SIEM REAP, Cambodia (AFP) — China and Southeast Asian nations pledged
Wednesday to strive for closer economic ties, setting aside regional
tensions over a territorial row in the resource-rich South China Sea.
Trade
between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
jumped to over $200 billion in the first seven months of 2012, up nine
percent year-on-year, Chinese Commerce Minister Chen Deming said during a
meeting with regional economic ministers in the Cambodian tourist hub
of Siem Reap.
The business relationship between ASEAN and China
was "particularly important" amid global economic gloom, he said, adding
that both sides have "a solid basis for cooperation" and "bright
prospects".
China is ASEAN's largest trading partner, while the
10-nation bloc last year overtook Japan as Beijing's third-biggest
trading partner.
"China is willing to be ASEAN's good neighbour, good friend and good partner," Chen said in his opening remarks.
This
week's talks between regional economic ministers mark the first
high-level gathering of ASEAN members since a foreign ministers' meeting
in July ended in acrimony over how to deal with a dispute in the South
China Sea, exposing deep divisions within the bloc.
The tension
that hung over those meetings appeared absent from the cordial gathering
in Siem Reap, suggesting that ASEAN members do not want the maritime
row to hurt business.
"It's a completely different ballgame," said
Southeast Asia expert Carl Thayer, emeritus professor at the University
of New South Wales in Australia.
The foreign and economic ministers have "completely different agendas", he added.
Friction
within ASEAN also eased significantly after Indonesia got the bloc to
agree on six key points on the South China Sea following intense
diplomatic efforts in the days after the failed ASEAN summit, Thayer
said.
China claims sovereignty over almost all of the
resource-rich sea, which is home to vital shipping lanes, but ASEAN
members the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei have overlapping
claims.
Hanoi and Manila have recently accused Beijing of increasingly aggressive behaviour in the disputed waters.
The
ASEAN group, which also includes Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar,
Singapore and Thailand, saw its economies as a whole grow by 4.7 percent
in 2011, down from 7.6 percent growth in 2010, according to ASEAN data.
"We
recognise the external environment has become more hostile," Malaysian
Minister for International Trade and Industry Mustapa Mohamed said, in a
nod to the economic troubles of the key eurozone and US markets.
Nonetheless,
"we consider ourselves to be one of the most dynamic regions in the
world under the circumstances", he told AFP on the sidelines of the
talks.
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