Vietnamese woman self-immolates to protest China
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — A 67-year-old
Vietnamese woman died after setting herself on fire in downtown Ho Chi
Minh City on Friday in protest against China's deployment of an oil rig
in waters claimed by Hanoi, state media reported.
The
paper quoted Le Truong Hai Hieu, a top city official, as saying police
recovered a plastic container thought to contain fuel, a lighter and
seven handwritten banners saying among other things: "Demand unity to
smash the Chinese invasion plot" and "Support Vietnamese coast guards
and fishermen."
China's deployment of the rig on May 1 in the
South China Sea triggered fury in Vietnam, which has been feuding with
China for years over overlapping claims in the potentially oil and
gas-rich seas. Ships Hanoi sent to confront the rigs are now facing off
against Chinese vessels protecting it.
Street protests also
occurred, but Vietnam's authoritarian government clamped down on them
after they morphed into anti-Chinese riots that left three Chinese
national dead and damaged scores of foreign-owned factories.
News
of the self-immolation spread quickly on the Internet. Thanh Nien ran a
cell phone clip purportedly showing the incident and motor cyclists
looking on. The paper said the woman came to the palace by taxi and set
herself on fire before guards there could react. By the time they did,
her injuries were fatal.
Self-immolations in Vietnam are rare but have been occasionally reported over the years.
In
1963, a Buddhist monk burnt himself to death at a busy intersection in
Saigon to protest the persecution of Buddhists by the South Vietnamese
government. An Associated Press photo of him won a Pulitzer Prize and
remains a recognized image today.
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