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Authorities from the two countries disagreed on where the boat was detained Thursday morning. Vietnamese officials said it was in disputed waters 56 km 35 miles off the coast of China's Hainan Island and km off Vietnam. The arrests risk escalating the biggest breakdown in ties between Vietnam and China in three decades.
China's top diplomat met Vietnam's leadership last month to try to defuse tensions, but talks ended in stalemate. China's Foreign Ministry said the fishermen had "broken the law" by working in Chinese territorial waters 7 nautical miles south of the city of Sanya on Hainan. That angered many Vietnamese, sparking rare protests and an orgy of arson, rioting and looting of Chinese factories in three industrialised provinces.
Many turned out to be Taiwanese-owned. China has said the rig is operating within its waters near the Paracel Islands, which it occupies. Both sides have argued for decades about sovereignty over the islands. The two countries have been trading barbs for weeks, each accusing the other of intimidation and intentionally ramming rival vessels, which both deny.
Vietnam has held news conferences showing footage of what it says are Chinese vessels working in pairs to corner Vietnamese boats and crash into them. China claims about 90 percent of the South China Sea, but parts of the potentially energy-rich waters are also subject to claims by the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Vietnam and Taiwan. Vietnam's Foreign Ministry spokesman, Le Hai Binh, told reporters on Thursday that Vietnam was "carefully considering" legal action against China but any such move would have to be timed to its advantage.