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Anti-China activists in Vietnam mark Paracels defeat

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Anti-China activists in Vietnam mark Paracels defeat


PUBLISHED : Sunday, 19 January, 2014, 3:20pm
UPDATED : Sunday, 19 January, 2014, 3:20pm

Agence France-Presse in Hanoi

vietnam.jpg


Anti-China protesters rally in front of the statue of King Ly Cong Uan (Ly Thai To) in Hanoi to mark the 40th anniversary of the Chinese occupation of the disputed Paracels in the South China Sea. Photo: AFP

Activists chanted anti-China slogans and laid flowers on Sunday at a protest in Hanoi marking the 40th anniversary of the Chinese invasion of contested islands in the South China Sea.

In 1974, as US troops withdrew from Vietnam, China invaded the Paracel Islands, which were held by the US-backed South Vietnamese regime.

More than 70 Vietnamese soldiers died during the invasion and China has controlled the island chain ever since.

The two countries are locked in long-standing territorial disputes over the Paracel and Spratly islands, which both claim, and often trade diplomatic barbs over oil exploration and fishing rights in the contested waters.

On Sunday, dozens of activists laid flowers at a statue of Ly Thai To - the founder of Hanoi and a nationalist figurehead - in the centre of the capital.

Activists waved banners and shouted “Hoang Sa (Paracels), Truong Sa (Spratlys) belong to Vietnam!” before hundreds of uniformed and plain clothed police forced them to leave the area.

“We gathered here to commemorate the event... Forty years ago the Chinese invaded the island and killed many Vietnamese soldiers,” academic Nguyen Quang A said at the event.

The protest was the first display of public discontent in Hanoi this year against Beijing’s perceived aggression over territory, following a handful of anti-China demonstrations last year which were broken up by authorities.

“The government of Vietnam is in a very difficult situation,” Quang A said, calling the heavy police presence at the event “ridiculous”.

“The memory of people of Vietnam is vivid. Nobody can eradicate that memory,” he said.

Vietnam’s tightly-controlled state media covered the anniversary but not Sunday’s protest. There was no official comment from the government.

Beijing’s increasingly assertive stance in the South China Sea has stoked public anger in Vietnam and given way to rare protest in the authoritarian country.

Apart from China and Vietnam the Spratly Islands are claimed in whole or in part by the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan.


 
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