Hanoi says all will lose in any East
Vietnam Sea war
Vietnamese President Tran Dai
Quang warned on Tuesday there would be no winners in any armed conflict
sparked by territorial disputes in the East Vietnam Sea.
Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang delivers a speech at the 38th Singapore Lecture, organised by the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS), on August 30, 2016. AFP
Quang,
who is on a state visit to Singapore, told a forum that recent developments
there were threatening regional security.
The
Vietnamese leader did not mention any country but there is growing unease
over China's actions.
China
claims most of the East Vietnam Sea. It has reclaimed reefs and built
airstrips capable of hosting military equipment, sparking anger from
competing claimants led by Vietnam and the Philippines.
"The
[East Vietnam Sea], located at the heart of Southeast Asia, not only brings
about many important benefits to nations in the region but it is also a vital
route to maritime and air transport of the world," Quang said.
But
"recent worrying developments" there "have had a negative
impact on the security environment of the region, especially maritime
security and safety, freedom of navigation and overflight".
"And
should we allow instability to take place, especially in the case of armed
conflicts, there will be neither winners or losers but rather all will
lose," he warned.
Quang
was speaking to diplomats, academics and students at a forum organized by the
ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute.
Four
Southeast Asian states -- Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam -- as
well as Taiwan have competing claims in the sea.
Vietnam
has been among the most vocal critics of China's blanket territorial claims.
In 2014 China moved a controversial oil rig into Vietnamese territory,
prompting protests in Vietnam.
China's
activities in the sea have also drawn criticism from the United States, which
says it seeks to ensure freedom of navigation in the waterway through which
$5 trillion in annual global trade passes.
The
sea row has also driven a wedge between members of the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations, which has failed to forge a unified front against
Beijing's actions.
Last
month the Philippines won a case against China at a UN-backed tribunal in the
Hague which rejected Beiijing's claims to most of the sea.
China
boycotted the hearing and has refused to recognize the ruling.
AFP/TUOI
TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 8, 2016
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