Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Energy News .




TRADE WARS
China evacuates 3,000 nationals from Vietnam after deadly unrest
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 18, 2014


Filipinos and Vietnamese unite in anti-China street protest
Manila (AFP) May 16, 2014 - Several hundred Filipino and Vietnamese protesters united in a march in the Philippine capital on Friday, demanding that China stop oil drilling in disputed South China Sea waters.

Filipino riot police blocked the entrance to a high-rise building that houses the Chinese consulate in Manila's financial district as around 200 protesters marched on the office.

The street action, which remained peaceful, came after deadly riots in Vietnam that Hanoi said were triggered by China's deployment of a deep-sea oil rig in a part of the South China Sea.

The protesters, some wearing green cardboard cut-outs of turtle shells, carried placards that read "Vietnam-Philippines join hands to kick off China", "China Stop Bullying Vietnam and the Philippines" and "We Support Vietnam".

The Philippines this week filed criminal charges against nine Chinese crew members of a fishing boat seized by Filipino police in the disputed waters for collecting hundreds of protected giant sea turtles.

The protesters also chanted "Paracels Vietnam", referring to the South China Sea island chain where the Chinese oil rig is deployed.

Filipino politicians joined members of Manila's Vietnamese community at the demonstration.

"We are here to protest what China is doing against Vietnam. We need to call on the support of local and international friends," Arya Nguyen, one of about 60 Philippines-based Vietnamese who joined the protest, told AFP.

"If they (the Chinese government) can do that to Vietnam, they can do it to everybody," echoed Janicee Buco, a Filipina representative of a community group called Vietnam Filipino Association.

Buco said the Vietnamese who took part were Philippines-based descendants of Vietnamese boat people who fled with the aim of being resettled in the West after the Vietnam war.

- Rival claims -

The protesters said they felt aggrieved over China's recent moves to assert its territorial claims over most of the strategic and resource-rich waters, including the oil-rig deployment that Hanoi said triggered ramming incidents involving Vietnamese and Chinese vessels.

Like the two communist rivals, the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan have claims to the sea, which overlap those of China and Vietnam.

Manila has also accused Beijing of illegal land reclamation on a reef that Filipino officials said could be used to build China's first airstrip in the disputed waters.

A Philippines foreign ministry spokesman said Friday that the reclamation works at the Chinese-held Johnson South Reef -- also claimed by the Philippines -- could "jeopardise" a case that Manila has lodged with the UN over China's claims in the South China Sea, as the works would change the nature of the reef.

"If you change the character or nature of that feature, from a rock to an island, of course the maritime entitlements change too," he said.

Manila from time to time arrests Vietnamese fishermen for poaching in Filipino coastal waters, but bilateral ties are otherwise cordial.

Both nations have overlapping claims to the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, but there has been little tension over those as the two countries work together through ASEAN to contain China's territorial ambitions.

China has evacuated more than 3,000 of its nationals from Vietnam following a wave of deadly anti-Beijing unrest, state media said Sunday, as Vietnamese civil society groups called for renewed demonstrations in several cities.

The Xinhua news agency said the evacuees included 16 nationals who were "critically injured" in the worst anti-China violence in Vietnam in decades triggered by Beijing's deployment of an oil rig in contested South China Sea waters.

They were pulled out on a chartered medical flight and China was dispatching five ships to Vietnam to pluck more nationals to safety, after an alliance of 20 vocal Vietnamese NGOs called for fresh protests Sunday in the capital Hanoi, the southern economic hub of Ho Chi Minh City, and other areas against China's "aggressive actions" in the South China Sea.

But Vietnamese authorities, which have occasionally allowed protests to vent anger at the country's giant neighbour, warned they would "resolutely" prevent any further outbursts.

China's positioning of an oil rig in waters also claimed by Vietnam has ignited long-simmering enmity between the two communist neighbours, which have fought territorial skirmishes in past decades.

Worker demonstrations spread to 22 of Vietnam's 63 provinces in the last week, according to the Vietnamese government, with enraged mobs torching foreign-owned factories. The violence left at least two Chinese workers dead and more than 100 injured.

More than 3,000 Chinese nationals had been evacuated from Vietnam as of Saturday afternoon, Xinhua reported early Sunday.

"They returned to China with the assistance of (the) Chinese Embassy to Vietnam," it said, citing China's foreign ministry.

Beijing has also advised its nationals against travelling to Vietnam.

"Recently, there was an explosion of violence in South Vietnam targeting foreign companies, provoking injuries and death of Chinese citizens and damaging companies' properties," China's foreign ministry said on its website Saturday.

"The foreign ministry advises Chinese nationals temporarily not to travel to Vietnam. (It also advises) Chinese citizens and structures in Vietnam to increase their risk-awareness, to strengthen their security prevention measures, and to avoid leaving (their premises)."

Xinhua also reported that security chief Guo Shengkun had spoken to his Vietnamese counterpart and urged the authorities there to quell the violence, adding that Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng had also called on officials to "bring relevant issues under control".

- Call for fresh protests -

The alliance of local Vietnamese NGOs has renewed calls for fresh protests in the country, however it urged participants to remain peaceful following the chaos Tuesday and Wednesday.

"Those violent actions created a bad image for patriotic demonstrations and the people of Vietnam; therefore, they must be stopped," said a statement issued on social media late Friday.

The alliance comprises largely of anti-government organisations and is believed to have played a role in stirring the recent protests.

