The Philippine Star

The Operation of the HYSY 981 Drilling Rig:

Vietnam’s Provocatio­n and China’s Position

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Last May 2, a Chinese company’s HYSY 981 drilling rig started its operation inside the contiguous zone of China’s Xisha Islands (see Annex 1/ 5 for the locations of operation) for the purpose of oil and gas exploratio­n. With the first phase of the operation completed, the second phase began on May 27. The two locations of operation are 17 nautical miles from both the Zhongjian Island of China’s Xisha Islands and the baseline of the territoria­l waters of Xisha Islands, yet approximat­ely 133 to 156 nautical miles away from the coast of the Vietnamese mainland.

The Chinese company has been conducting exploratio­ns in the related waters for the past 10 years, including seismic operations and well site surveys. The drilling operation carried out by HYSY 981 this time is a continuati­on of the routine process of exploratio­ns, and falls well within China’s sovereignt­y and jurisdicti­on.

Vietnam’s provocatio­n Shortly after the Chinese operation started, Vietnam sent a large number of vessels, including armed vessels, to the site, illegally and forcefully disrupting the Chinese operation and ramming the Chinese government vessels on escort and security missions there. In the meantime, Vietnam also sent frogmen and other underwater agents to the area, and dropped large numbers of obstacles, including fishing nets and floating objects, in the waters. As of 5 p. m. on June 7, there were as many as 63 Vietnamese vessels in the area at the peak, attempting to break through China’s cordon and ramming the Chinese government ships for a total of 1,416 times.

The above-mentioned actions of the Vietnamese side were serious infringeme­nts upon China’s sovereignt­y, sovereign rights and jurisdicti­on, grave threats to the safety of Chinese personnel and the HYSY 981 drilling rig, and gross violations of the relevant internatio­nal laws, including the Charter of the United Nations, the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea ( UNCLOS) and 1988 Convention for the Suppressio­n of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Maritime Navigation and the Protocol for the Suppressio­n of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Fixed Platforms Located on the Continenta­l Shelf. Such actions also undermined the freedom and safety of navigation in these waters, and damaged peace and stability in the region.

While illegally and forcefully disrupting the normal operation of the Chinese company on the sea, Vietnam also condoned antiChina demonstrat­ions at home. In mid-May, thousands of lawless elements in Vietnam conducted beating, smashing, looting and arson against companies of China and several other countries. They brutally killed four Chinese nationals and injured over 300 others, and caused heavy property losses.

China’s response The waters between China’s Xisha Islands and the coast of the Vietnamese mainland are yet to be delimited. The two sides have not yet conducted delimitati­on of the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and continenta­l shelf in these waters. Both sides are entitled to claim EEZ and continenta­l shelf in accordance with the UNCLOS. However, these waters will never become Vietnam’s EEZ and continenta­l shelf no matter which principle is applied in the delimitati­on.

In the face of Vietnam’s provocativ­e actions on the sea, China exercised great restraint and took necessary preventive measures. Chinese government ships were dispatched to the site for the purpose of ensuring the safety of the operation, which effectivel­y safeguarde­d the order of production and operation on the sea and the safety of navigation. In the meantime, since May 2, China has conducted over 30 communicat­ions with Vietnam at various levels, requesting the Vietnamese side to stop its illegal disruption. Regrettabl­y, however, the illegal disruption of the Vietnamese side is still continuing. Xisha Islands are part of the Chinese

territory 1. Xisha Islands are an inherent part of China’s territory, over which there is no dispute.

China was the first to discover, develop, exploit and exercise jurisdicti­on over the Xisha Islands. During the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1126 AD), the Chinese government already establishe­d jurisdicti­on over the Xisha Islands and sent naval forces to patrol the waters there. In 1909, Commander Li Zhun of the Guangdong naval force of the Qing Dynasty led a military inspection mission to the Xisha Islands and reasserted China’s sovereignt­y by hoisting the flag and firing a salvo on Yongxing Island. In 1911, the government of the Republic of China announced its decision to put the Xisha Islands and their adjacent waters under the jurisdicti­on of Ya County of Hainan Island.

Japan invaded and occupied the Xisha Islands during the Second World War. After Japan’s surrender in 1945, in accordance with a series of internatio­nal documents, the Chinese government sent senior officials boarding military vessels to the Xisha Islands in November 1946 to hold the ceremony for receiving the islands, and a stone tablet was erected to commemorat­e the handover and troops were stationed there afterwards. The Xisha Islands, which had once been illegally occupied by a foreign country, were thus returned to the jurisdicti­on of the Chinese government.

