China,
Vietnam pledge to 'address and control' maritime disputes
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[October 17, 2014]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China and
Vietnam have agreed to "address and control" maritime disputes, state
media said on Friday, as differences over the potentially energy-rich
South China Sea have roiled relations between the two countries and
other neighbors.
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Ties between the Communist countries sank to a three-decade low
this year after China deployed a $1 billion-oil rig to the disputed
waters which straddle key shipping lanes.
Vietnam claims the portion of the sea as its exclusive economic
zone, and the rig's deployment sparked a wave of violent protests in
Vietnam.
The two countries should "properly address and control maritime
differences" to create favorable conditions for bilateral
cooperation, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang told Vietnamese Prime
Minister Nguyen Tan Dung on Thursday on the sidelines of the
Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) in Milan.
"Thanks to efforts from both sides, China-Vietnam relations have
ridden out the recent rough patch and gradually recovered," the
official Xinhua news agency cited Li as saying.
Xinhua said Dung agreed and endorsed boosting "cooperation in
infrastructure, finance and maritime exploration".
The comments were a reiteration of earlier pledges by leaders from
the two countries.
China's Defense Minister Chang Wanquan held talks with his
Vietnamese counterpart, Phung Quang Thanh, on Friday in Beijing,
Xinhua reported, during which both sides agreed to "gradually
resume" military ties.
The two leaders vowed that the countries' militaries would "play a
positive role in properly dealing with their maritime disputes and
safeguarding a peaceful and stable situation", the news agency said.
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China claims almost the entire South China Sea, believed to be rich
in deposits of oil and gas resources. Brunei, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims in the waters where
$5 trillion of ship-borne goods pass every year.
Alarmed by China's military rise and growing assertiveness, Vietnam
has broadened its military relationships in recent years, most
notably with Cold War-era patron Russia but also with the United
States.
Beijing has told Washington to stay out of disputes over the South
China Sea and let countries in the region resolve the issue
themselves.
(Reporting by Michael Martina; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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