Nguyễn Phan Long

Nguyễn Phan Long (1889–1960) served as Prime Minister of the State of Vietnam in January 1950. He was dismissed in May 1950 by the Emperor Bao Dai under pressure from the French colonial authorities, who resented his pro-American and nationalist attitude.[1]

Journalist at La Tribune Indigène, he founded in 1920 the liberal newspaper L'Écho Annamite, in which wrote e.g. the (Eurasian) Vietnamese nationalist Eugène Dejean de la Bâtie,[2] friend of André Malraux.

He was in the 1920s-1930s the deputy leader of the Parti Constitutionnaliste Indochinois, a nationalist party founded in 1923 and led by Bui Quang Chiêu.[3] He was elected as colonial councillor.

He wrote abundantly about spiritism in his newspaper and was also a fervent adept of Caodaism.[4] He was elected in 1936 as president of the Congrès Universel des Sectes Caodaïques, an attempted unified caodai movement, which eventually failed.[5]

After 1945, he was Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of Interior as well as editor of L'Écho du Vietnam.

Sources

  1. Ellen J. Hammer, Struggle for Indochina, 1940-1955, Stanford University Press, 1955 ISBN 978-0-8047-0458-8 , pp. 273-274
  2. (French) Vĩnh Đào, Quelques notes sur Eugène Dejean de la Batie
  3. (French) Đình Thảo Trịnh, Dinh Khai Trinh, Décolonisation du Viêt Nam: un avocat témoigne, Editions L'Harmattan, 1994, ISBN 978-2-7384-2368-9 , p. 45
  4. (French) Gustave Meillon, Le Caodaïsme - 3
  5. (French) Gustave Meillon, Le Caodaïsme - 1

see also:

Preceded by
Bảo Đại
Prime Minister of the State of Vietnam
1950
Succeeded by
Tran Van Huu
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