China evacuates thousands from Vietnam |
Hong Kong (CNN) -- Two Chinese ships arrived at the coast of #Vietnam on Monday to begin efforts to collect thousands of Chinese citizens who are fleeing the country after deadly attacks last week.
The chartered ships
reached the port of Vung Ang in Ha Tinh, the coastal province where some
of the worst violence targeting Chinese factories and workers took
place, Chinese state media reported.
Along with two other
ships that are still en route, the vessels plan to pick up almost 4,000
Chinese citizens who are leaving because of the recent unrest, #China's
state-run broadcaster CCTV reported Monday.
Chinese authorities said
Sunday that more than 3,000 Chinese had already been evacuated from
Vietnam after protests over China's decision to move an oil rig into
disputed waters of the South China Sea spiraled into riots in which
foreign-owned factories were burned and looted.
Two Chinese citizens were killed in the violence and more than 100 were injured, authorities said.
The crisis has frayed
ties between the two Communist-run Asian nations, and there is little
sign of either side backing down over the increasingly bitter
territorial dispute.
Security tightened
A series of chartered
planes carried around 300 Chinese citizens, including 16 critically
injured workers, back to China on Sunday, the official Chinese news
agency Xinhua reported.
Vietnamese authorities
have clamped down on the unrest, arresting hundreds of people. They have
beefed up security at key locations and urged citizens not participate
in further protests.
But that hasn't stopped
China from pressing ahead with the measures to extract thousands of its
citizens from the country. Beijing has also warned Chinese people not to
travel to Vietnam and said it will suspend some planned bilateral
exchanges with Hanoi, according to Xinhua.
Ships clash at sea
Out in the South China Sea, ships from both countries are facing off.
Vietnam's state-run news
agency VNA on Saturday accused China of continuing to show "its
aggressiveness by sending more military ships" to the area around the
oil rig. Vietnam has demanded that China immediately withdraw the rig
from the disputed waters.
The news agency cited
Nguyen Van Trung, an official at the Vietnam Fisheries Surveillance
Department, as saying that China had 119 ships in the area on Saturday
morning, including warships, coast guard vessels and fishing boats.
Some of the ships were provoking the Vietnamese vessels by ramming them and firing water cannons at them, he said.
'We are not afraid of trouble'
China, for its part, has
continued to accuse Vietnamese ships of similar acts, saying they are
trying to disrupt the oil rig's drilling operation. It has declared a
three-mile exclusion zone around the rig, which is operated by the
state-owned oil and gas company CNOOC.
"We do not make trouble,
but we are not afraid of trouble," Gen. Fang Fenghui, the chief of the
general staff of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA), said Thursday during a visit to the United States.
"In matters of
territory, our attitude is firm. We won't give an inch," Fang said after
meeting U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey.
U.S. concerns
Relations between China
and Vietnam soured earlier this month, when the Chinese platform began
drilling for oil near the Paracel Islands, which are claimed by both
countries.
At the time, the U.S. State Department called the move "provocative," saying it "raises tensions."
Beijing has laid claim
to most of the South China Sea, putting it at odds with several of its
neighbors in the region, including the Philippines and Malaysia. China
is also locked in a bitter dispute with Japan over a group of tiny
islands in the East China Sea.
"We have to acknowledge
there are territorial disputes," including "what exactly is the status
quo and who is seeking to change it," Dempsey said Thursday at the news
conference with Fang of the PLA.
His comments were a
veiled reference to Washington's view that Beijing is attempting to
change the status quo by more aggressively seeking to establish control
over disputed areas.
Source: CNN News
Source: CNN News
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