In a text message sent by the government to Vietnamese mobile phone users Saturday, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said authorities across the country had been ordered to "implement measures to resolutely prevent illegal demonstrations that could cause social and security disorder".

China's deployment of the giant rig is viewed in Hanoi as a provocative assertion of Beijing's hotly-disputed claims in the South China Sea, and has been criticised by Washington as exacerbating territorial tensions.

There have been repeated skirmishes near the controversial rig in recent days between Chinese and Vietnamese vessels, including collisions and the use of water cannon.

The violent attacks on Chinese personnel at foreign-invested factories in Vietnam have further aggravated the situation, with China accusing Hanoi of a role in the unrest.

The attacks on foreign enterprises -- which included Chinese, Taiwanese and Korean businesses -- appear to have spooked Vietnamese authorities, which depends heavily on foreign investment for economic growth.

But, while condemning China's maritime actions, the government has warned against further protests and pledged foreign investments would be protected.

Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou has ordered commercial jets to be on standby to evacuate Taiwanese nationals should violence escalate.

The island's China Airlines and EVA Airways have already provided extra chartered flights to Vietnam.

The oil-rig confrontation is the latest to spark alarm among China's Southeast Asian neighbours, which complain of increasing maritime intimidation by Beijing.

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea, which is believed to hold significant offshore energy reserves.

Japan, China ministers hold first meeting since war shrine trip
Tokyo (AFP) May 17, 2014 - The Japanese and Chinese trade ministers held talks Saturday in the first high-level meeting between the two countries since a visit by Japan's premier to a controversial war shrine sparked a furious diplomatic row in December.

Toshimitsu Motegi and his Chinese counterpart Gao Hucheng agreed to put political tensions to one side to boost bilateral economic ties, when they met on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum in Qingdao, Kyodo news agency reported.

It was the first Cabinet-level meeting since hawkish Japanese premier Shinzo Abe's visit to Yasukuni Shrine on December 26 provoked outrage in Beijing, inflaming diplomatic tensions already running high over a bitter territorial dispute.

China, along with other Asian nations, regards the shrine as a symbol of what it says is Japan's unwillingness to repent for its aggressive warring last century.

"Although Japan and China have difficult issues, we agreed that we should proceed with cooperation between the two countries based on our mutually beneficial and strategic relationship," Motegi was quoted by Japanese state broadcaster NHK as saying following the meeting in the Chinese port city.

The talks, which lasted about 20 minutes, were held in a "very good atmosphere", Motegi told reporters.

Relations between the Asian giants plunged to their lowest in years in September 2012 after Japan nationalised part of a South China Sea island chain known as the Senkakus in Japan and the Diaoyus in China.

Tokyo controls the islands, which are strategically sited and may harbour mineral resources, but Beijing claims sovereignty.

Paramilitary vessels from both sides have shadow-boxed in waters around the islands since then, with some observers warning of the risk of a limited military confrontation that could have disastrous regional implications.

However, in recent months the temperature has cooled and there have been signs that the two sides, who are economically interdependent, are moving towards a diplomatic detente.

.


Related Links
Global Trade News






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








TRADE WARS
Vietnam violence throws snag for US plans in Asia
Washington (AFP) May 15, 2014
The outbreak of deadly anti-China protests in Vietnam raises the stakes for the United States, which has rallied behind Beijing's neighbors but faces ugly new realities. Demonstrations have spread to a third of Vietnam's provinces, with workers attacking Chinese workers and factories, in a wave of nationalist outrage after Beijing moved a deep-water drilling rig into waters claimed by Hanoi. ... read more


TRADE WARS
Polar vortex in part to blame for high energy bills, U.S. says

The largest electrical networks are not the best

U.S. has responsibility to act as 'emerging energy superpower,' Upton says

Power-One Renewable Energy Business to transition to the ABB brand name

TRADE WARS
Erosion leaves pit under production platform in the North Sea

North Dakota study finds Bakken crude no different than other grades

Woodside says it's done trying to grab stake in giant Israeli gas field

China, Russia in '$400 bn' gas deal as Ukraine crisis looms

TRADE WARS
German energy company RWE Innogy starts turbine installation at mega wind project

Irish 'green paper' outlines transition to a low-carbon economy

U.S. moves closer to first-ever offshore wind farm

Offshore wind supported with U.S. federal funding

TRADE WARS
TBEA SunOasis Set to Overtake First Solar as World's Largest Solar EPC Company

Chemists challenge conventional understanding of how photocatalysis works

Planting the 'SEEDS' of solar technology in the home

Main Street Breaks Ground on 5MW Solar Project in Virgin Islands

TRADE WARS
Fortum drops Areva-Siemens in favour of Rolls-Royce

Japan court rules against restart of nuclear reactors

Japan Fukushima operator starts diverting groundwater to sea

Bolivia to develop nuclear power: president

TRADE WARS
Growing Camelina and Safflower in the Pacific Northwest

Boeing, Embraer team for biofuel use

Ames Lab creates multifunctional nanoparticles for cheaper, cleaner biofuel

Plants' Oil-Desaturating Enzymes Pair Up to Channel Metabolites

TRADE WARS
Moon rover Yutu comes closer to public

The Phantom Tiangong

New satellite launch center to conduct joint drill

China issues first assessment on space activities

TRADE WARS
Drought sounds alarm, fuels hunger fears for indigenous Guyana

Fossil palm beetles 'hindcast' 50-million-year-old winters

How climate talks can be more successful

Tropical cyclones moving poleward, says study




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.