Vietnamese abroad voice unity on East Sea
dispute
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Vietnamese and foreign supporters
gathered in front of Sydney Town Hall yesterday to protest China's
placement of an oil rig within Vietnamese waters. - VNA/VNS Photo Hong Van
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SYDNEY (VNS)
- Over 300 Vietnamese and foreign supporters raised banners in front of
Sydney Town Hall yesterday, expressing their overwhelming indignation over China's illegal placement of Haiyang
Shiyou-981oil rig and escorting vessels in Viet Nam's continental shelf and
exclusive economic zone since early May.
Following the demonstration, they issued a statement
declaring that China's act was a grave violation of the United Nations
Charter and the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and against the spirit
of the Declaration of the Conduct of Parties in the East Sea and its
agreements with Viet Nam on the settlement of issues at sea.
In the document, they called on China to conform to international law by
pulling its rig and ships out of Viet Nam's waters immediately and
unconditionally.
Vietnamese people in Kuala Lumpur
held a similar rally and sent a letter of protest to the Chinese embassy the
same morning, in which they asked China to respect its neighbouring
countries, their sovereignty and international law.
The Vietnamese community in Egypt
also joined a meeting to protest China's installment of its oil
rig on Vietnamese waters. Vietnamese Ambassador to Egypt Dao Thanh Chung gave
a speech accusing China
of seriously violating international law. He made it clear that Vietnamese
both at home and abroad and many countries around the world had vowed to side
with Viet Nam
during its fight. They also called on China
to withdraw its rig and escort vessels from Viet Nam's waters immediately.
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More than 150 Vietnamese people,
mainly students, take part in a demonstration on Saturday in Adelaide, capital city of South Australia. - VNS Photo Lam Lam
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The same day, crowds of Vietnamese and Swiss people
took to the streets in Zurich, raising banners
asking China
to abide by international law.
In a letter sent to the Chinese Consul General in Zurich, they requested the Chinese government pull its
rig and ships out of Viet
Nam's waters right away, saying the
dispute should be settled via diplomatic channels.
Vietnamese scholars in the US
said the act seriously violated international law and applauded the measures Viet Nam was
taking in response to the incident.
Dr. Ngo Nhu Binh, Director of the Vietnamese Language
Programme in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilisation at Harvard University, said that the placement of
the oil rig was more of a political move than an economic one.
"China
has a great ambition for the East
Sea, and the nine-dot
line is an obvious manifestation of this expansionism," Binh told New
York-based Viet Nam News Agency correspondents. The lecturer hailed the
response of the Vietnamese government to China's
act and said he thought now was the time for Viet Nam to take the matter to an
international court. According to Binh, Viet Nam should consult international law
experts about this issue and study the experience of the Philippines.
"If we take the matter to an international court,
we must have a firm legal foundation," he said.
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The Vietnamese protestors march
peacefully along streets of the inner Adelaide City,
brandishing red-starred Vietnamese flags and chanting slogans written in
English. - VNS Photo Lam Lam
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Lawyer Ta Van Tai, a former lecturer at Harvard Law School,
noted that the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
required that concerned parties engage in talks and conciliation procedures
before taking compulsory procedures entailing binding decisions, so bilateral
and multi-lateral diplomatic talks were a must.
Tai suggested that Viet
Nam take the issue to the United National General
Assembly or the UN Security Council, saying that a resolution adopted by the
former could deter China.
He said while the matter could be vetoed by China
at the UN Security Council, Viet
Nam should still raise the issue, because
this was a necessary step when international peace and security were under
threat. With Chinese ships acting threateningly and using force to intimidate
Vietnamese fisheries surveillance vessels, marine police and fishermen, the
country was clearly under threat, he said.
"The Vietnamese government's point of view is very
clear. If China does not
remove its rig, Viet Nam
will take other actions, and this point of view receives support from
Vietnamese worldwide," said Nguyen Ba Chung, a researcher at the William
Joiner Institute for the Study of War and Social Consequences at the University of Massachusetts
in Boston.
Chung noted that China's act triggered a strong
reaction among the overseas Vietnamese community. Among the academic circle
in the US, the general
opinion was also that China's
act was unreasonable. The focus of discussion now was what the US should do to counter China's aggressive move in the East Sea.
The researcher said that as there was no way for Viet Nam to stop similar moves by China in the future, sooner or later Viet Nam would have to take China to an
international court.
He added that while China might not appear in court
because they know they would lose, at least the world would see very clearly
that China was in the wrong, making it difficult for China to continue using
its power to bully other countries in the East Sea. - VNS
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