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Thousands in Vietnam protest against Taiwanese steel plant over mass fish deaths

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Vietnamese protesters demonstrate against Taiwanese conglomerate Formosa during a rally in downtown Hanoi in May. Photo: AFP

Thousands of Vietnamese protesters surrounded a Taiwanese steel plant on Sunday, some scaling walls and holding signs demanding its closure, as anger flares against the firm for dumping toxic waste into the ocean killing tonnes of fish.

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Huge crowds on motorbike and foot gathered at the Formosa plant in central Ha Tinh province, with some holding signs saying: “Authorities, please close Formosa plant for the future of the nation” as others chanted angrily.

Dead fish and other marine life began washing ashore in central Vietnam in April, the country’s worst ecological disaster in decades that devastated livelihoods in coastal towns where fishing is the main source of income.

A villager shows dead sea fish he collected on a beach in Phu Loc district in the central province of Thua Thien Hue. Photo: AFP
A villager shows dead sea fish he collected on a beach in Phu Loc district in the central province of Thua Thien Hue. Photo: AFP
Taiwan’s Formosa, which is building a multibillion-dollar steel plant in the area, was blamed for the disaster and fined US$500 million.
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The government said it would start paying affected fishermen in October and confirmed last week that payouts would range from US$130 to US$1,600 per person depending on losses calculated between April and September.

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