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China's President Xi Jinping waves as he arrives at Noi Bai International Airport in Hanoi, Vietnam |
Bilateral relations plunged to their lowest point in years following
China's parking of a giant oil rig near the Paracel islands in an area
Vietnam claims is within its exclusive economic zone. The incident
sparked deadly anti-Chinese protests in Vietnam.
The two countries have since then been trying to repair ties with
high-level contacts and exchanges of visits including the visit to China
by Vietnamese Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong in
April.
Vietnamese state media quoted Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh as saying
that leaders will discuss strengthening of relations as well as
differences including the territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
And China's official Xinhua News Agency reported that more than 10
cooperation agreements covering party-to-party relations, trade,
investment and infrastructure are expected to be signed.
But analysts say Xi's two-day visit is unlikely to mark much progress in addressing territorial tensions.
"I personally think it's difficult to resolve the issue of territorial
disputes when Vietnam and China still maintain their positions," said
Duong Danh Dy, former Vietnamese consul general in Guangzhou, in
southern China.
Xinhua said in an editorial Thursday said that the settlement of their
territorial disputes depend on "the two neighbors' will and ability to
properly manage their differences," and that they should not allow the
outside world to interfere.
Witnesses said a group of about 30 people staged a brief protest in
front of the Chinese Embassy in Hanoi Thursday morning before being
taken away in buses by authorities.
Jonathan London, a professor at Hong Kong's City University, said it's
in Vietnam's interests to have good relations with its big neighbor to
the North and that Vietnam could take the opportunity of the visit to
send a message to the Chinese president.
China claims almost all South China Sea with its nine-dash line. Vietnam
and China both claim the Paracel islands, which are under Chinese
occupation after it ousted the U.S.-backed Saigon government in 1974,
one year before the end of the Vietnam War.
The two countries along with the Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei
claim all or parts of the Spratlys islands, which lies on one of the
world's busiest sea lanes and are believed to be rich in oil and gas and
fish resources.
China's massive land reclamation over the past 18 months in the South
China Sea has rattled countries in the region and caused concerns in the
United States, which supports the freedom of navigation and overflight
in the area.
Despite the territorial disputes, China is Vietnam's largest trading
partner with the two-way trade volume reaching $58 billion last year.
Xi is scheduled to travel on to Singapore
on Friday where he is expected to meet with Taiwan's leader, the first
such meeting since Taiwan split from mainland China since 1949.
Source: ABC News
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