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President Xi, right, pictured with Vietnamese envoy Hoang Binh Quan in Beijing. Photo: Xinhua

China, Vietnam share ‘common destiny’, says Xi Jinping in bid to calm waters amid heightened tensions over rival claims in South China Sea

China and Vietnam share a common destiny, President Xi Jinping told a visiting Vietnamese envoy, as the two continue to repair ties damaged by their competing claims in the disputed South China Sea.

The two communist led states claims in the South China Sea came to a head two years ago when Beijing placed an oil rig in waters off the Vietnamese coast, leading to anti-China riots.

READ MORE: Vietnam protests ‘serious violation of sovereignty’ after China deploys missile system to disputed island in South China Sea

Since then they have exchanged high-level visits, including a trip by Xi to Hanoi last year.

“China and Vietnam share a common destiny, so do the Communist Party of China and the Communist Party of Vietnam,” Xi told Hoang Binh Quan, a special envoy of Vietnam’s communist party chief Nguyen Phu Trong, the state news agency Xinhua said late on Monday.

“Developing bilateral ties conforms to the fundamental interests of the two countries and their people,” Xi added.

Tensions heightened between the two nations last month over territorial sovereignty in the South China Sea after Taiwan and US officials said Beijing had placed surface-to-air missiles on Woody Island, part of the Paracel archipelago which China controls.

Vietnam called China’s actions a serious infringement of its sovereignty over the Paracels.

READ MORE: Vietnam backs latest US challenge to Beijing’s sovereignty in South China Sea, say analysts

Xi called for the proper handling of differences between the two nations in order for their “comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership to develop in a sustained, healthy and steady way”.

Xi said China was willing to work with Vietnam to maintain the frequency of high-level visits and to carry on the two countries’ important tradition of the party chiefs sending special envoys to communicate with each other.

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