China moves 3,000 citizens from Vietnam after riots

Violence sparked by outpouring of rage over oil drilling in disputed area of South China Sea

More than 3,000 Chinese nationals have been moved from Vietnam following deadly rioting that stemmed from an outpouring of rage over oil drilling in a disputed area of the South China Sea.

The violence was triggered by China’s positioning of a $1 billion oil rig in a part of the South China Sea claimed by Hanoi, a move described by the United States as provocative. It is the worst breakdown in ties between the two Communist neighbours since a short border war in 1979.

The evacuation followed days of clashes between Vietnamese rioters and Chinese workers. Crowds of thousands massed as rioters turned against Chinese workers and Chinese-owned businesses, or those thought to be Chinese, smashing windows, gates and walls and torching vehicles and factories.

The trouble broke out in Vietnam’s south on Tuesday after nationalist rage boiled over during protests around industrial parks near Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon. Two Chinese nationals were killed in the violence and more than 100 others injured, Xinhua said, citing China’s foreign ministry.

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China is to send five ships to Vietnam today to bring more of its nationals back to China, Xinhua said, citing the transport ministry In Beijing.

Sixteen critically injured Chinese nationals were airlifted from Vietnam early today aboard a chartered medical flight arranged by the Chinese government, the foreign ministry said in a separate statement.

Workers from the China 19th Metallurgical Corporation, a contractor for an iron and steel plant being built by Formosa Plastics Group, Taiwan’s biggest investor in Vietnam, were moved back to China early today, Xinhua said.

Yesterday, China’s Foreign Ministry advised Chinese nationals to hold off from traveling to Vietnam and told its citizens in Vietnam to avoid leaving their premises.

Separately, China’s Spring and Autumn Airline said it plans to suspend all charter flights from Shanghai to Vietnam from tomorrow, according to Xinhua.

Reuters