By JIM GOMEZ,
Associated Press
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Southeast Asian leaders decided Sunday to
ask China to start formal talks "as soon as possible" on crafting a
legally binding accord aimed at preventing an outbreak of violence in
disputed South China Sea territories, a top diplomat said.
Leaders
of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations made the decision during
their annual summit in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh, ASEAN
Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan said.
The South China Sea
territorial disputes, which many fear could spark Asia's next war, have
overshadowed discussions at the summit, where the top agenda items
included human rights and expanding an Asian free-trade area.
Four
countries in the 10-member ASEAN — Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines
and Vietnam — have been locked in long-unresolved territorial rifts with
China and Taiwan in the resource-rich waters, where a bulk of the
world's oil and cargo passes. Since Chinese and Vietnamese naval forces
engaged in deadly clashes in the region in the 1970s, the disputes have
settled into an uneasy standoff.
But fresh territorial spats
involving China, Vietnam and the Philippines starting last year have set
off calls for ASEAN and China to turn a nonaggression accord they
signed in 2002 to a stronger, legally-binding "code of conduct" aimed at
discouraging aggressive acts that could lead to dangerous
confrontations or accidental clashes in the busy region.
ASEAN
member countries have submitted features they each want to see in such
an accord and were now ready to sit as a bloc to discuss with China how
the agreement could be drafted. The crucial talks could start
immediately, even right after the Cambodia summit, according to Surin.
Cambodian
Prime Minister Hun Sen, host of this year's summit, would convey the
bloc's decision to his Chinese counterpart, Wen Jiabao, who would fly to
Cambodia later Sunday to join expanded ASEAN meetings in the next two
days.
"They would like to see the commencement of the discussion
as soon as possible because this is an issue of interest, concern and
worry of the international community," Surin told reporters. "It's an
issue between ASEAN and China to resolve together ... It needs two to
tango."
U.S. President Barack Obama, would also fly to Cambodia to
attend on Tuesday the so-called East Asia Summit, an annual forum where
ASEAN leaders and their counterparts from eight other nations,
including China and the United states, would discuss security and
economic concerns. Washington has backed calls for the drafting of a
South China Sea nonaggression pact.
It's unclear how China would respond, with ASEAN diplomats saying they have gotten unclear signals from Chinese officials.
Vietnam
and the Philippines have separately accused China since last year of
intruding into South China Sea islands, reefs and waters they claim and
of disrupting their oil explorations well within their territorial
waters. China, which claims virtually the entire South China Sea, has
dismissed the protests, saying those waters belonged to Beijing since
ancient times.
China has sought one on one negotiations with rival
nations to resolve the disputes, something that will give it advantage
because of its sheer size, and has objected to any effort to bring the
problem to regional or international forums like ASEAN. It has also
warned Washington not to get involved but American officials have
declared that the peaceful resolution of the disputes and freedom of
navigation in the vast sea was in the U.S. national interest.
Obama was expected to reiterate Washington's call for a legally-binding code of conduct in the South China Sea in Cambodia.
ASEAN
leaders, meanwhile, adopted a human rights declaration on Sunday
despite last-minute calls for a postponement by critics, including
Washington, who said the pact contains loopholes that can allow
atrocities to continue.
ASEAN, an unwieldy collective of liberal
democracies and authoritarian states, signed a document adopting the
Human Rights Declaration in Phnom Penh. The nonbinding declaration calls
for an end to torture, arbitrary arrests and other rights violations
that have been longtime concerns in Southeast Asia, which rights
activists once derisively described as being ruled by a "club of
dictators."
ASEAN diplomats have called the declaration a
milestone in the region despite its imperfections, saying it will help
cement democratic reforms in countries such as Myanmar, which until
recently has been widely condemned for its human rights record.
Founded
in 1967 as an anti-communist bloc in the Cold War era, ASEAN has taken
feeble steps to address human rights concerns in the vast region of 600
million people. It adopted a charter in 2007 where it committed to
uphold international law and human rights but retained a bedrock
principle of not interfering in each other's internal affairs - a
loophole that critics say helps member states commit abuses without
consequence.
During the summit, the leaders are expected to
announce the start of negotiations for an expanded free-trade area
involving ASEAN member countries and six regional economic powerhouses
that include China but excludes the United States, which is promoting a
separate free-trade arrangement involving Asia-Pacific nations.
ASEAN leaders meanwhile agreed that implementation of an ambitious ASEAN Economic Community will be slightly delayed.
Delegates
explained to the press after a plenary meeting Sunday that the AEC will
be launched at the end of 2015 — December 31 — rather than on Jan. 1,
2015 as originally envisioned.
The community, roughly similar to
the EC, would integrate the diverse nations' economies, covering trade,
investment and other measures.
Thai Foreign Minister Surapong
Tovichakchaikul said the meeting's chairman, Cambodian Prime Minister
Hun Sen, had proposed the later starting date, and won the approval of
all members.
He said the ASEAN Economic Minister's Meeting had
earlier agreed the implementation could begin on Jan. 1, 2015, but that
the leaders agreed Sunday that much work had yet to be done. "ASEAN is
more concerned about substance than the date," he said.
Associated Press writers Grant Peck and Sopheng Cheang contributed to this report from Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
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