Several hundred Vietnamese protesters staged a rare demonstration outside the Chinese embassy in Hanoi yesterday to defend the national claim of sovereignty over the disputed Spratly and Paracel archipelagos.
Waving the red and gold Vietnamese flag, raising their fists and shouting "Defend the homeland" and "Down with China," about 250 people rallied for one hour as police stood by before the protest was peacefully dispersed.
"We love our country. We protest the occupation of Truong Sa (the Spratlys) and Hoang Sa (the Paracels)," shouted the protesters, mostly students, who had gathered in Lenin Park across from the gated diplomatic mission.
PHOTO: AFP
The two archipelagos, considered strategic outposts in the South China Sea, have potential oil and gas reserves and rich fishing grounds.
The Spratlys are claimed in full or part by China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan. Other than Brunei, all claimants have troops based on the archipelago of more than 100 islets, reefs and atolls.
The Paracels -- which Chinese troops took from South Vietnamese forces in 1974 -- are also claimed by Vietnam and Taiwan.
The protest came after China last month set up the county-level Sansha administrative unit on Hainan island, which covers 2.6 million km2, mostly ocean, including the disputed isles.
The disputes stir strong passions in Vietnam, which remembers a millennium of Chinese rule and fought its last border war with China in 1979.
The two countries fought a brief naval battle in 1988, near one of the Spratly Island reefs, in which more than 50 Vietnamese sailors died.
The two countries normalized relations in 1991.
The issue has been hotly debated on blogs in Vietnam, and Vietnamese hackers over the weekend defaced at least one Chinese government Web site with obscenities and a call to "stop invading" the islands.
"We need to do something with a long-term vision to settle this problem," said one protester, Hanoi engineering student Nguyen Duc Toan. "China is acting aggressively. We have a long history in Hoang Sa and Truong Sa."
The rally, which supported Vietnam's official stance, was tolerated by police, and media were allowed to attend -- a rarity in Vietnam, where public protests are usually suppressed quickly.
The islands have been flashpoints for years, and the number of disputes has risen as declining fish stocks in the South China Sea have forced fishing crews from Vietnam and elsewhere to sail deeper into disputed waters.
In July a Chinese naval vessel fired at a Vietnamese fishing boat near the Spratlys, sinking the boat and killing one sailor, reports said.
‘HYANGDO’: A South Korean lawmaker said there was no credible evidence to support rumors that Kim Jong-un has a son with a disability or who is studying abroad South Korea’s spy agency yesterday said that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s daughter, Kim Ju-ae, who last week accompanied him on a high-profile visit to Beijing, is understood to be his recognized successor. The teenager drew global attention when she made her first official overseas trip with her father, as he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Analysts have long seen her as Kim’s likely successor, although some have suggested she has an older brother who is being secretly groomed as the next leader. The South Korean National Intelligence Service (NIS) “assesses that she [Kim Ju-ae]
In the week before his fatal shooting, right-wing US political activist Charlie Kirk cheered the boom of conservative young men in South Korea and warned about a “globalist menace” in Tokyo on his first speaking tour of Asia. Kirk, 31, who helped amplify US President Donald Trump’s agenda to young voters with often inflammatory rhetoric focused on issues such as gender and immigration, was shot in the neck on Wednesday at a speaking event at a Utah university. In Seoul on Friday last week, he spoke about how he “brought Trump to victory,” while addressing Build Up Korea 2025, a conservative conference
DEADLOCK: Putin has vowed to continue fighting unless Ukraine cedes more land, while talks have been paused with no immediate results expected, the Kremlin said Russia on Friday said that peace talks with Kyiv were on “pause” as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy warned that Russian President Vladimir Putin still wanted to capture the whole of Ukraine. Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump said that he was running out of patience with Putin, and the NATO alliance said it would bolster its eastern front after Russian drones were shot down in Polish airspace this week. The latest blow to faltering diplomacy came as Russia’s army staged major military drills with its key ally Belarus. Despite Trump forcing the warring sides to hold direct talks and hosting Putin in Alaska, there
North Korea has executed people for watching or distributing foreign television shows, including popular South Korean dramas, as part of an intensifying crackdown on personal freedoms, a UN human rights report said on Friday. Surveillance has grown more pervasive since 2014 with the help of new technologies, while punishments have become harsher — including the introduction of the death penalty for offences such as sharing foreign TV dramas, the report said. The curbs make North Korea the most restrictive country in the world, said the 14-page UN report, which was based on interviews with more than 300 witnesses and victims who had