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We won't stop building in the South China Sea says China

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"Building and maintaining necessary military facilities, this is what is required for China's national defense and for the protection of those islands and reefs," Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin told a news conference in Kuala Lumpur.

China planned to "expand and upgrade" the civilian facilities on the islands "to better serve commercial ships, fishermen, to help distressed vessels and provide more public services", Liu said, adding that China rejects the notion that it is militarizing the South China Sea. He said China has mostly built civilian facilities.

Liu's comments at the annual East Asia Summit, this year hosted by Kuala Lumpur, were some of the most forceful explanations that China has given regarding its position on the South China Sea.




Militarisation will continue, stop it if you can :coffee:
 
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You guys should build a country in that spot. I'd like to see another Vietnam there. That would be an engineering marvel for sure and hit the record book.

So like this.

2000px-Location_Vietnam_ASEAN.jpg




@William Hung - Chinam
 
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You guys should build a country in that spot. I'd like to see another Vietnam there. That would be an engineering marvel for sure and hit the record book.
China would build several thousands-populated island towns in south CHina sea,which consititues Shansha prefecture.
 
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China would build several thousands-populated island towns in south CHina sea,which consititues Shansha prefecture.

Excellent, but i'd rather see another Vietnam there like the picture above.
 
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here is Yongxin Island, the capital of Sansha prefecture.
Yongxin island is a part of Parcel Islands. it has been a disputed island between vietnam and CHina since 19th century. Before WWII ,it was actual controlled by French indochina. After WWII ,China controlled it.
it already has a population of 2K and already attracts many toursts.
in 5-10 years, I think there would be 3-5 such island towns in South China sea, which would become “Chinese maldives" and attracts thousands of tourists.
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Nice demonstration of determination on part of China to ensure peace and safety in global maritime trade routes.

Development cannot be stopped.

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China to continue island building
November 23, 2015

China said yesterday that it would continue to build military and civilian facilities on its artificial islands in the South China Sea and warned other countries not to "deliberately stir up trouble" there.

"Building and maintaining necessary military facilities, this is what is required for China's national defense and for the protection of those islands and reefs," Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin told a news conference in Kuala Lumpur.

China planned to "expand and upgrade" civilian facilities on the islands "to better serve commercial ships, fishermen, to help distressed vessels and provide more public services," Liu said, adding that China rejects the notion it is militarizing the South China Sea. He said China had mostly built civilian facilities there.

Liu was speaking at a press briefing on the sidelines of the 27th ASEAN Summit and Related Summits in Malaysia.

The briefing was held hours after Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, who attended the summits, raised a five-pronged proposal to uphold and promote peace and stability in the South China Sea and called on countries outside the region to refrain from taking actions that may cause tension in the area.

Liu said the construction of facilities, mainly civilian ones, on seven of its islands and reefs is essential to improve the quality of life and work for personnel on the islands and to provide high-quality public services that will also benefit surrounding countries.

He said 42 of China's islands and reefs in the region are being illegally occupied by its three neighboring countries.

"To build necessary military defense facilities on islands far away from our mainland is both required by the national defense need and the need to safeguard our islands and reefs," Liu said. "They should not be mistaken for the militarization of the South China Sea.

"Some major countries outside the region are exercising their so-called freedom of navigation by sending airplanes and warships while strengthening military cooperation with countries in the region. Is that a trend of militarization?" he said, urging heightened alert against it. "Don't make troubles on purpose," he warned.

China voiced "strong discontent" over the recent intrusion of a US warship in waters near China's Nansha Islands. Calling such an act "political provocation," Liu said that when exercising freedom of navigation in and above the South China Sea, countries concerned need to respect the sovereignty and security of countries along the coast.

More than 100,000 ships from many countries around the world sail safely and freely through the South China Sea each year. China has held that disputes should be addressed by the countries directly concerned through friendly consultation and peaceful negotiation, with peace and stability in the South China Sea being jointly maintained by China and ASEAN countries.
 
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Excellent, but i'd rather see another Vietnam there like the picture above.
Your leader obvioulsy miscaculate the situation and lighted the island-building race by unilaterally starting island-building first.


now, the situation is out of the controll of Vietnam, after China also joined the race.

You could decide when to start the race, but you can not decide when to end the race now.
 
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Your leader miscaculate the situation and lighted the island-building race by unilaterally starting island-building first..

now, the situation is out of the controll of Vietnam, after China also joined the race.

Who's my leader? I have no leader. I'm a Vietnamese Canadian/American which means the people are the leaders. I don't recognize the VCP as a leader.
 
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Spotlight: Chinese premier visits Malacca to send message of peace amid U.S. meddling in South China Sea

2015-11-23 09:190

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Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (2nd L, front) interacts with old friends and representatives of local people at San Shu Gong specialty shop in Malacca, Malaysia, Nov. 22, 2015. Li, accompanied by his wife Cheng Hong, visited Malacca on Sunday. (Xinhua/Li Tao)


MALACCA, Malaysia, Nov. 22 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Sunday squeezed several hours out of his tight schedule in Malaysia to visit Malacca, a port city about two hours' drive from Kuala Lumpur.