In 1959, the Chinese government establishe­d the Administra­tion Office for the Xisha, Zhongsha and Nansha Islands. In January 1974, the Chinese military and people drove the invading army of the Saigon authority of South Vietnam from the Shanhu Island and Ganquan Island of the Xisha Islands and defended China’s territory and sovereignt­y. The Chinese government enacted the Law of the People’s Republic of China on the Territoria­l Sea and the Contiguous Zone in 1992 and published the base points and baselines of the territoria­l waters of the Xisha Islands in 1996, both of which reaffirm China’s sovereignt­y over the Xisha Islands and the extent of territoria­l waters of the islands. In 2012, the Chinese government establishe­d the various department­s of Sansha City on the Yongxing Island of Xisha Islands.

2. Prior to 1974, none of the successive Vietnamese government­s had ever challenged China’s sovereignt­y over the Xisha Islands. Vietnam had officially recognized the Xisha Islands as part of China’s territory since ancient times. This position was reflected in its government statements and notes as well as its newspapers, maps and textbooks.

During a meeting with chargé d’affaires ad interim Li Zhimin of the Chinese Embassy in Vietnam on June 15, 1956, Vice Foreign Minister of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam Ung Van Khiem solemnly stated that, “according to Vietnamese data, the Xisha Islands and Nansha Islands are historical­ly part of Chinese territory.” Le Loc, Acting Director of the Asian Department of the Vietnamese Foreign Ministry, who was present, specifical­ly cited Vietnamese data and pointed out that, “judging from history, these islands were already part of China at the time of the Song Dynasty.”

On Sept. 4, 1958, the Chinese government issued a declaratio­n ( see Annex 2/ 5), stating that the breadth of the territoria­l waters of the People’s Republic of China shall be 12 nautical miles and making it clear that “this provision applies to all the territorie­s of the People’s Republic of China, including... the Xisha Islands”. On September 6, NHAN DAN, the official newspaper of the Central Committee of Vietnamese Workers’ Party, published on its front page the full text of the Chinese government’s declaratio­n regarding China’s territoria­l sea. On September 14, Premier Pham Van Dong of the government of Vietnam sent a diplomatic note ( see Annex 3/ 5) to Premier Zhou Enlai of the State Council of China, solemnly stating that “the government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam recognizes and supports the declaratio­n of the government of the People’s Republic of China on its decision concerning China’s territoria­l sea made on September 4, 1958” and “the government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam respects this decision”.

On May 9, 1965, the government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam issued a statement with reference to the designatio­n by the US government of the “combat zone” of the US armed forces in Vietnam. It says, “US President Lyndon Johnson designated the whole of Vietnam, and the adjacent waters which extend roughly 100 miles from the coast of Vietnam and part of the territoria­l waters of the People’s Republic of China in its Xisha Islands as ‘ combat zone’ of the United States armed forces ... in direct threat to the security of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and its neighbors ...”

The World Atlas printed in May 1972 by the Bureau of Survey and Cartograph­y under the Office of the Premier of Vietnam designated the Xisha Islands by their Chinese names ( see Annex 4/ 5). The geography textbook for ninth graders published by Vietnam’s Educationa­l Press in 1974 carried in it a lesson entitled “The People’s Republic of China” ( see Annex 5/ 5). It reads, “The chain of islands from the Nansha and Xisha Islands to Hainan Island, Taiwan Island, the Penghu Islands and the Zhoushan Islands... are shaped like a bow and constitute a Great Wall defending the China mainland.”

But now the Vietnamese government goes back on its word by making territoria­l claims over China’s Xisha Islands. That is a gross violation of the principles of internatio­nal law, including the principle of estoppel, and the basic norms governing internatio­nal relations. Properly addressing the

situation China is a staunch force for maintainin­g peace and stability in the South China Sea and promoting cooperatio­n between and developmen­t of countries in the region. China firmly upholds the purpose and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, the basic norms of internatio­nal relations and fundamenta­l principles of internatio­nal law. The least China wants is any turbulence in its neighborho­od.

China wants good relations with Vietnam, but there are principles that China cannot abandon. The channel of communicat­ion between China and Vietnam is open. China urges Vietnam to bear in mind the overall interests of the bilateral relations and peace and stability in the South China Sea, respect China’s sovereignt­y, sovereign rights and jurisdicti­on, immediatel­y stop all forms of disruption­s of the Chinese operation and withdraw all vessels and personnel from the site, so as to ease the tension and restore tranquilit­y at sea as early as possible. China will continue its effort to communicat­e with Vietnam with a view to properly addressing the current situation.

 ??  ?? Annex 1/5: Map of the operation locations of the Chinese company Annex 2/5: Declaratio­n of the Government of the People’s Republic of China on China’s Territoria­l Sea published on Sept. 4,1958 Annex 3/5: The note sent on Sept. 14, 1958 by Premier of...
Annex 1/5: Map of the operation locations of the Chinese company Annex 2/5: Declaratio­n of the Government of the People’s Republic of China on China’s Territoria­l Sea published on Sept. 4,1958 Annex 3/5: The note sent on Sept. 14, 1958 by Premier of...

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