Provincial
spat over Chinese resort in Vietnam pass pulls in prime minister
A billboard
describing a planned resort complex that's set to be built by the World Shine
Hong Kong Limited Company along the Hai Van Pass in
The mayor of
Nguyen Van
Cao, chairman of the provincial People’s Committee, was referring to a
planned resort complex it licensed in October of 2013.
At that
time, the Thua Thien-Hue government gave the Chinese company 200 hectares
(494 acres) of land on
The project's investor
is a subsidiary of the British Virgin Islands-based World Shine Hong Kong
Limited Company, whose director, Lu Wang Sheng, is a Chinese national.
If
built, the complex will feature a five-star hotel with 450 rooms, a luxury
apartment building with 220 apartments, 350 villas and a 2,000-seat
international convention center.
The
project's total cost was estimated to hit US$250 million and is slated for
completion in 2023.
After local
media reported on the project, several defense experts publicly denounced it
as a threat to national security due to the Hai Van Pass' great
strategic significance.
The
project's detractors have called for a careful review from both the
provincial government and the Ministry of Defense.
Lieutenant-General
Be Xuan Truong, deputy commander-in-chief of the Vietnamese People’s Army,
told the press he's sure the Ministry of Defense won't approve the project
due to its sensitive location.
Lieutenant-General
Nguyen Quoc Thuoc, former commander of the Military Zone 4, said that
particular stretch of the Hai Van Pass--between Bach Ma Mountain and the
Whoever
controls the pass will be able to control the whole country, he said, so no
portion of it should be given over to foreign investors.
The
municipal government of
Meanwhile,
Cao, the Thua Thien Hue mayor, told the press the project’s location falls
totally within his purview.
He said the
local government sought opinions from provincial military authorities before
licensing the project.
But, he
said, if the PM orders the province to cancel the project, it will do so.
“We’re
waiting for the PM’s instructions,” he said.
The Hai Van
Pass runs along a spur in the Truong Son (Annamite) Range, which emerges from
the west and juts into the
In 1858, the
French launched their first military incursion into
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Thứ Năm, 20 tháng 11, 2014
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