The tour, quite distinctive in an itinerary crammed with multilateral and bilateral meetings, featured a diversity of activities from visiting museums to chatting with local folks.

However, it was well beyond a regular travel to get to know the local customs and conditions. More importantly, it was an explicit gesture of China's commitment to peaceful development and common prosperity in East Asia.

China has been playing a leading role in promoting all types of regional cooperation and integration, as the premier demonstrated in the 18th ASEAN-China (10+1) leaders' meeting, the 18th ASEAN-China, Japan and South Korea (10+3) leaders' meeting, and the 10th East Asia Summit.

He pledged to offer loans totaling 10 billion U.S. dollars for ASEAN infrastructure as well as free assistance worth 3.6 billion yuan (around 563 million U.S. dollars) to underdeveloped ASEAN nations in 2016.

He also called on China and ASEAN to speed up the upgrade of their free trade area (FTA), and conclude the negotiations on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) by 2016.

Although most of the nations in the region aspire for closer ties with China, a few countries have been hyping up "China threat" theories and wrongfully accusing China of bullying its neighbors.

Hegemony is never within China's culture and policy, as proved by ancient Chinese navigator Zheng He's great expeditionary voyages during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Li reiterated the message during his stay in Malaysia.

Li made a particular stop at Zheng He Museum in Malacca, a place to commemorate the erstwhile intercontinental voyager, who is also believed to be the initiator of the ancient Maritime Silk Road.

Starting his expeditions more than eight decades earlier than Christopher Columbus, Zheng made seven sea voyages to Southeast Asia, South Asia, West Asia and East Africa from 1405 to 1433, and brought silk, tea and chinaware either as commodities or as gifts to the local people wherever he traveled.

Historical records revealed that Zheng visited Malacca for at least five times, and deepened the friendly exchanges between China and Malaysia in a significant way. Actually, he remains widely admired today for bringing nothing but friendship and prosperity to the places on the route with his big fleets.

However, maritime disputes have been simmering in recent years in the sea area where Chinese ancestors used to sail around. The United States, with its high-profile strategy of rebalance to the Asia-Pacific, is meddling in regional affairs and stoking tensions.

Prior to the meetings, U.S. President Barack Obama labeled the South China Sea as "a major topic," and U.S. National Security Advisor Susan Rice dubbed it "a central issue of discussion."

Last month, Washington infuriated China and alarmed the region by sailing a naval vessel very close to China's Nansha Islands in the South China Sea.

Earlier Sunday, before he went to Malacca, Li urged countries from outside the region to play a positive and constructive role and refrain from taking actions that may cause tension in this region.

In a five-pronged proposal for peace and stability in the South China Sea, he also suggested that sovereign and jurisdictional disputes in the region be settled through friendly consultation and negotiation.

"Only by expanding our common interests and seeking common ground can we narrow our differences," he told ASEAN nations in an earlier meeting.

SPIRIT PASSED DOWN FOR CENTURIES

Six months before Li's visit to Malacca, Zhai Mo, a well-known Chinese navigator, also made a stop at the famous port city while leading his fleet of unpowered sailboats to retrace the ancient Maritime Silk Road in a bid to pass down Zheng's spirit.

They encountered heavy rain at the Strait of Malacca. "The sea water turned into dark green in the storm, and we approached the shore in rafts," Zhai said while recalling his first landing on Malacca.

"What struck me most is the sharp contrast -- how small the strait is and how huge Zheng He's fleets would have appeared," Zhai said.

Zhai could not even find a proper berth to anchor his boat, which has a draught of only 2.5 meters. It is just beyond his imagination how Zheng's hundreds of vessels and some 28,000 boatmen on board managed to swarm into the strait 600 years ago.

Looking around the exhibits, including boat models and porcelain remains said to be excavated from an ancient warehouse left by Zheng, the premier said he believes it was also the sharp contrast between what Zheng's powerful fleets could have done and what he actually did that won him the everlasting reputation.

As the museum displays, Zheng asked his people to help local soldiers and civilians build city walls, drive away pirates, settle conflicts and keep peace at sea in Malacca. They also passed agricultural and manufacturing technologies and medical skills to the local people.

Commanding the largest and most advanced fleets in his time, Zheng did not bring hostility and conflicts. That embodies the very essence of the traditional Chinese philosophy, where peace and good-neighborliness always come first, Li noted.

Following this spirit, China's development today will never sacrifice the interests of other countries and will always pursue mutual benefit and common development of all its partners, he said, stressing that China is willing to solve maritime disputes through negotiations and dialogues.

Another of Zheng's legacies lies in the bloodline of a very special community in Malaysia -- Baba and Nyonya. They are descendants of Zheng's followers who decided to stay and married the local residents between the 15th and 17th centuries.

In Malacca, Li also visited a museum about these natives of mixed blood, who have inherited both Chinese and Malaysian traditions and formed their own cultures in food, clothes, chinaware and building.

The Baba and Nyonya community is "a vivid example of the friendly exchanges and cultural blending between the two countries," Li said. "They also showcase the openness and tolerance of Zheng He's spirit, which allows different ethnic groups, cultures and religions to live in harmony."

