Vietnam’s
new Law of the Sea ignites new tension with China
28
June, 2012
June
28, 2012 – HANOI – Vietnam’s
new Law on the Sea, passed last week, has sparked a fresh round of
tensions with China about competing territory in the South China Sea.
When Vietnam’s National Assembly passed the law on June 21, the
reaction from China was immediate and aggressive. The law states
Vietnam’s sovereignty claims of the Spratly and Paracel islands,
territory believed to be rich in oil and minerals, and also claimed
by its larger neighbor.
Beijing says the law is illegal and called in
Vietnamese ambassador Nguyen Van Tho to protest. Analysts have said
the move is directed more towards engaging Vietnamese public opinion,
rather than stirring ire with China. Last year, hundreds of
protesters took to the streets for weeks of rare demonstrations in
Vietnam, protesting Chinese aggression against Vietnamese oil
exploration vessels.
Nguyen Quang Thach, a resident of Hanoi,
was at the protests last year. He says he welcomes the new law. “I’m
happy with this because we know the demarcation of our sea territory
and it’s a good way to send a message to other countries that we
have the law and regulations,” he said.
The face-off with China
quickly escalated.
The same day Vietnam passed the Law on the Sea,
China’s Foreign Ministry announced it had raised the level of
governance on three groups of islands in the South China Sea from
county to prefectural level, under the control of Sansha city.
The
seat of government will be on Woody Island, which is part of the
Paracels, an area China took from what was then South Vietnam in
1974. Sansha city has been in the works for some time, says Jennifer
Richmond, China director for the security analysts firm Stratfor,
which made it easy to bring up in response to Vietnam’s new law.
“Sansha city is not a new concept. In fact I think they started
thinking about this back in the late 50s and 60s. So what they
have done is they had always had a county administrative area,”
said Richmond. “What they are trying to do now is make it a
prefecture administration with some territorial claim.”
Richmond
says the announcement was made in reaction to the new law, but is not
directed entirely at Vietnam. Instead, he says it was part of a
public relations exercise aimed at the Chinese public as the country
gets ready for a leadership transition.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.