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Vietnam Cracks Down on Growing Wave of Migrant Workers From China

It would be better if China and Vietnam worked together to expand their economies instead of competing with each other
Oh we work together all right. Chinese manager, Vietnamese worker.
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U see the problem while we cant work together now,right ??

So,it'd better let CN collapse like during Mongol-Manchus invasions. In History, during Mongol Manchus invasions, millions Han fled to VN and willing to work like slaves just to survive . Then, thats the time we can "work together " :laugh:
 
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Oh we work together all right. Chinese manager, Vietnamese worker.

GDP per capita difference between China and Vietnam is the same as between US and Mexico.
Gdp per capita of china is not even on the same level as Mexico.
It would be better if China and Vietnam worked together to expand their economies instead of competing with each other
Economic is a zero sum game. The chinese used to be able to export 90% of steel demand to Vietnam. Now they can only export 1% and we can even export back to their market. You get the idea. There is no such a thing as economic cooperation.
 
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U see the problem while we cant work together now,right ??

So,it'd better let CN collapse like during Mongol-Manchus invasions. In History, during Mongol Manchus invasions, millions Han fled to VN and willing to work like slaves just to survive . Then, thats the time we can "work together " :laugh:
Alot of them became the new Lords in Vietnam, ask your emperor why he has a Chinese surname
Lol
 
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Reports
china-technicians-102920.jpg

Hundreds of Chinese technicians gather at the Sino-Vietnamese Friendship Pass in Guangxi hoping to find work in Vietnam, Oct. 20, 2020.


Vietnamese authorities say they are cracking down on a growing number of migrants crossing the border illegally from neighboring China, in an apparent reversal of previous trends.

Police in the border area of Lang Son in northern Vietnam, across the border from the southwestern Chinese Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, recently arrested 20 foreign nationals and three Vietnamese drivers on suspicion of smuggling.

Lt. Col. Nguyen Chang Shan of the No. 2 Highway Checkpoint traffic police said Lang Son police had intercepted a group of "stowaways" at around 1.00 p.m. local time on Oct. 26 hiding in two Toyota off-road vehicles and one Toyota commercial vehicle, traveling down the highway from Quang Ninh in the direction of Haiphong and Hanoi, according to a Vietnamese news account on China's Tencent Weibo social media platform.

"The arrested persons were taken to the Lang Son Public Security Bureau for further investigation by the police," the report said.

Kuo Hai-kuang, a Taiwanese businessman based in Binh Duong province, said there have been a growing number of migrants from China seeking work in Vietnam since the coronavirus pandemic hit the national economy at the start of this year.

"There have been a lot more in recent years, most of them coming down from the north [of Vietnam]," Kuo said. "They cross the border illegally on minor roads and paths."

"They come over from Guangxi, and some from Yunnan province, on the Chinese side."

Kuo said the detainees will likely be held in custody for a time, before being fined and repatriated.

"Vietnamese police don't mess about," he said. "They lock you up, investigate, then they drive you right back where you came from."

Migrants lost factory jobs

The Vietnam Public Security Border Bureau has reported arresting more than 100 stowaways from Guangxi, China, in the area near the Chinese border, according to state media reports.

The migrants had lost jobs in factories in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong, and had been hoping to find work in Vietnam, state media reported.

In one case, border patrols in the northern Vietnamese province of Lao Cai found 76 smuggled migrants from China, while a further 25 Chinese nationals were found by police in Ha Giang province.

On Oct. 20, video footage of around 1,000 Chinese migrant workers gathering near the border checkpoint in Guangxi, readying themselves to seek work in Vietnam, was posted to social media.

While they may struggle to find work in larger, foreign-invested companies, such workers are often quietly taken on by Chinese-invested firms across the border, according to Kuo.

"Most wouldn't dare [to hire them], except for mainland Chinese companies," he said. "But we are talking about small companies, not the larger ones."

A Guangxi-based businessman surnamed Chen told RFA that many are lured by the promise of stronger economic growth and a more liberal form of government in Vietnam than is currently available back home.

"Right now, Vietnam's economic development is like Shenzhen back in the day," Chen said. "It is probably much stronger than the open areas of mainland China."

"That's basically what is behind the movement of labor into Vietnam," he said. "The pay and conditions there are better, especially for skilled workers, so a lot of people are going. A friend of mine went."

China's economy 'deteriorating'

Beijing resident Sun Yuchen said the reversed trend is food for thought for those living under the rule of ruling Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping.

"At the very least, illegal migration to Vietnam shows that there aren't that many opportunities in China," Sun said. "It shows that the economy in mainland China is deteriorating."

