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Australia, Hanoi at odds over 50th anniversary of Vietnam War battle

August 18, 2016 12:02 AM EDT

SYDNEY (Reuters) - An Australian ceremony to commemorate the 50th anniversary of a Vietnam War battle has soured into a diplomatic spat after the Vietnamese government restricted access to the site at Long Tan.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull made an 11th-hour appeal to his Vietnamese counterpart Nguyen Xuan Phuc on behalf of about 1,000 Australian veterans and their families who had traveled to Vietnam but found themselves barred by authorities, who said the ceremony might offend residents.

"I thank the prime minister of Vietnam for agreeing last night to arrangements which will, after all, enable our veterans and their families who have traveled to Vietnam, reverently to commemorate the battle as they honor all those who fought and died in those fields so many years ago," Turnbull said in an address in Canberra on Thursday.

The commemoration had long been planned in coordination with Vietnamese authorities, but was canceled on Wednesday.

Australian Veterans' Affairs Minister Dan Tehan said the formal ceremony at the Long Tan site remained canceled but Nguyen had agreed to ease the restrictions so that smaller groups of veterans could visit the site.

Tehan called the cancellation "a kick in the guts".

In Vietnam, police blocked roads leading to Long Tan and allowed a small group of veterans and diplomats to lay a wreath at the site.

"Very, very sad that the Vietnamese government has taken the attitude they have toward a fairly peaceful commemorative service to honor the dead," Australian veteran Peter Wyldey told Reuters in the nearby seaside resort of Vung Tau, where some veterans had gathered for a private ceremony.

A local government official told Reuters that Hanoi feared the service would turn into a victory celebration and put the Australians at risk because families of Vietnamese soldiers killed in the battle still lived nearby.

More than 60,000 Australians served in Vietnam between 1962 and 1972 and more than 500 Australians were killed during the deeply unpopular war between the Soviet-backed Communist government of North Vietnam and South Vietnam's U.S.-backed regime. The war ended with the fall of the former Saigon in 1975.

The 1966 battle of Long Tan was fought in a rubber plantation in South Vietnam. Eighteen Australian soldiers were killed and 24 wounded. North Vietnamese and Viet Cong casualties numbered about 245 killed and 350 wounded.

(Reporting by Matt Siegel and Reuters TV; Editing by Paul Tait and Clarence Fernandez)



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