Vietnam should sue China at
international tribunal: voters
The
front side of Truong Sa Lon Island, part of Vietnam's Truong Sa (Spratly)
archipelago, is seen with a berth. Tuoi Tre
Vietnam should complete judicial steps soon to bring China to an
international tribunal for infringing on Hanoi’s sovereignty over the East
Vietnam Sea, many constituents have said in their proposal to the law-making
National Assembly.
The proposal was read out before deputies during a meeting on
Monday.
The voters advised in their proposition that Vietnam should be
more prudent in its external policies and take more care in cooperating and
dealing with a certain number of countries, particularly China.
“Vietnam should limit compromise policies to ensure its
territorial integrity, national security, and sovereignty,” the constituents
said.
They also expressed their protest against China’s construction
of artificial islands on some reefs belonging to Vietnam’s Truong Sa
(Spratly) and Hoang Sa (Paracel) archipelagos.
The voters objected to Chinese vessels’ illegal fishing in
Vietnamese waters as well as their attacks on local fishing boats there.
Vietnam should adopt solutions that are more decisive and clear
in struggling against China to protect the fatherland’s independence,
sovereignty and territorial integrity, they said.
Particularly, the country should fulfill judicial procedures
soon to take legal proceedings against China at an international tribunal
over its violation of the Southeast Asian country’s sovereignty in the East
Vietnam Sea, they added.
Last year, Beijing illegally planted its Haiyang Shiyou 981
oil rig 80 miles deep into Vietnam's continental shelf and exclusive economic
zone from early May to July 16, despite strong protests from Hanoi as well as
the international community.
At a press briefing on October 28, 2015, Vietnamese Ministry
of Foreign Affairs spokesman Le Hai Binh protested China’s illicit
construction of two lighthouses on Duy Mong (Drummond) Island and Hai Sam
(Antelope) Reef in the Luoi Liem (Crescent) cluster, part of Vietnam’s Hoang
Sa.
Similarly, at another press conference on October 13, 2015,
spokesman Binh also voiced Vietnam’s opposition to China’s illegal building of
two other lighthouses on Chau Vien (Cuarteron) and Gac Ma (Johnson South)
reefs, part of Vietnam’s Truong Sa.
“Vietnam has full legal and historical evidence to prove its
indisputable sovereignty over Truong Sa and Hoang Sa. Any activities conducted
there by other countries without agreement from Vietnam are illegal and null
and void,” the ministry’s spokesman underlined.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Thứ Ba, 17 tháng 11, 2015
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