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| Graphic fact file on the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) whose leaders meet in Brunei on Wednesday |
Southeast Asian leaders met in Brunei on Wednesday for talks aimed at easing tensions over the South China Sea and building momentum towards groundbreaking economic partnerships.
The annual summit of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) began in the capital of the oil-rich sultanate with a
dinner in which the leaders were looking to rebuild unity after
unprecedented infighting last year.
The split was over how much pressure the group should try to apply to
China over competing territorial claims to the resource-rich South China
Sea.
The Philippines and Vietnam, as well as China and Taiwan, claim parts of
the sea, which is also home to some of the world's most important
shipping lanes as well as rich fishing grounds.
But a push by the Philippines and Vietnam for ASEAN to send a united
message to an increasingly assertive China crumbled amid resistance from
Cambodia, a close Chinese ally that held the rotating chair of the bloc
in 2012.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino said after Wednesday's dinner he was
pleased Brunei's Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah had made the South China Sea
issue a top priority at the summit, and that ASEAN had rebuilt some
unity on the issue.
"Everybody is interested in having a peaceful resolution and also in
voicing ... concern that there have been increasing disputes," Aquino
told reporters.
"We should really be thankful that the whole of the ASEAN is willing to discuss this instead of putting it on the backburner."
ASEAN leaders will make a united call in an end-of-summit statement for
talks with China on the issue, but they will avoid any strong language,
according to a draft of the document obtained by AFP.
"We reaffirmed our commitment to ensuring the peaceful resolution of
disputes without resorting to the threat or use of force, through
friendly consultations in accordance with universally recognised
principles of international law," the draft statement said.
The draft repeated a call made regularly by Southeast Asian countries
for an "early conclusion" on a legally binding code of conduct for the
sea between ASEAN and China.
But the draft made no mention of when they would hope to clinch a deal on the code.
Brunei had said one of its priorities as this year's ASEAN chair was to
see the code of conduct, initially proposed in 2002, agreed by the end
of the year.
However China, which prefers to negotiate directly with individual
countries rather than a united ASEAN bloc, has refused to begin
meaningful talks on the code, and has given no indication it is willing
to start negotiations soon.
Aquino, who wants a code secured as soon as possible, said Wednesday he
was nevertheless happy ASEAN was now at least united in trying to ensure
the disputes did not "become bloody".
"So there is unity of purpose and one can always be hopeful that that will lead to something more concrete," he said.
ASEAN leaders have said that one of the other key issues on the agenda
during the two-day summit is pressing ahead with deeper economic
integration within the bloc, and other countries in the region.
The leaders are set to announce that ASEAN will begin negotiations next
month with China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand
for a giant free trade pact, according to the draft end-of-summit
statement.
The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) aims to tie
together ASEAN's free trade agreements with each trading partner, which
would account for a third of the world's economic output, and is being
strongly backed by China.
ASEAN hopes to conclude the RCEP deal by the end of 2015.
The block is also aiming to create a single market for the 10 Southeast
Asian countries and its 600 million people -- known as the ASEAN
Economic Community -- by 2015.
That initiative is one of the other top items on the agenda in Brunei this week.


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