When
they arrived, the vessels removed unveiled canvas sheets hiding their weapons,
intimidating Vietnamese fishing vessels, said Nguyen Van Trung, deputy head of
the Vietnam Fisheries Surveillance Department at a press conference in Hanoi on Saturday.
Trung
said the Chinese ships kept approaching and provoking the Vietnamese forces
patrolling Vietnam 's
waters around the oil rig.
He
said the warships included a fast-attack missile craft coded 755 and a fast
patrol attack craft coded 789.
He
added that as Vietnam Fisheries Surveillance ships approached the oil rig to
demand China
remove it, many Chinese ships encircled, rammed and fired water cannons into
Vietnamese ships.
Trung
said one Chinese ship intentionally rammed a Vietnam Fisheries Surveillance
Force ship when it was on duty about seven nautical miles from the oil rig.
At
the same time, Chinese "fishing" vessels continued to surround
Vietnamese fishing vessels, however, the Vietnamese refused to move from their
traditional fishing grounds.
The
Vietnam Fisheries Surveillance Force said it had tried to exercise the utmost
restraint. Together with the Coast Guard Force, it continues to provide support
for Vietnamese fishing boats to ensure their safety and operations, said Trung.
In
a bulletin aired on Radio Voice of Vietnam, Trung said that by yesterday
afternoon, China
had 134 ships of various kinds, including coast guard ships, warships,
refueling ships and fishing vessels, around the oil rig.
In
another development, the Minister for Public Security, Tran Dai Quang, on
Saturday telephoned his Chinese counterpart, Guo Sheng Kun, over recent public
protests against the oil rig set up within Vietnam 's continental shelf and
exclusive economic zone.
Quang
updated the Chinese official about incidents at industrial parks in the
southern provinces of Binh Duong and Dong Nai, central Ha Tinh province and Ho Chi Minh City .
He
told the Chinese minister that some people had used the spontaneous protests to
create social disorder and that dozens of policemen had been injured.
He
added that the incidents were regrettable and that hundreds of people for being
held for investigation.
The
Vietnamese government has promptly directed ministries, agencies and localities
to take measures to help the affected businesses resume their activities and
enable local foreigners to stabilize their lives, he said.
Trung
said China should withdraw
the oil rig from Vietnam 's
exclusive economic zone and suggested the two sides sit down and hold talks to
clear up differences.
Meanwhile,
police in central Ha Tinh province have launched legal proceedings against 16
people involved in a disturbance at the Vung Ang Economic Zone.
The
suspects are being investigated on charges of causing public disorder,
intentionally injuring others, destroying and stealing assets, said Colonel Bui
Dinh Quang, deputy chief of the provincial police, yesterday.
Earlier,
local police also started legal proceedings against a public disorder case at
the zone's Son Duong Formosa
deepwater port project on May 14.
The
province's competent agencies are conducting further investigations and
encourage people to hand in images and video clips on the incident to be used
as legal grounds for strictly punishing the offenders under the law.
Many
foreign experts and workers were discharged from hospital at the weekend. They
thanked doctors and nurses at Ha Tinh hospitals for their treatment.
Int'l
press conference
An
international press conference was held in Hanoi on Saturday to inform foreign reporters
about bad individuals' extremist actions that affected social order and safety
in several localities in the country.
Dang
Minh Khoi, Assistant to the Foreign Minister and head of the Northeast Asia
Department under the Foreign Ministry, said right after learning about the incidents,
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung immediately chaired several meetings with
concerned Ministries and localities on how to promptly fix the situation.
He
underscored that the Vietnamese Foreign Ministry has maintained regular
contacts with foreign agencies in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City to promptly handle the protection of
foreign citizens in Vietnam
as well as their legitimate rights.
Lieutenant
General Hoang Kong Tu, head of the Investigation Security Agency under the
Ministry of Public Security, reported that the agency is working hard to
investigate whether workers received money to participate in destroying the
assets, but no official information on the action has been found.
Regarding
the issue, the local police commenced criminal proceedings against 300 people
on charge of appropriating and destroying assets, causing public disorder, and
taking actions against on-duty officials.
He
reported that several foreigners in Vietnam were found to work without
work permits and were sent to their homeland.
Lieutenant
General Tu confimed that two people lost their lives in the incidents due to
their fights with the rioters, which were out of expectations.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=&sid=&nid=&rid=644966
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