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Vietnam demands 'immediate withdrawal' of China ship in disputed sea

Agence France-Presse
Vietnam demands 'immediate withdrawal' of China ship in disputed sea
This aerial file photo taken on April 21, 2017, shows a reef in the disputed Spratly islands on the South China Sea. The US on July 20, 2019, expressed concern over reports that China is hampering other countries' oil and gas activities in the South China Sea and accused Beijing of acting like a bully. The State Department said such acts by China — it did not say when they are alleged to have happened — threaten regional peace and security. It said these acts were interfering in particular with Vietnamese oil and gas exploration and production.
Ted Aljibe / AFP

HANOI, Vietnam — Vietnam on Thursday called for the "immediate withdrawal" of a Chinese ship in the South China Sea, as the standoff over the disputed waters intensified.

Beijing last week issued a new call for Hanoi to respect its claims to the resource-rich region — which have historically been contested by Vietnam as well as Taiwan, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei.

READ: Philippines not informed of Chinese warship sail-by in Tawi-Tawi

Hanoi responded by saying it had sent several messages to Beijing insisting that a Chinese survey ship vacate its waters, and doubled down Thursday with new demands for the vessel's removal.

"Vietnam has had several appropriate diplomatic exchanges... requesting immediate withdrawal from Vietnam's exclusive economic zone," a foreign ministry spokeswoman told reporters, while refusing to disclose the ship's precise location.

"Vietnam resolutely and persistently protects our sovereign rights... by peaceful means on the basis of international laws," Le Thi Thu Hang added. 

READ: Vietnam 'deeply concerned' about China's test missiles

The ship, owned by the government-run China Geological Survey, begun research around the contested Spratly Islands on July 3, according to the US-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. 

Before it was spotted, a Chinese coast guard vessel also patrolled near Vietnamese supply ships in a "threatening manner," CSIS said.

China has not confirmed the presence of its ships in the area.

READ: Philippines Coast Guard gets new boats, equipment for maritime security

Beijing invokes its so-called nine-dash line to justify its apparently historic rights to the waterway, and has previously built up artificial islands as well as installed airstrips and military equipment in the region.

The line runs as far as 2,000 kilometers (1,200 miles) from the Chinese mainland to within a few hundred kilometers of the Philippines, Malaysia and Vietnam.

In 2014 Beijing moved an oil rig into waters claimed by Hanoi, sparking deadly, anti-China protests across Vietnam. 

The latest stand-off in the Sea prompted a swift rebuke from the United States over the weekend, calling for an end to China's "bullying behavior." 

READ: War is not the answer: How other claimants handled maritime incidents

"China's repeated provocative actions aimed at the offshore oil and gas development of other claimant states threaten regional energy security," the US State Department said Saturday.  

The United States has long called for freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, and on Thursday said it sailed a warship through the Taiwan Strait.

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