ASEAN urges self-restraint in disputes with China
Hanoi, Manila seek stronger action, but summit statement does not directly mention Beijing
NAYPYIDAW — Vietnam and the Philippines pushed for stronger
action to confront China’s increasingly assertive behaviour in the South
China Sea at a summit yesterday, but a statement released by leaders of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) at the end of the
meeting put paid to those hopes by making no direct mention of China.
A
showdown between Chinese and Vietnamese ships near the Paracel Islands
has turned the spotlight on long-standing and bitter maritime disputes.
Beijing claims sovereignty over much of the strategically important
South China Sea, believed to contain significant oil and gas reserves.
Four of ASEAN’s 10 members, including Vietnam and the
Philippines, have competing territorial claims with China, but few are
willing to risk their economic and political ties with the grouping’s
major trade partner.
ASEAN is seeking a code of
conduct for the waters, with talks making little progress since China
agreed in July last year to start discussions.
The stand-off
between China and Vietnam started on May 1, when China moved a deep-sea
oil rig into waters close to the Paracel Islands. Vietnam, which says
the islands belong to it, immediately despatched ships.
China
insists it is doing nothing wrong and said it had “maintained a lot of
restraint’’ in the face of “intensive provocations” by Vietnam.
Hanoi says the security and free navigation of the strategic waterway are now under serious threat.
Philippine
President Benigno Aquino, meanwhile, called for support to resolve his
country’s territorial dispute with Beijing in the South China Sea
through international arbitration.
ASEAN leaders yesterday also
discussed tensions on the Korean Peninsula, reiterating their commitment
to a region free of nuclear weapons.
They also discussed the
need to effectively tackle threats such as cybercrime, human trafficking
and climate change, as well as food and energy security, human-rights
issues and efforts to create an ASEAN economic community.
Separately,
a statement by ASEAN foreign ministers yesterday called for a “peaceful
resolution” to the political crisis gripping Thailand, days after a
court ruling removed Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra from power.
It
was the first time Myanmar hosted an ASEAN summit since joining the
bloc in 1997. It was previously passed over due to its poor human-rights
record.
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