Vietnam condemns China for assault on its fishermen in the disputed
South China Sea
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[October 03, 2024]
By HAU DINH
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — Vietnam condemned China on Thursday while saying
that Chinese law enforcement personnel assaulted 10 Vietnamese
fishermen, damaged their fishing gear and seized about 4 tons of fish
catch near the disputed Paracel Islands in the South China Sea.
The fishermen first reported the assault near the Chinese-controlled
islands by radio on Sunday but did not identify the attackers.
Three of the fishermen suffered broken limbs and the rest sustained
other injuries, according to Vietnamese state media. Some were taken on
stretchers to a hospital after they returned to Quang Ngai province late
Monday.
Vietnam’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs blamed Chinese law enforcement
personnel on Thursday for the high-seas attack, saying it had “seriously
violated Vietnam’s sovereignty in the Paracel Islands,” international
law and an agreement by the leaders of the rival claimant countries to
better manage their territorial disputes.
Chinese officials did not immediately issue a reaction.
Vietnam conveyed its protest and alarm over the attack to the Chinese
ambassador in the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi.
Vietnam demanded that Beijing respect its sovereignty in the Paracel
Islands, launch an investigation and provide Hanoi with information
about the attack, Vietnamese spokesperson Pham Thu Hang said in a
statement posted on the Foreign Ministry’s website.
China has become increasingly aggressive in asserting its claims in
virtually the entire South China Sea, through which about $5 trillion in
global trade transits each year. The busy sea passage is also believed
to be sitting atop vast undersea deposits of oil and gas.
Aside from China and the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and
Taiwan also have overlapping claims in the strategic waterway.
The United States has no claims in the disputed waters, but it has
deployed Navy ships and Air Force fighter jets to patrol the waterway
and promote freedom of navigation and overflight. China has warned the
U.S. not to meddle in what it says is a purely Asian dispute.
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In this March 27, 2016, photo, Vietnamese fishermen fix nets on
their boat as while docked at Tho Quang port, Danang, Vietnam, after
a fishing trip in the South China Sea. (AP Photo/Hau Dinh, File)
The Vietnamese newspaper Tien Phong cited one of the fishermen, Tran
Tien Cong, as saying that two foreign boats approached them from the
rear and that personnel from those vessels boarded their boat and
started beating the fishermen with a meter-long (three-foot-long)
stick, apparently made of iron.
The Vietnamese fishermen panicked and did not fight back because
they were overwhelmed by an estimated 40 attackers. Another
fisherman, Nguyen Thuong, was cited as saying that the attackers,
who spoke through a translator, ordered them to sail back to
Vietnam. The assailants then seized their fishing gear and fish
catch.
After being beaten, the Vietnamese fishermen were forced to kneel
and were covered with plastic sheets before the attackers left.
The Paracel Islands lie about 400 kilometers (250 miles) off
Vietnam’s eastern coast and about the same distance from China’s
southernmost province of Hainan. Both countries, along with the
self-governing island of Taiwan, claim the islands.
The islands have been under the de facto control of China since
1974, when Beijing seized them from Vietnam in a brief but violent
naval conflict.
Last year, satellite photos showed that China appeared to be
building an airstrip on Triton Island in the Paracel group. At the
time, it appeared the airstrip would be big enough to accommodate
turboprop aircraft and drones but not fighter jets or bombers.
China has also had a small harbor and buildings on the island for
years, along with a helipad and radar arrays.
China has refused to provide details of its island construction work
other than to say it is aimed at promoting global navigation safety.
It has rejected accusations, including by the U.S., that it is
militarizing the sea passage.
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