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Asia in 3 minutes: naughty Chinese tourists in Vietnam; naughty monkeys in Thailand

A ‘secret’ shot at Starbucks in South Korea and a long shot for Japanese nationalists wanting the US to acknowledge nuclear ‘war crimes’

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Chinese tourists in Vietnam with T-shirts depicting Beijing’s claims to the South China Sea. File photo

Chinese tourists make a splash in Vietnam with South China Sea T-shirts

A photo of Chinese tourists wearing T-shirts depicting Beijing’s claims to the disputed South China Sea has sparked online anger in Vietnam, prompting calls for the visitors to be deported. The shirts featured a map of China and its nine-dash line – the sea boundary found on some 1940s-era maps which Beijing says proves its claim to most of the waterway, despite partial claims from Vietnam and other nations. The territorial dispute is a hot-button issue in Vietnam, which has a turbulent history of conflict with its powerhouse neighbour. The visitors arrived in southern Cam Ranh airport on Sunday night and were stopped by security at the immigration desk, an airport police officer confirmed. “We asked them to take the T-shirts off before allowing them to leave the airport,” said the officer.

What next? Photos of the tourists in their nationalist attire made the rounds on social media – with the nine-dash line crossed out with an “X”. Some netizens said the tourists were not welcome in Vietnam. “Immediately deport them and ban them permanently from coming to Vietnam,” Facebook user Nguyen Ngoc Hieu posted.

War crime? The mushroom cloud of the atomic bomb dropped by B-29 bomber Enola Gay over the city of Hiroshima. File photo
War crime? The mushroom cloud of the atomic bomb dropped by B-29 bomber Enola Gay over the city of Hiroshima. File photo

Japanese demand displays acknowledge America’s nuclear ‘war crimes’

Japanese nationalists are demanding that displays at national parks in the United States commemorating the development of the first atomic weapons state that the subsequent attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki were war crimes. A number of facilities that make up the Manhattan Project National Historical Park are already open to the public, including museums and tours of locations in the Tennessee town of Oak Ridge, Los Alamos in New Mexico and Hanford in Washington state. The facilities are being expanded and “interpretative themes” are being developed, said Kris Kirby, superintendent of the park.

What next? The Allies’ position was that the bombs were necessary to hasten the Japanese surrender and to avoid an invasion of the home islands, a scenario that military planners believed would cost hundreds of thousands of lives among the invasion force.

Bangkok Post: critical editor gets cut. Photo: EPA
Bangkok Post: critical editor gets cut. Photo: EPA
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