Haiyang Shiyou 981 standoff

Haiyang Shiyou 981 standoff
Part of South China Sea disputes
Haiyang Shiyou 981
Location of Haiyang Shiyou 981 oil platform
LocationWaters near Paracel Islands
15°29′58″N 111°12′06″E / 15.49944°N 111.20167°E / 15.49944; 111.20167Coordinates: 15°29′58″N 111°12′06″E / 15.49944°N 111.20167°E / 15.49944; 111.20167
Result China temporarily withdrew the oil rig
Belligerents

 China

 Vietnam

Strength
1 drilling platform, 6 warships, 40 coast guard vessels, over 30 transport ships and tugboats, 34-40 ironclad fishing boats, Su-27 and Shaanxi Y-8 patrol planes[1] 60 vessels: coast guard, fisheries surveillance and wooden fishing boats[1][2]
Casualties and losses
1 fishing boat sunk[3]

Haiyang Shiyou 981 standoff refers to the tensions between China and Vietnam arising from the Chinese state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corporation moving its Haiyang Shiyou 981 (known in Vietnam as "Hải Dương - 981") oil platform to waters near the disputed Paracel Islands in South China Sea, and the resulting Vietnamese efforts to prevent the platform from establishing a fixed position. According to an announcement by the Hainan Maritime Safety Administration of China, the drilling work of Haiyang Shiyou 981 would last from May 2 to August 15, 2014.[4] On July 15, China announced that the platform had completed its work and withdrew it fully one month earlier than originally announced.

The standoff is regarded by analysts as the most serious development in the territorial disputes between the two countries ever since the Johnson South Reef Skirmish in 1988 in which more than 70 Vietnamese soldiers were killed.

Background

Territorial claims in the South China Sea

The Paracel Islands have been subject to territorial disputes between China, Taiwan and Vietnam in the 20th century. In 1974, China and the US-backed South Vietnam fought the Battle of the Paracel Islands in which China took over the entire archipelago. South Vietnam never relinquished its claims, while Chinese and Soviet-backed North Vietnam (which did not administer the islands) supported the 1958 Declaration by China claiming all of the Paracel Islands, Spratly Islands, Macclesfield Bank and Pratas Islands.[5] However, when North Vietnam reunited the country following the Vietnam War it repeated the former South Vietnamese claims.

China claims the sea and land inside the "nine-dashed line" which covers about 80% of the South China Sea as its territory.[6][7] This claim is contested against by various countries in the region including Brunei, Malaysia, and the Philippines in addition to Vietnam. Republic of China (Taiwan) keeps the same claims as China and controls some islands from the 1940s when the date U-shaped eleven-dotted line was published. In 2001, China and ASEAN signed an agreement of the code of conduct between disputing countries in which they agreed neither side would make a unilateral move without consulting and negotiations with the other parties.

While China and Vietnam are nominally brother socialist countries, relations have not always been cordial. In 1979, China invaded Vietnam in response to Vietnam invading the Chinese-backed Khmer Rouge. The two countries sporadically fought until relations were reestablished in 1991. Due to one thousand years of Chinese domination and numerous Chinese invasions over the past two millennia, the Vietnamese public remain wary of Chinese actions.

Location of Haiyang Shiyou 981

According to an announcement by the Hainan Maritime Safety Administration, the drilling work of Haiyang Shiyou 981 lasted from May 2 to August 15, 2014, in area within 3 miles radius of 15-29.58N 111-12.06E.[8]

On May 2, 2014, China National Offshore Oil Corporation moved its $1 billion Haiyang Shiyou 981 oil rig to a location 17 nautical miles from Triton Island, the southwestern-most island of the Paracel Islands.[6] According to Vietnam, its location has been shifted 3 times since then.[9] The initial location was about 17 nautical miles off Triton Island (part of the Paracel Islands), 120 nautical miles east of Vietnam's Ly Son Island and 180 nautical miles south of China's Hainan Island, in which the last two nearest undisputed features generate a continental shelf.[10] Up to now, it has been sitting on Vietnam's claimed continental shelf and on the Vietnamese side of any median line generated from the coastlines of the two countries.[10] The location is also at the edge of hydrocarbon blocks 142 and 143 which were already created by Vietnam but had not been offered for exploitation to foreign oil companies, nor had been acknowledged by other disputed parties of South China Sea.

Confrontations and protests

Soon after China moved its oil rig to south of Paracel Islands and established an exclusion zone around it, Vietnam vociferously protested the move as an infringement of its sovereignty. It sent 29 ships to attempt to disrupt the rig's placement and operations. The ships met resistance from Chinese ships escorting the rig, and Vietnam stated that its ships were repeatedly rammed and sprayed with water resulting in 6 people being injured,[10] while China stated that its ships were also rammed and it sprayed water in self-defense. On May 26, a Vietnamese fishing boat sank near the oil rig after being rammed by a Chinese vessel; the incident was shown by a video footage from Vietnam a week later.[11]

Internationally, Vietnam attempted to garner support at the ASEAN summit which occurred on May 10–11. Domestically, the tensions with China resulted in people protesting against Chinese actions, which was considered rare in a communist country where the government clamped down on public protests.[12] On May 13 and 14, anti-Chinese protests in Vietnam escalated into riots in which many foreign businesses and Chinese workers were targeted.[7] Businesses owned by foreign investors from China, Taiwan, Singapore, Japan and South Korea were subject to vandalism and looting due to the confusion by protesters who believed the establishments to be Chinese.[13][14]

Reactions

China

Vietnam

International community

Commentaries

Effects in Vietnam

Starting on May 11, a series of unprecedented anti-China protests following by unrests and riots flared up across Vietnam.

Previously on May 8, VN-Index, Vietnam’s benchmark stock index plunged 5.91%,[50] marking the biggest drop since 2001 amid escalating tensions with China over disputed waters.[51] It however recovered 2.92% on the following trading day.[52]

See also

References

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  2. "Chinese ship sinks Vietnamese fishing boat in South China Sea- Nikkei Asian Review". Asia.nikkei.com. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
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  4. 航警14033(海洋石油981船南海钻井作业)
  5. http://www.mfa.gov.cn
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  8. 航警14033(海洋石油981船南海钻井作业):HN0033 SOUTH CHINA SEA DRILLING WORK BY M/V "HAI YANG SHI YOU 981"IN AREA WITHIN 1 MILES RADIUS OF 15-29.58N/111-12.06E FROM 02 MAY TO 15 AUG ENTERING PRIHIBITED HAINAN MSA CHINA.
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