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Vietnam, China make no progress in oil rig talks

vietnam-china

Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi, left, and Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung pose for photos before their meeting in Hanoi, Vietnam on Wednesday June 18, 2014. Talks between Yang Jiechi and Vietnamese officials on produced no breakthrough in the impasse over an increasingly bitter confrontation in the disputed South China Sea, a Vietnamese official said. AP

HANOI, Vietnam — A top Chinese diplomat and Vietnamese officials made no progress in talks Wednesday about an increasingly bitter confrontation over a giant oil rigChinadeployed in thedisputed SouthChinaSea, officials said.

State Councilor YangJiechiis the most senior Chinese diplomat to visit Vietnam sinceChinaplaced the rig off the Vietnamese coast last month. Both countries have accused the other of violating their territorial rights and instigating clashes between ships around the rig.

A Vietnamese official familiar with the talks said no progress was made during the discussion between Yang and Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister PhamBinhMinh. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

He said the two sides still insisted on their opposing positions.

China’sForeign Ministry said Yang blamed Vietnam for interfering with the rig’s operations and causing the present difficulties in their relations.

Yang said Vietnam should stop the disruptions and take measures to secure Chinese property and people in Vietnam, according to an account of his remarks released by ministry spokeswoman HuaChunying.

The rig’s deployment in early May triggered anti-China demonstrations and some turned to riots, which resulted in the deaths of five Chinese nationals and injuries to hundreds more. Hundreds of factories were damaged and dozens were burned. Many of them were built with Taiwanese investment.

Yang also met with Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and Communist Party chief NguyenPhuTrong.

Dung told Yang thatChina’splacement of the oil rig in Vietnamese-claimed waters was a “grave violation of Vietnamese sovereignty, …. threatening peace, security, maritime and aviation safety in the region,” Vietnam’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. It said he demanded thatChinawithdraw the rig and the vessels escorting it and resolve disputes by peaceful means in accordance with international law.

The two ideological allies fought a brief border war in 1979, and skirmishes also occurred in 1988 whenChinausedforce to occupy JohnsonSouthreef in theSpratlys. Relations were normalized in 1991.

Chinaclaims most of theSouthChinaSea, rich in natural resources and one of the world’s busiestsealanes, bringing it into disputes with neighbors, including the Philippines, a U.S. ally.

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