After ‘Barbie,’ Blackpink site also under Vietnam scrutiny | Inquirer Entertainment
OVER SOUTH CHINA SEA MAP

After ‘Barbie,’ Blackpink site also under Vietnam scrutiny

/ 05:50 AM July 07, 2023

The girl group Blackpink—BLACKPINK FACEBOOK PAGE

The girl group Blackpink —BLACKPINK FACEBOOK PAGE

HANOI—Vietnam has launched an inspection into K-pop group Blackpink’s tour organizer’s website, ahead of its concert in Hanoi, over criticism from fans that it shows a map of the South China Sea with disputed boundaries.

The controversy follows Vietnam’s decision to ban Warner Bros.’ highly anticipated film “Barbie” over a scene allegedly featuring the “nine-dash line” used in Chinese maps to illustrate Beijing’s claims over vast areas of the South China Sea, including swathes of what Vietnam considers its continental shelf.

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Vietnam’s culture ministry said late on Wednesday it had ordered an inspection of the website “to verify the suspicion that the company organizing the Blackpink music night promoted the cow-tongue line,” using the Vietnamese phrase to describe the U-shaped line.

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Inaccessible website

The ministry did not immediately respond to questions about the possible outcome of the inspection. It was unclear when it would announce its findings.

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Chinese organizer iME Entertainment and South Korean agency YG Entertainment, which manages Blackpink, had no immediate comment.

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The organizer’s website was inaccessible on Thursday but a cached version seen by Reuters, and last updated on July 4, shows a vague nine-dash line that encompasses nearly the whole South China Sea.

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Territorial claims

Vietnam and China have long had overlapping territorial claims to a potentially energy-rich stretch in the waterway. The Southeast Asian country has repeatedly accused Chinese vessels of violating its sovereignty.

Blackpink, a cornerstone of South Korea’s multibillion-dollar entertainment industry, is the latest to court trouble in Vietnam for depicting China’s controversial nine-dash line, which was repudiated in an international arbitration ruling by a court in The Hague in 2016. China refuses to recognize the ruling.

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Complaints

The culture ministry’s move followed complaints by Vietnamese internet users who noticed the nine-dash line on the organizer’s website.

“Bought two tickets for me and my date. Then saw the cow-tongue, and quit. I am (a) patriot,” Tu Anh Xinh, a Blackpink fan, wrote on Facebook.

The world-famous K-pop girl group is due to perform in Vietnam for the first time ever on July 29 to July 30, having been granted a government license that requested the organizer to comply with the government’s regulations on performing activities.

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TAGS: Blackpink, China, Vietnam

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