Major General
Nguyen Quang Dam, commander of the Vietnam Coast Guard, is pictured during an
online chat with Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper readers in
China’s deployment of warships and
aircraft to protect its illegal drilling rig Haiyang 981 in Vietnamese waters
in the East Vietnam Sea runs counter and is unacceptable to international
practices, according to the chief of the Vietnam Coast Guard.
Major General Nguyen Quang Dam, commander of the
Vietnam Coast Guard, made that statement during an online chat with Tuoi
Tre newspaper readers in
The official said there has been no sign of the Chinese
ships withdrawing from the scene so far.
He affirmed that over the last week, China has deployed
70 to 80 vessels and aircraft to protect operations of the rig on a daily
basis, adding the Chinese vessels are always ready to ram or fire high-power
water cannons at Vietnam Coast Guard ships and the Vietnam fisheries
surveillance force, which are trying to persuade the Chinese side to remove
its rig from Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone and continental shelf.
“Their violent acts have posed serious threats to the
lives of Vietnamese members of law enforcement,” Dam said, expressing his
concerns.
He also criticized
The Vietnam Coast Guard chief said that
He added that the Vietnam Coast Guard will not send any
military ship to deal with the current issue. According to the commander,
only the Vietnam Coast Guard and
With regard to a recent false accusation from
In an international conference on May 8,
“We would like to send
“The Vietnam Coast Guard will do its best to protect
the country’s sea and land sovereignty and will make no concession to
Since early this month, Chinese vessels have
continually rammed or fired high-power water cannons at their Vietnamese
counterparts, causing damage to several ships and injuries to nine Vietnamese
fisheries surveillance staff members.
The attacks came when the Vietnamese side was trying to
persuade the Chinese to remove their oil rig from
The Chinese rig is now located at 15°29’58’’ North
latitude and 111°12’06’’ East longitude in the East Vietnam Sea, about 119
nautical miles (221 km) from Ly Son Island off the central Vietnamese
province of Quang Ngai and 18 nautical miles south of Tri Ton Island off the
Southeast Asian country’s Hoang Sa (Paracel) archipelago.
This location, announced by the Chinese, is within
Tuoi Tre
|
Thứ Tư, 14 tháng 5, 2014
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