"Learning from the history, we shall further promote cultural exchanges between China and Malaysia," he said.

FUTURE CARRIED BY NEW INITIATIVE

The premier, who also met with the Malacca governor and inspected a miniature of an industrial park, did not come here only to recall the past glory.

Malacca, located in the southern region of the Malay Peninsula, not only plays a critical role in China-Malaysia friendship since ancient times, but also stands at a key point along the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, which is part of the Belt and Road Initiative proposed by President Xi Jinping in 2013.

In an early step to put the initiative into action, the Malacca State established a friendly partnership with South China's Guangdong Province in September, and the industrial park is a major project currently under construction by companies from both sides.

Listening attentively to the introduction about the industrial park, Li said he is pleased to know that Malacca has worked out detailed planning for the project and launched a series of preferential policies.

"The industrial park, with distinct geographical advantages and vast development prospects, will not only stimulate the local economy, but also boost a cluster of industries and promote practical cooperation between China and Malaysia," Li said.

The park was associated with the grand Malacca Gateway project. After China put forward the Belt and Road Initiative, which also comprises the Silk Road Economic Belt, the Malaysian government has decided to expand it as an active response to the proposal.

The project, covering more than 610 acres with two man-made islands and a natural one, was originally planned to comprise a cruise ship port, a service department, hotels and theme parks to invigorate the tourism and service industries.

After the expansion, it will turn into a center of tourism, logistics and high-tech marine industries, with a deep sea port, a ship yard and a duty-free trade zone added to the construction list.

More than 300,000 ships pass through Malacca every year, but due to a lack of related facilities, these ships have to wait for a long time to be served, which shows the urgency to build a new seaport terminal, Idris Haron, chief minister of Malacca State, once explained.

Haron said he had met more than 50 delegations, most of which came from Guangdong, since he took office about two and a half years ago, and he had visited China for at least seven times for the purpose of promoting cooperation.

The Chinese premier, who will hold talks with Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak on Monday, said he hopes that what is going on in Malacca serves as an example for future bilateral cooperation and for the implementation of the Belt and Road Initiative among Southeast Asian countries.

The 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, covering a population of 4.4 billion people, will connect markets along its route and produce enormous economic potential.

"I hope the initiative will bring more markets and jobs to the local people and enterprises in Malacca," Haron said.

That is exactly what it is meant to do.

"China's development will first benefit its neighbors, including Malaysia, and I expect that everyone can seize the opportunity to contribute to the friendship and common development between China and ASEAN nations," Li said.

8cdcd430086f17bcb0d502.jpg
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang interacts with old friends and representatives of local people at San Shu Gong specialty shop in Malacca, Malaysia, Nov. 22, 2015. Li, accompanied by his wife Cheng Hong, visited Malacca on Sunday. (Xinhua/Liu Weibing)

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Chinese Premier Li Keqiang waves to crowds outside San Shu Gong specialty shop in Malacca, Malaysia, Nov. 22, 2015. Li, accompanied by his wife Cheng Hong, visited Malacca on Sunday. (Xinhua/Liu Weibing)

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Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (2nd L, front) overlooks the Strait of Malacca, in Malacca, Malaysia, Nov. 22, 2015. Li, accompanied by his wife Cheng Hong, visited Malacca on Sunday. (Xinhua/Li Tao)

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Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (3rd L) and his wife Cheng Hong (2nd L) talk with Governor of Malacca Mohd Khalil Yaakob (3rd R) and Chief Minister of Malacca State Idris Haron (1st L), in Malacca, Malaysia, Nov. 22, 2015. (Xinhua/Huang Jingwen)

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Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (3rd L, front) visits Zheng He Museum in Malacca, Malaysia, Nov. 22, 2015. Li, accompanied by his wife Cheng Hong, visited Malacca on Sunday. (Xinhua/Huang Jingwen)

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Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (4th L, front), accompanied by Governor of Malacca Mohd Khalil Yaakob, listens to introduction of an industrial park in Malacca, Malaysia, Nov. 22, 2015. Li, accompanied by his wife Cheng Hong, visited Malacca on Sunday. (Xinhua/Huang Jingwen)
 
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here is Yongxin Island, the capital of Sansha prefecture.
Yongxin island is a part of has been a disputed island between vietnam and CHina since 19th century. Before WWII ,it was actual controlled by French indochina. After WWII ,China controlled it.
it already has a population of 2K and already attracts many toursts.
in 5-10 years, I think there would be 3-5 such island towns in South China sea, which would become “Chinese maldives" and attracts thousands of tourists.

Wow so amazing. China should make the new islands extremely opulent and luxurious, and also futuristic looking.
Imagine something like this, so awesome

real-madrid-resort-island.jpg
 
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Wow so amazing. China should make the new islands extremely opulent and luxurious, and also futuristic looking.
Imagine something like this, so awesome

real-madrid-resort-island.jpg
well, that is why USA has neither might nor reason to stop China's island-building.


In most occasions, those Chinese-made islands are more maldives-like tourism towns,rather than navy bases.

Of course, with those manmade islands grows to be towns, China would gradually turn south china sea into its actual-controlled water.
 
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