Anti-China demonstrators in Vietnam torch foreign factories amid territorial dispute
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Anti-China protests in Vietnam escalated Tuesday night, as thousands of protesters set fire to factories they believed were owned by Chinese companies, officials said Wednesday.聽
The flare-up comes amid anger over China鈥檚 deployment last week of a deep-sea oil rig in disputed waters close to Vietnam鈥檚 shores. It points to the difficult balancing act Vietnam's communist rulers wish to strike between encouraging some public anger without letting protests escalate too far in the still tightly controlled state. 聽聽
Up to were torched in industrial parks in southern Vietnam, following government-approved protests, the Associated Press reports. Many other factories were vandalized.聽
Most of the affected factories appeared to be , which were misidentified as Chinese factories by protesters, Reuters reports.
Vietnamese officials gave few details, but said gates to factories were smashed and windows were broken. Police said they were investigating.
A Singapore foreign ministry spokesman said the premises of a number of foreign companies were broken into and set on fire in the Vietnam-Singapore Industrial Parks (VSIP) I and II in Binh Duong. The spokesman said the Singapore government had asked Vietnam to immediately restore law and order, but gave no other details.
About 19,000 Vietnamese were 鈥渄emonstrating against China鈥檚 violation of Vietnam鈥檚 territorial waters,鈥 before a smaller group 鈥渢urned angry, destroying companies鈥 gates and entering the compounds,鈥 Tran Van Nan, vice chairman of the Bin Duong province鈥檚 People鈥檚 Committee told local reporters.聽
The Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a travel advisory for Chinese citizens planning on traveling to Vietnam and called Vietnam a 鈥減rovocateur.鈥
Protests in Vietnam are rare, Alicia Wittmeyer writes in Foreign Policy, and that they have not been broken up indicates government support 鈥 but the that protesters will turn to domestic issues, like freedom of speech.
According to聽, protesters at an anti-China march in Hanoi on Sunday ever so briefly unfurled a banner that read "Freedom for Those Who Love Their Country" -- a reference to bloggers recently arrested.
Call it the tricky art of managing an authoritarian protest. While putting on a聽sufficient show of anger to demonstrate to another country the sort of pressures building at home, the government must also ensure that such protests don't spiral out of control. Let a protest go too far, and the government could back itself into a corner and wind up unable to negotiate with a country its citizens have been riled up to hate. Then there's the threat that protests expand to include issues that the authorities would rather not discuss: pesky, imprisoned bloggers, for example.
Putting 鈥渢he genie back in the bottle isn鈥檛 easy," Ms. Wittmeyer writes, citing anti-China protests in Vietnam in 2011 that took two months to get under control, even after breakthroughs in diplomatic talks with China.
Orville Schelle, director of the Center on US-China Relations at the Asia Society in New York, wrote on ChinaFile that what鈥檚 with Vietnam and other countries along the East and South China Seas, is that they center around sovereignty.
This is a serious matter because, for China at least, the question of "territorial integrity" brooks no compromise, which means that there is very limited room left for its diplomats to negotiate, much less compromise. This rigidity, which has deep historical roots, is fed by China's extreme sensitivity to issues which it views involving any blush of territorial聽encroachment.
One of the quite distinct elements of Xi's new forward foreign policy is a posture that grows out of what might be called a "never again" Chinese attitude that arises from an important part of the "China dream," namely that after more than a century of suffering incursion, quasi-colonization, foreign occupation, unequal treaties and other forms of predation by stronger counties, now that China is strong, it should never again allow itself to compromise -- especially under pressure from the "Great Powers" -- on questions of its territorial聽integrity.
Tension also flared between China and the Philippines on Wednesday. The Philippines鈥 Foreign Secretary said that on a disputed reef in the South China Sea to build an airstrip or an offshore military base, the AP reports. The two countries are already at odds over last week's arrest by Philippine security forces of Chinese fishermen accused of illegally fishing for protected turtles in Philippine-administered waters.聽