Stories
from Hoang Sa told by a foreign correspondent
VietNamNet’s Huynh Phan talked with Tran
Huy Cong, representative of the Japanese television broadcaster NDN in
Vietnam, about his journey to Hoang Sa (Paracel)
Q: NDN has been in
Chinese vessels in
A: We had
registered too late so we had to wait for the second trip. Joining us were
correspondents of five other foreign media agencies, including CNN and Viet
Weekly (also based in the
There were four Japanese media agencies this time,
including two television broadcasters and two newspapers, compared with only
two television broadcasters on the first trip (Asahi TV and NHK).
Q: How did you feel when you knew
that you were admitted to the trip to Hoang Sa?
A: We
registered two correspondents, I and a Japanese reporter who filmed the
beginning of the Iraq War 11 years ago. As the trip schedule was kept secret,
the other correspondent could not wait for over a week so he returned to
I was quite worried because I'm old and have high blood
pressure, plus I get seasick. But finally, I was the strongest man among the
correspondents on board.
Q: How was the trip?
A: At first,
all correspondents were on a ship but when we arrived at the scene, the area
near Hoang Sa, where
The other foreign correspondents went to the ship 8003,
which is bigger but it did not approach to the Chinese oil rig closely like
our vessel, so they had fewer photos of the Chinese ships than correspondents
in our ship.
Q: Were you worried when you joined
the second trip and could not capture the different scenes from those already
filmed by the correspondents of NHK and Asahi TV who participated in the
first trip?
A: Yes, I was
but I was very lucky. Before the trip, correspondent Duong Dinh Huy of Asahi
TV told me that he could not film the scene in which Chinese ships collided
with Vietnamese vessels and attacked Vietnamese boats by water cannons.
The female correspondent of NHK was taken to the
hospital for an emergency when her ship arrived at the port. According to
Tokyo-based NDN, she filmed several Chinese ships in the distance. The pressure
on me was huge because NDN waited for my film.
Q: And did you overcome that
pressure?
A: After the
trip, I had 11 clips, each file is five minutes long. Japanese television
channels like NHK, Asahi TV, Tokyo TV, TBS, or NTV wanted to buy the files.
The General Manager of NDN, Misao Ishigaki, called me
to say: "This year you have done a very important task, and you can have
a holiday from now until the year’s end."
Q: What did you film?
Correspondent Cong.
A: I was on the
ship 4032 from May 27 to 31. I filmed two key issues: 1/Ships of the Vietnam
Coast Guard and Fishery Surveillance forces performing law enforcement
duties; they were prevented by Chinese ships; 2/ the activities of officers
and soldiers of the Vietnam Coast Guard.
The law enforcement force of
Q: Did the Chinese know about the
presence of foreign journalists on Vietnamese ships?
A: When the
Vietnamese ships approached the oil rig, the Chinese vessels appeared to
block them. Correspondents filmed the scene so the Chinese side knew about
our presence and they used tricks.
For example, once Chinese vessels surrounded ships of
the Vietnam Fishery Surveillance force. A Vietnamese ship broke down and it
could not operate. A Chinese came to cover the Vietnamese ship from our
cameras. At the same time another Chinese ship attacked the Vietnamese vessel
with water cannons.
For those who have not watched the scene from the
beginning, they may think that the Chinese vessel was spraying water toward a
Chinese ship in order to watch it but we had filmed it from the start. So the
Japanese audience could know clearly that the Chinese ship attacked the
Vietnamese vessel with water cannons.
Chinese ships also surrounded Vietnamese boats. Usually
four Chinese ships besieged a Vietnamese vessel on the right, the left, the
front and the back of the Vietnamese ship.
Chinese ships also ran across the prow of Vietnamese
ships in order to collide and film the scene to denounce that Vietnamese
ships had rammed Chinese ships.
Q: How far was the ship 4032 from
the Chinese oil rig?
A: The 4032
ship approached the oil rig every day but it was always hindered by Chinese
vessels. It was about 6.5 to 8 nautical miles from the oil rig.
Do you think that the clips you shot at the scene are
enough for the Japanese audience to know about
It is the right thing that
We went to the scene to verify the information and
clips that
Q: What about the life of soldiers
on the vessels of the
A: Every four
days they had a bath because of lack of fresh water. Their meals often lacked
vegetables. At about 9-10pm, they caught squid and cooked noodles. They had
to keep their noodle bowls by their legs, otherwise noodles would fall out
because of big waves.
I filmed a young soldier reading an old newspaper on
board. His sad face stood out in the immense scene of water and the velvet
sky. I interviewed him and discovered that he is 26 years old, a native from
Nam Dinh province. He had not returned home for eight months and he did not
know when he would have a chance to visit his family.
Q: The last question: after that
trip did the NDN allow you to have long holiday as the general director said?
A: Not, not
yet. From May 15, I went to Ly Son Island for 10 days to make a documentary
film entitled "Hoang Sa belongs to
Thank you!
Interviewer:
Huynh Phan |
Chủ Nhật, 13 tháng 7, 2014
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