Cambodia Publicly Endorses China Position on South China Sea
FILE
- A worker holds a new officially approved map of China that includes
the islands and maritime area that Beijing claims in the South China
Sea, at a printing factory in Changsha in south China's Hunan province.
VOA | 25 March 2015
PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA—Cambodia's
leader has publicly endorsed China's position that territorial disputes
in the South China Sea cannot be solved through the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
In Phnom Penh, Prime Minister Hun Sen said Wednesday the issue should
be solved by the countries directly affected by the disputes.
“Ultimately, it is not an issue for ASEAN as a whole. It is bilateral
issue between the concerned countries, which need to talk between
themselves," he said.
But the Philippines and Vietnam, both members of ASEAN, have been
pushing for a more regional and multi-lateral approach to the problem.
Although this is the first time Cambodia's leader has explicitly
stated his position on the issue, Phnom Penh came under fire by some for
its handling of the matter while it held the chairmanship of ASEAN in
2012.
Referring to the rotating ASEAN chairmanship, Hun Sen defended Cambodia's leadership.
“After Cambodia, Brunei also could not find a solution; Myanmar
failed as well. Now I am waiting to see if Malaysia will be able to
solve the problem," said Hun Sen. "I can say, it will not be able to do
so ... impossible. But they only blamed Cambodia, only Cambodia was
wrong. I will wait to see the whole round.”
During the 2012 ASEAN summit, the regional leaders failed to issue a
joint declaration. Critics said the failure was caused by Cambodia
protecting China's position on the South China Sea issue.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) groups together
Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. In addition to Vietnam and the
Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei also have territorial disputes with
China.
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