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Vietnamese take to
streets in protest against China’s
oil rig incursion
A crowd gathers in front of the Chinese
Consulate-General on Hai Ba
Trung Street in HCMC
A
crowd held a peaceful demonstration in Ho Chi Minh City
on Saturday to protest China’s
deployment of a giant drilling rig and a fleet of ships, including military
ones, into Vietnamese waters.
Starting at 9 a.m., the crowd
gathered in front of the Chinese Consulate-General on Hai Ba Trung Street in
District 1 with banners written in Vietnamese, English and Chinese, demanding
China withdraw its rig from the waters in the Hoang Sa (Paracel)
Islands over which Vietnam claims sovereignty .
Some of the banners included: “China violated international laws!” and “Hoang
Sa-Truong Sa belong to Vietnam.”
The people marched along Hai Ba Trung Street,
sang Vietnam’s national
anthem and shouted in protest of China’s violations.
The demonstration ended at around
9:40 this morning.
In 1974, taking advantage of the
withdrawal of the American troops from the Vietnam War, China invaded
the Paracel. A brief but bloody naval battle with the forces of the then
US-backed Republic
of Vietnam ensued.
Vietnam's behemoth
northern neighbor has illegally occupied the islands ever since. But a
post-1975 united Vietnam
has never relinquished its ownership of the Paracel
Islands and continues to keep
military bases and other facilities on the Spratly Islands.
China and four members of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) including Vietnam, the
Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei all claim territory in the resource- and
oil-rich East Sea, internationally known as the South China Sea.
Over the past years, Vietnam and the Philippines
have accused China
of harassing their fishermen and damaging their vessels in the disputed
waters.
The tensions between Hanoi and Beijing
resurfaced last week when the state-run China National Offshore Oil
Corporation (CNOOC) moved a giant US$-1billion oil rig into position in Vietnam's
exclusive economic zone in the Hoang Sa Islands.
On May 7, Vietnam released images and
information about Chinese vessels intentionally ramming Vietnamese patrol
boats protecting their waters.
The various incidents unfolded
between May 3 and May 7 after China deployed roughly 80 ships to guard the
giant mobile rig as it was looking to drill for oil and gas just 120 nautical
miles off Vietnam’s central coast.
Images and videos released at a
press conference in Hanoi
on May 7 showed Chinese boats ramming and firing water cannons at Vietnamese
vessels, damaging the ships and injuring six Vietnamese fisheries
surveillance officers.
On May 8, China acknowledged for the first
time that its vessels had fired water cannons at the Vietnamese
flotilla. But Beijing
defended its actions by saying that it had no choice but to increase its
security measures in response to what it claimed were Vietnamese
provocations, Reuters reported.
One day ahead of a regional summit
that begins Saturday in Myanmar,
Vietnam called on other
ASEAN member countries to speak with a common voice against China's
latest move.
Vietnam's recent
flare-up with China
in the contested waters is likely to top the agenda at the summit, but
analysts doubt any breakthrough will be achieved in a diverse bloc that
remains divided over the issue.
But on the bright side, Southeast
Asian foreign ministers agreed Saturday to jointly express concern over the
latest sea collision between Vietnam
and China.
Dinh
Quan, Thanh Nien
News
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