Reports have also emerged that China is constructing a wall along its border with Vietnam in a bid to stem the outward flow of smuggled migrant workers.

Video footage recently uploaded to social media revealed the construction of a two-meter-high concrete wall in the border regions.

Some social media comments appeared to confirm the content of the video.

"It's not surprising that they are in such a hurry to build a wall along the Sino-Vietnamese border," one Guangxi resident told RFA, adding sarcastically: "It's to prevent [Chinese citizens] from going astray and suffering all that freedom and democracy entails."

Some said the wall would eventually stretch the entire length of the 1,300 land border between the two countries, but RFA was unable to confirm this.

Back in 2015, when Beijing was keen to stem the flow of illegal migrant workers in the opposite direction, from Vietnam into China, official media announced the government would build an eight-kilometer fence in Guangxi to prevent cross-border "smuggling."

The apparent reversal of fortune has led Chinese social media users to quip that while the U.S. built a wall to prevent people from getting in, Beijing needs to build one to stop its own citizens from escaping
Free radio asia? I take these source with a pinch of salt.
 
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U see the problem while we cant work together now,right ??

So,it'd better let CN collapse like during Mongol-Manchus invasions. In History, during Mongol Manchus invasions, millions Han fled to VN and willing to work like slaves just to survive . Then, thats the time we can "work together " :laugh:
I can't imagine what happens when millions of Chinese rush into Vietnam with weapons. Maybe that's why most of the patriarchal ancestors of Vietnamese came from China? :sarcastic:
 
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Gdp per capita of china is not even on the same level as Mexico.

Economic is a zero sum game. The chinese used to be able to export 90% of steel demand to Vietnam. Now they can only export 1% and we can even export back to their market. You get the idea. There is no such a thing as economic cooperation.

Really? Typical liar. You are far poorer than Mexicans. Don't get mad bro, facts are facts.



59
23px-Flag_of_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China.svg.png
China
10,839

71
23px-Flag_of_Mexico.svg.png
Mexico
8,069

1153,498
 
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Free radio asia? I take these source with a pinch of salt.
Cnese were captured when trying to enter VN by hiding inside the washing machines

co-quan-kiem-tra-toan-bo-dan-cu-doi-tuong-nguoi-nuoc-ngoai-chui-vao-may-giat-an-tron-2-5f1e423f0625f.png

There r many Cnese trying to enter VN illegally looking for jobs recently due to CN owned factories like Luxshare, Lenovo, TCL quit CN and move to VN to avoid 25% tariff.

Luxshare, Foxconn r recruiting thousands workers, preparing to assembly Apple products in VN, seem like thats the reason why thousands jobless Cnese who lost jobs from Foxconn desperately trying to enter VN to seek jobs in VN Luxshare to get 430 usd/month. :coffee:.
 
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Haha, from " Radio Free Asia".

Radio Free Asia was founded and funded in the 1950s by an organization called "Committee for Free Asia" as an anti-communist propaganda operation.

Based on Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, it was established in the 1990s with the stated aim of promoting democratic values and human rights, and countering the narrative of the Chinese Communist Party.

It is funded by a grant from the U.S. Agency for Global Media (formerly the "Broadcasting Board of Governors"), an independent agency of the United States government.

In 2017, RFA and other networks, such as Voice of America, were put under the newly created U.S. Agency for Global Media, an independent federal agency.
 
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he final winner in your picture is still the Chinese army. Chinese soldiers will be buried and Vietnamese will become roadside fertilizer:enjoy:

View attachment 691132

Poor Vietnamese are vulnerable. Every Chinese soldier has destroyed eight Vietnamese:enjoy:

1 to 8 ?

Chinese PLA ran out very quickly when yo met our local militant group from minor ethnic people only. :haha:

1606358747640.png
 
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Alot of them became the new Lords in Vietnam, ask your emperor why he has a Chinese surname
Lol
Pathetic so called "Lords" were looted and kicked back to CN in bare hands,bro :lol:

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Many Hoa people had their businesses and property confiscated by the Communist Party after 1975, and had fled the country as South Vietnamese people faced persecution by the Communist Government. Hoa persecution intensified in late 1970 during the Sino-Vietnamese War.[12][13] Post-1988, the Vietnamese government's shift to economic liberalization revived the remaining Hoa's economic presence in Vietnamese society.[14] In recent times, the ethnic Hoa people have assimilated into contemporary Vietnamese society, due to similar traditions and religious beliefs.[15] The current Hoa population is officially acknowledged to be around 800,000 people.[16] However, the numbers have steadily decreased over time due to outward immigration and intermarriage with the Kinh majority.[17]
 
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