Local
Foreign
Business
Sports
Leisure
BM
Kadazan Dusun
Archives
Latest News
 
Nst-studio
Classifieds
In_sites_link
Football-link
Smbb-logo
Buuan kavavagu do MOSTI kihizab monihombus kahantazan tavasi |  Miobpinai osuvon pulis id kiis minomoduso songuhun pakalaja |  SWEPA PAPANTOD DO BOOGIZAN KALAJA OM POINGIDOPUAN: MUSA |  Pemimpin m'rakat bidas cadangan pembangkang Dewan Negara dimansuh |  Suri rumah, abang kandung bunuh pekerja ladang diburu polis |  Ibu bapa perlu awasi, pantau anak-anak layari internet elak budaya negatif, kata Hamisa |  DBKK roboh 4,442 rumah setinggan di bandaraya, kata Muhammad Ammir |  Ahmad Shabery fokus kembangkan infrastruktur komunikasi, caj internet lebih rendah |  Swepa dipuji tingkat usahawan, profesional wanita |  Jangan politikkan segala tindakan pihak berkuasa, kata Ahmad Zahid |  DALANG TIDAK AKAN DIDEDAH |  Arsenal prove critics wrong! |  Life after Fergie begins |  Indonesia in quarters |  Juniors forget scoring boots! | 
 Business

Asean studying possibilities of joint development in South China Sea

1st June, 2012

BANGKOK: Asean is looking into the possibilities of joint development in the South China Sea among the five claimants, Asean Secretary-General Dr Surin Pitsuwan told the World Economic Forum on East Asia here yesterday.

“They could possibly explore the resources together rather than focusing on who owns what,” he said.

In preparing the guidelines on the Code of Conduct (CoC) for the claimants, he said Asean was exploring the possibilities on whether such joint development could be included as one of the modalities in the CoC.

China and four Asean member countries—the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei—are the claimants for the whole or partly of the sea.

Explaining that such modalities are workable, he cited as an example that Thailand and Malaysia have jointly developed part of their overlapping territorial claim in the lower part of the Gulf of Thailand on a 50:50 basis.

Surin said such an approach could keep the conflict under control too. Looking at the way forward, he said, Asean should show the world that its four members and China could settle their differences peacefully.

He said the South China Sea issue was important as it provided passage for 85 per cent of the trade in the region.

United States Senator Susan M. Collins said her country was concerned with China’s provocative action in the South China Sea such as despatching para military ships to the territorial dispute area.

“We want to see freedom of navigation in the South China Sea. The US will play positive role in supporting Asean’s efforts to resolve the dispute,” she said.

Zhu Daojiong, a professor at the School of International Studies of the Peking University, said the freedom of navigation was not an issue in the South China Sea.

   
Email Print
   
 
 
E-browse
Actionline