Cambodia Spoiled Asean Statement on Sea: Reports
Cambodia Daily | 20 June 2016
Cambodia helped to scupper an Asean joint statement on the South
China Sea last week, according to news reports, an echo of the success
it had killing a similar statement when it was chair of the regional
bloc four years ago.
The Foreign Affairs Ministry issued its own statement after the
two-day meeting in Kunming, China, supporting Beijing’s preference for
settling territorial disputes in the hotly contested sea bilaterally.
According to the Associated Press (AP), the bloc issued a joint
statement at the end of the meeting on Tuesday between the Asean foreign
ministers and their Chinese counterpart expressing “serious concern
over recent and ongoing developments.”
China claims most of the sea, one of the busiest shipping lanes in
the world, and has been transforming shallow reefs into artificial
islands topped with airstrips, in waters also claimed by Asean members
Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.
But the statement was quickly recalled in order to make “amendments”
to an updated version that never came, the AP reported. It cited an
unnamed Philippine diplomat saying that Burma, Cambodia and Laos
withdrew their support for the statement so as not to offend China.
Kyodo News also cited unnamed diplomats who claimed that Cambodia and Laos opposed issuing a joint statement.
Neither Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn nor ministry spokesman Chum Sounry could be reached on Sunday. Government spokesman Phay Siphan said he did not know if Cambodia was involved in recalling the statement.
Cambodia’s reported retraction reflected the spoiler role it played as the chair of Asean in 2012.
During a meeting of the bloc’s foreign ministers in Phnom Penh that
year, Cambodia blocked efforts by the Philippines and others to mention
recent naval confrontations with China in the sea. As a result, the
foreign ministers’ meeting ended without a closing statement for the
first time in the block’s 45-year history.
The debacle cemented perceptions of Cambodia as a wedge with which
China, Cambodia’s largest investor, could split Asean unity over the
South China Sea. While Beijing sees an advantage in settling territorial
disputes one-on-one, the countries with competing claims see a strength
in numbers and want China to deal with them as a group.
On Friday, the Foreign Affairs Ministry issued its own statement on
the meeting in Kunming making no reference to the “serious concerns”
mentioned in the joint Asean statement that was recalled.
The ministry said Mr. Sokhonn had stressed the need to settle disputes bilaterally.
The minister, it said, “recalled the stance of Cambodia, which is
that territorial and jurisdictional disputes have to be solved between
the parties directly involved, without threats or the use of force, in
accordance with the principles of globally recognized international law
and the United Nations pact on maritime law.”
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