of their airline
tax revenues for HIV/AIDS programs in developing countries.




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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