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Protests over mass fish deaths present new Vietnam govt with first big test

HANOI — Millions of dead fish stretched out over 200km of central Vietnamese beaches are posing the biggest test so far for the new government.

The Vietnamese government has said there is no evidence for now to show Formosa was responsible for the mass fish deaths. Photo: Reuters

The Vietnamese government has said there is no evidence for now to show Formosa was responsible for the mass fish deaths. Photo: Reuters

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HANOI — Millions of dead fish stretched out over 200km of central Vietnamese beaches are posing the biggest test so far for the new government.

The communist administration led by Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has been criticised on social media for a lack of transparency and slow response, with thousands protesting on Sunday in major cities and provincial areas.

The government says it does not know why the wild and farmed fish were found dead on the coast of four provinces between April 6 and 18. The phenomenon “caused economic and environmental damage, hurt the fishery industry, and particularly resulted in puzzled sentiment among citizens”, it said in an April 28 statement.

In a country where public protests are rare, anger over the dead fish has created a challenge for officials as to how to react: While an offshoot of Taiwan’s Formosa Plastics has been questioned over the incident and drew ire on social media, the government must also assure foreign companies it welcomes their business given the focus on investment to drive the economy.

“It’s their first crisis and it’s really a delicate one,” said Mr Fred Burke, managing partner at law firm Baker & McKenzie (Vietnam). “Millions of livelihoods are at risk. The population is extremely unhappy.”

Mr Burke is a member of a government council and advises on foreign investment projects in the country.

With information scarce, the incident has heightened concerns about damage to the environment, food safety and how businesses are regulated. State media raised questions about a waste pipe running into the sea from Formosa’s steel plant being built in Ha Tinh province.

Formosa Ha Tinh Steel “is deeply surprised and sorry about” the fish deaths, it said in a statement on April 26, adding there is no proven link to the incident. It said its total investment in the Vietnam plant was US$10.5 billion (S$14.1 billion), including US$45 million for a waste water treatment system. That system has regulatory permits and meets national standards, it said.

The government has said there is no evidence for now to show Formosa was responsible. The fish may have been killed by toxins discharged by human activities or algal blooms known as a red tide, it said.

Even so, thousands protested at various places, including the capital Hanoi. In Ho Chi Minh City, a crowd of 1,000 carried signs reading “please return a clean sea to us” and “stop discharging waste water into the sea”.

“We wanted to raise our voice to protect our environment,” said Ms Tran Thi Thu Nguyet, who joined the rally. Facebook posts also showed photos of protests in the southern and central provinces.

Police detained two people they said collected and spread information on the Internet to spur protests over the fish deaths, reported Vietnam Television on Sunday, citing the provincial authorities. One person allegedly entered the Formosa Industrial Zone last month to film and interview local people, it said.

Fishing and tourism have been hurt. Fishermen in central Quang Binh province have lost 115 billion dong (S$6.9 million), according to the local government.

About 30 per cent of tourists cancelled visits to the province, which houses Son Doong, the world’s largest cave, during a four-day holiday starting on April 30, it said.

In an unusually candid response, the government admitted it was slow to react, and new Environment Minister Tran Hong Ha publicly apologised. “The initial handling process was passive,” said the administration in its April 28 statement. Environmental monitoring was “untimely, inaccurate, and infrequent”, in part, as some systems were not linked.

Anger spread on social media after a local Formosa official said Vietnamese should choose between their seafood industry or a steel plant. The company later apologised for the comment, according to local media.

Still, hundreds of people have used Facebook to urge the government to close the plant. “For people’s health and our motherland’s protection, let’s ask Formosa to compensate the fishermen and kick it out of our country right away,” said a user named Truong Thu Ha. More than 100,000 people signed a petition calling for United States President Barack Obama to raise the issue with Vietnam during his visit this month.

“Vietnamese who are rarely consulted about and aware of investment projects face a big crisis of confidence,” said independent environmental consultant Thi Nguyen, who is based in Ho Chi Minh City. “Foreign investment is important, but the Vietnamese government shouldn’t attract foreign investment at any cost, and this disaster proved that.”

Mr Vu Tu Thanh, the chief Vietnam representative of the US-ASEAN (Association of South-east Asian Nations) Business Council, said the government must walk a line between assuaging public anger and not unnerving foreign businesses. Companies based in Vietnam from nations including Japan and the US are watching to see if the country moves to retroactively amend regulations, said Mr Thanh.

Vietnam’s government has sought foreign investment to help it achieve this year’s growth target of 6.7 per cent. The economy grew 5.46 per cent in the first quarter, versus 7.01 per cent in the last quarter of 2015 as income from crude oil and agriculture production dropped.

Taiwan was the third-largest investor in Vietnam in the first quarter, after South Korea and Singapore. It invested US$465.6 million in the period, according to Vietnam government figures.

Formosa has been the focus of public anger in Vietnam before. In May 2014 , it and other Taiwanese businesses were attacked by protesters after China placed an oil rig in disputed waters off Vietnam’s coast.

Formosa said the riots, where one Chinese worker died of heat stroke, caused US$3 million in losses, and it received 30 billion dong in compensation.

“What the government is worried about is if they are too vocal in criticising them, it will still stir up anti-Chinese sentiment and create trouble,” said Mr Burke from Baker & McKenzie, referring to Formosa. “But if they are not vocal enough, they are viewed as coddling these guys who are seen as being disrespectful of Vietnam and its environment.”

Local media have reported recently that toxins are sometimes found in pork and vegetables. While the government banned the use of the dead fish in central provinces for food or animal feed, locals expressed concern it may be processed into fish sauce, a family staple.

“I’m stocking enough sauce for a year,” said housewife Nguyen Thi Lan as she piled sauce bottles into her basket at a supermarket in Hanoi. “I need to avoid sauce made out from dead fish before it spreads.” BLOOMBERG

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