Some
19,000 workers in Vietnam rioted yesterday, burning down and damaging
as many as 15 factories in an outburst of rage over China’s decision to deploy an oil rig near a disputed chain of islands.
Regardless of the trigger, the aggression was ultimately misplaced:
Most of the torched facilities were owned by companies based not in
China but in Singapore, Taiwan, and South Korea.
In
Vietnam, mass demonstrations are almost never allowed by the
government. But Hanoi was so incensed by Beijing’s provocation in the
South China Sea that it authorized anti-China protests
in cities across the country. But those officially-sanctioned protests
then spun out of control, giving rise to the violent ransacking of
factories in southern Binh Duong province.
As
in China two years ago, when protests against Japan’s disputed claim to
a separate island chain turned violent, the recent events in Vietnam
underscore how volatile the consequences can be when governments
stoke nationalist fervor. That’s an especially scary lesson right now in
Asia, where territorial disputes over islands in the East and South
China Sea are laying bare historical enmities and risking armed
conflict.
The
stand-off between China and Vietnam takes place at the same time as a
parallel dispute between China and the Philippines. A group of Chinese
fisherman were detained by Philippine authorities and accused of
harvesting endangered turtles, and today Manila accused Beijing of reclaiming land on a disputed reef, possibly to build an airstrip or military base.
Following
the riots in Vietnam, Taiwanese, Japanese, and South Korean businesses
shut their plants in the country and “hung Vietnamese flags outside
their business in a bid to deter looters,” according state-run news site VNExpress.
The unrest threatens the country’s hard-won success in establishing
itself as a low-cost manufacturing center for foreign-owned firms. Even
before the China incident raised tensions, violent labor disputes have periodically broken out at Vietnamese factories.
Companies in technology and textiles have shifted their operations to Vietnam
in recent years, largely in response to higher labor costs in China and
other developing countries. But that trend won’t continue long if
there’s a plausible chance of those factories getting burned to the
ground.
http://qz.com/209325/taiwan-and-singapore-are-paying-the-price-for-chinas-provocative-maritime-move/
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