Hong Kong (CNN) -- China has evacuated more than
3,000 of its citizens from Vietnam and is sending ships to retrieve more
of them after deadly anti-Chinese violence erupted last week over a
territorial dispute between the two countries.
Five Chinese ships will
travel to Vietnam to help with the evacuation, the official #Chinese news
agency Xinhua reported Sunday, citing the Ministry of Transport. One of
the ships has already set off from the southern island province of
Hainan, the ministry said.
Sixteen critically
injured Chinese citizens were flown out of Vietnam on Sunday morning on a
chartered medical plane organized by Chinese authorities, Xinhua said.
Two Chinese workers were
killed and more than 100 others were injured in the violence that hit
parts of Vietnam last week, according to the news agency. Some of the
worst violence appeared to have taken place in the central coastal
province of Ha Tinh.
Foreign factories,
particularly those run by companies from China and Taiwan, were burned
and looted by rioters outraged over Beijing's decision to send an oil
rig into waters of the South China Sea that both countries claim as
sovereign territory.
Protests spin out of control
Vietnamese authorities
initially allowed protests, which are usually forbidden in the country,
to take place over the Chinese move. But after the unrest spiraled
lethally out of control, the government tried to rein in its angry
citizens.
On Saturday, the
government sent out a series of text messages to cell-phone users saying
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung was urging people "not to participate in
illegal protests that cause public disorder and harm social safety."
Chinese officials have repeatedly called on Vietnam to take action over the riots, protect Chinese citizens and help victims.
Vietnamese authorities
have arrested hundreds of suspects and started legal proceedings against
several of them, Vietnam's state-run news agency VNA reported Saturday,
citing Minister of Public Security Tran Dai Quang.
He described the attacks
as regrettable, saying dozens of police officers were injured as they
tried to bring the situation under control.
Ships clash at sea
But out in the South
China Sea, neither side appears to be showing any sign of backing down
over the territorial dispute that sparked the violence.
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, 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.
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.
Beijing has laid claim to most of the South China Sea, putting it at odds with several of its neighbors in the region.
Source: CNN News
Source: CNN News
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