Yahoo – AFP,
November 13, 2017
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| Chinese President Xi Jinping (L) shakes hands with Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang (R) at the presidential palace in Hanoi (AFP Photo/LUONG THAI LINH) |
Vietnam and
China agreed Monday to avoid conflicts in the hotly contested South China Sea,
as a new pathway to dialogue on easing tensions was opened with other Southeast
Asian nations.
The
communist neighbours have long sparred over the sea, through which $5 trillion
in shipping trade passes annually and which is believed to sit atop vast gas
reserves.
Hanoi and
Beijing agreed Monday to keep the peace in the sea, the countries said in a
joint statement during a state visit to Hanoi by Chinese President Xi Jinping.
They agreed
to "well manage disputes at sea, make no moves that may complicate or
expand disputes, (and) maintain peace and stability on the East Sea," the
Vietnamese version of the statement said, using Hanoi's term for the waters.
China
claims nearly all of the sea, even approaching the coasts of its neighbours. It
is also partly claimed by the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan in
addition to Vietnam.
China has
in recent years built artificial islands and airstrips capable of hosting
military installations in contested areas to cement its claims, inflaming
tensions with its neighbours.
Relations
between China and Vietnam hit a low in 2014 when Beijing moved an oil rig into
waters claimed by Vietnam, sparking weeks of protests.
There have
been two armed conflicts between China and Vietnam in the sea -- brief clashes
in 1974 and 1988 that claimed the lives of dozens of Vienamese troops.
On Sunday
US President Donald Trump offered to help Vietnam resolve the long-simmering
tensions.
"If I
can help mediate or arbitrate, please let me know... I am a very good
mediator," Trump said on his own state visit to Hanoi at the tail end of
his marathon tour of Asia.
Vietnam
offered no response.
And China,
which has long insisted the United States has no role to play in the dispute,
spoke out against what it deemed foreign interference.
"We
hope non-regional countries can respect the regional countries' efforts in
maintaining the regional stability of the South China Sea, and play a
constructive role in this aspect," foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang
said at a regular press briefing in Beijing.
More
talks agreed
Trump was
in Manila on Monday for meetings with the 10-member Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN) and several other countries.
At that
meeting China and ASEAN, which includes Vietnam, announced on Monday night they
had agreed to begin talks on a much-delayed code of conduct for the sea.
Chinese
Premier Li Keqiang sealed the accord with the ASEAN leaders in Manila,
according to China's state-run Xinhua news agency.
However no
timeframe was announced for an actual code.
China
initially agreed in 2002 to begin talks on a code, but delayed doing so while
carrying out its expansionist strategy.
And at
China's insistence, ASEAN also agreed in August that any future code would not
be legally binding, despite a strong push from Vietnam.
After the
Philippines backed China's position, ASEAN agreed it would not have legal
force.
The
Philippines had for many years stood alongside Vietnam as one of the region's
strongest opponents to Chinese expansionism.
Following
Manila's complaint to a United Nations-backed tribunal, the panel ruled last
year that China's territorial claims in the sea were without legal basis.
But the
Philippines, after President Rodrigo Duterte took office last year, decided not
to use the ruling to pressure China.
He instead
chose to build closer ties in return for billions of dollars in investments and
aid.
Critics
accused Duterte of giving in to Beijing. But he said his tactics had eased
tensions and opened the door to dialogue.

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