China urges Vietnam officials to investigate alleged defacing of Chinese traveller's passport

China has urged Vietnam to investigate claims that a Chinese visitor's passport was defaced with profanities by officials at Ho Chi Minh city airport. PHOTO: CHINA DAILY/ASIA NEWS NETWORK/PEOPLE'S DAILY ONLINE

HANOI (AFP) - China has urged Vietnam to investigate claims that a Chinese visitor's passport was defaced with profanities by officials at Ho Chi Minh city airport, in an apparent reference to a bitter territorial spat between the nations.

And later on Friday (July 29), Vietnamese state media reported that monitors at check-in counters at major airports in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh were compromised by hackers and displayed anti-Vietnamese and Philippines slogans with regards to the South China Sea.

A Chinese citizen, identified only by the surname Zhong, entered Vietnam on July 23 and found their passport was "defaced while crossing the border", according to a statement posted on the website of Beijing's consulate in HCMC.

Decrying the "shameless and cowardly act" the Consulate-General raised the matter with Vietnamese authorities, the statement said, adding "China is outraged" by the incident.

China has demanded Vietnam investigates the alleged act and "seriously punish those responsible", it said, adding "Vietnam has agreed to probe into it".

Vietnamese officials could not be immediately reached for comment.

Photographs circulated in online Chinese media this week purported to show the Chinese passport with the words "f**k you" scribbled on two pages next to maps of China and its hotly contested "nine-dash line".

But earlier this month, state media reported that border authorities in the central city of Danang and southern Phu Quoc island had refused to issue visa stamps on Chinese passports with the nine-dash line.

Beijing says the line demarcates its territory in the South China Sea.But Hanoi, which alongside several other nations has competing claims to the strategically key waters, rejects it.

Earlier this month, a UN tribunal said China's line had no legal basis, reviving the acrimony between the two countries.

Some Vietnamese Facebook users in the country cast doubt on the authenticity of the allegation.

Others reacted gleefully to an insult to a superpower that is both Vietnam's biggest foreign investor and main regional rival.

One Facebook user wrote "big applause to the immigration officers at Tan Son Nhat" airport, urging the border authorities to get their pens out for all Chinese passports.

The reaction is a sign of the enmity between the two countries over the South China Sea.

Hanoi routinely accuses Chinese vessels of sinking Vietnamese fishing boats, while Beijing has built landing strips and other facilities on contested shoals.

Four South-east Asian members - Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei - have competing claims with Beijing over parts of the South China Sea. Taiwan also has claims.

But the Asean regional bloc soft-peddled the issue at a summit this week despite warnings from Vietnam that the body risks losing relevance if it fails to step up to the security challenge.

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