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Kerry warns China against new air defence zone
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Feb 14, 2014


Vietnam anti-China activists mark 1979 border war
Hanoi (AFP) Feb 16, 2014 - Vietnamese activists on Sunday marked the 35th anniversary of a bloody border war with China, chanting slogans, singing patriotic songs and laying flowers at a temple in central Hanoi.

The two communist countries are locked in long-standing territorial disputes over the Paracel and Spratly islands in the South China Sea, and often trade diplomatic barbs over oil exploration and fishing rights in the contested waters.

Beijing's increasingly assertive stance in the South China Sea has triggered public anger and rare protests in authoritarian Vietnam where the demonstrations are sometimes allowed to go ahead and on other occasions forcefully broken up.

China invaded Vietnam's northernmost provinces in February 1979, angered by Vietnam's ouster of the Beijing-backed Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia.

The short but bloody conflict claimed tens of thousands of lives on both sides and ended with Chinese forces withdrawing and both Hanoi and Beijing claiming victory.

Vietnamese troops remained in Cambodia until 1989.

Although Vietnam fetes its military victories over the French and American armies, it has not arranged any official events to mark the China border war -- much to the chagrin of veterans and activists.

"Vietnamese leaders may have received pressure from China, so they don't want to talk about that war. They seem to want to deny the past," Nguyen Trong Vinh, a former Vietnamese ambassador to China, told AFP.

China has long been one of Vietnam's largest trading partners, state media has said, with bilateral trade at more than $40 billion in 2012.

On Sunday, around 100 activists tried to lay flowers at a statue of Ly Thai To -- the founder of Hanoi and a nationalist figurehead -- in the centre of the capital.

But dozens of people had been at the monument since early morning, playing loud music and dancing, which prevented the protesters from holding their planned ceremony -- in what activists said was a counter protest.

"It was deliberate... they (authorities) hired many people," economist Nguyen Quang A told AFP at the protest.

Protesters, wearing red headbands and carrying white roses with black ribbons saying "the people will never forget", then walked around the central Hoan Kiem lake.

They laid their flowers and made brief speeches at the Ngoc Son Temple -- a popular tourist destination -- before peacefully dispersing.

Plain clothed and uniformed police closely monitored the event but did not make any arrests.

Nguyen Tien Gioi, who fought against the Chinese in Vietnam's northern Lang Son, bemoaned the lack of official recognition for the conflict's anniversary.

"My comrades and I we feel sad and angry but what can we do? We still had to fight to protect our country," the 57-year-old told AFP.

There has been some coverage in Vietnam's tightly controlled state media of the 35th anniversary of the China war but no reports on Sunday's protest.

US Secretary of State John Kerry warned China on Friday against unilateral moves to set up a new air defence zone, saying such a step could threaten regional stability at a time of heightened tensions.

After a day of talks with senior Chinese leaders including President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Keqiang and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Kerry stressed that he had also highlighted the need to ease concerns over Beijing's territorial ambitions.

The top US diplomat's trip comes at a pivotal moment for the region, with flaring disputes between Beijing and Tokyo over their World War II history and disputed islands in the East China Sea sending relations between the Asian powers plummeting to their lowest point in recent years.

The issue of North Korea was also high on the agenda, with both sides putting specific ideas on the table for how to prod Beijing's belligerent ally to take concrete steps towards denuclearisation.

Washington was deeply angered when Beijing last year declared an air defence identification zone (ADIZ) over the East China Sea which includes the disputed islands, saying it could lead to confusion high in the skies.

Kerry told reporters he had warned Beijing against any further such moves, amid reports that China is considering a similar ADIZ over the South China Sea, where it has competing claims with several countries including the Philippines -- another US security ally.

"We've made it very clear that a unilateral, unannounced, unprocessed initiative like that can be very challenging to certain people in the region, and therefore to regional stability," Kerry stressed.

Any future such moves should be done "in an open, transparent, accountable way," he said, adding China should meet "the highest standards" of openness "to reduce any possibilities of misinterpretation".

His talks had also focused on "the specific road ahead" to resolve the competing maritime claims which have poisoned relations, and while China agreed it should be done peacefully, Kerry referenced Beijing's belief that it has a "strong claim based on history, based on fact".

For his part Wang "introduced the history of the East China Sea and South China Sea issues and elaborated on China's firm stance", Beijing's foreign ministry said in a press release.

- Zone not a claim of sovereignty -

He stressed that "no one can shake our determination to safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity", it added.

Beijing requires aircraft flying through its ADIZ to identify themselves and maintain communication with Chinese authorities, but the zone is not a claim of sovereignty.

Nonetheless fears of an aerial or maritime clash over the East China Sea islands have spiked following its declaration by Beijing. Chinese and Japanese patrol boats regularly shadow each other in the waters near the islands.

At the same time Beijing has been acting increasingly assertively in the South China Sea, which it claims almost in its entirety.

Kerry, who arrived in Beijing from Seoul on the second leg of an Asia tour, reiterated Friday that North Korea must take "meaningful, concrete and irreversible steps towards denuclearisation".

And he said the Chinese leaders had been "forceful" in reaffirming their commitment to that goal.

Wang said that China will never allow any chaos or war on the Korean peninsula, according to the official news agency Xinhua, quoting him saying: "China is serious on this. We not only say so, but do so."

Chinese state media, however, remained focused on the historical issues at play, with the China Daily newspaper on Friday running an editorial cartoon depicting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe offering a Valentine's Day rose to a dead kamikaze pilot's skull.

The cartoon appeared to be a reference to a recent bid by the Japanese city of Minami-Kyushu for World War II kamikaze fighters' farewell letters to be included in a UNESCO world heritage register, a move that drew swift condemnation from Beijing and Seoul.

The Global Times newspaper, which is close to China's ruling Communist Party, wrote in an editorial Friday that while Kerry's visit to Beijing is expected to be a "smooth" one, the US' promised "pivot" to Asia "has triggered pressure on China's strategies".

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