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#Vietnamese anger toward China is running at its highest level in years
after Beijing deployed an oil rig in disputed waters. That's posing a
tricky question for Vietnam's leaders: To what extent should they allow
public protests that could morph into those against their own
authoritarian rule?
At one level, the ruling Communist Party would like to harness the anger
on the street to amplify its own indignation against China and garner
international sympathy as naval ships from both countries engage in a
tense standoff near the rig off the Paracel Islands in the South #China
Sea.
But #Vietnam's government instinctively distrusts public gatherings of
any sort, much less ones that risk posing a threat to public order. And
they also know that members of the country's dissident movement are
firmly embedded inside the anti-China one, and have used the issue to
mobilize support in the past.
On Saturday, around 100 people protested outside the #Chinese Consulate
in the country's commercial capital, Ho Chi Minh City, watched on by a
large contingent of security officers. Dissident groups have called for
larger demonstrations on Sunday in Ho Chi Minh City and in Hanoi, the
capital.
The two Asian nations have a history of conflict going back 1,000 years,
and the streets of Vietnam's cities are named after heroes in those
fights. In the more recent past, the navies have twice had deadly
engagements in the South China Sea. There was a brief but bloody border
war in 1979. All have a created a deep well of mistrust toward China
among ordinary Vietnamese.
Yet the two countries share a Communist ideology and close economic
ties, making the China-Vietnam relationship highly sensitive topic. The
latest round of tension — the worst since 1988, when 64 Vietnamese
sailors were killed in a clash with the Chinese navy — had led to fresh
and awkward questions over that relationship, a normally taboo topic in
the state-controlled media.
"It's time for the Communist Party of Vietnam to reconsider all its
policy toward Beijing ... Vietnam should immediately abandon Beijing as
an economic and a political model," Huy Duc, one of Vietnam's best known
bloggers wrote in a recent post. "Hopefully, the drilling rig 981
incident will awaken the Communist Party of Vietnam to be on the side of
the people and drive out the Beijing expansionists."
A statement widely circulated on Facebook and dissident blogs called for
protests on Sunday morning in Hanoi outside the Chinese Embassy and a
Chinese cultural center in Ho Chi Minh City. In past years, authorities
have only allowed anti-China demonstrators to walk around a lake in
downtown Hanoi.
"Facing the danger of Chinese aggression appropriating the sacred East
Sea, the source of livelihood of the Vietnamese over generations, we are
determined not to compromise," according to a statement posted
alongside the protest call that used the Vietnamese term for the South
China Sea.
"We cannot continue to compromise and be vile and sinful to our heroic
ancestors and feel ashamed before our future generations," it said.
The last time there was a flare-up in the South China Sea in 2011,
anti-Chinese protests lasted weeks, and some protesters voiced slogans
against the government. Authorities used force to break them up.
Source: ABC News
Source: ABC News
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