YANGON: Southeast Asian leaders head into a historic summit in Myanmar
this weekend dogged by a flare-up of high-seas tensions with China that
will test the region’s ability to stand together against a mighty
economic partner.Vietnam and the Philippines, both members of the
10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), squared up to
Beijing this week in the South China Sea, whose waters are scored by
overlapping territorial claims.
“China’s actions on the eve of the ASEAN meeting in Myanmar will put South China Sea issues on the top of the agenda,” said Carl Thayer, an expert on the region at the University of New South Wales.
He said Beijing had been “aggressively
assertive” by relocating a deep-water drilling rig in waters claimed by
Vietnam and surrounding it with ships, adding it could be a riposte to
US President Barack Obama’s recent Asia tour.
Hanoi said on Wednesday
that the Chinese ships used water cannon to attack Vietnamese patrol
vessels and repeatedly rammed them, injuring six people.
During his
tour, Obama asserted support for US allies Japan and the Philippines,
both locked in their own territorial disputes with Beijing.
Philippine
police said Wednesday they had seized a Chinese fishing vessel and
detained its 11 crew members elsewhere in the South China Sea. China
said it was in the right in both the Philippine and Vietnam cases.
The
sea is crisscrossed by fishing and shipping lanes and is thought to
contain huge oil and gas reserves. Parts are claimed by ASEAN members
Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia and the Philippines, as well as by Taiwan.
China,
which asserts sovereign rights to almost all of the disputed waters,
wants to negotiate with rivals on a bilateral basis. Other claimants
reject that and want a multinational approach.
“ASEAN is not likely
to condemn China by name and will stick to its past formula of upholding
international law, rejecting force or the threat of force, and call for
an early conclusion of a binding code of conduct,” Thayer said.
He
added: “ASEAN protestations will not move China one inch.” The tensions
threaten to cloud Myanmar’s hopes of using Sunday’s ASEAN summit as a
coming-out celebration, as it emerges from decades of military rule with
a new emphasis on economic liberalisation.
Myanmar is hosting an
ASEAN summit for the first time, showcasing its remote capital Naypyidaw
under the slogan “Moving Forward in Unity to a Peaceful and Prosperous
Community”. It is expected to steer a cautious route through disputes
with China, a long-time ally. It has been a member of ASEAN for 17 years
but was forced to renounce the rotating presidency in 2006 because of
criticism over its rights record and the then-ruling junta’s failure to
shift to democracy.
Reforms since a new quasi-civilian government
took power three years ago have seen the removal of most Western
sanctions and the promise of an investment boom.
But the prosecution
of journalists this year, as well as arrests of protesters and ongoing
ethnic minority conflicts, have caused alarm among rights groups.
David
Mathieson of Human Rights Watch urged ASEAN to move beyond its
“non-interference policy” and push for a solution to the growing crisis
in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, where tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims
have been displaced from their homes by communal clashes with local
Buddhists. Myanmar’s internal problems have taken on a regional
dimension after many Rohingya fled in rickety boats to Malaysia,
Thailand and Indonesia.
Source: dailytimes
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