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ASEAN Aims for Integration Five Years Early
ATTENTION - UPDATES with hopes for early
integration ///
KUALA LUMPUR, July 25, 2006 (AFP) - Southeast
Asia hopes to accelerate by five years to 2015 its plans to
integrate the region's diverse economies in order to remain
relevant, Singapore's foreign minister said Tuesday. Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) foreign ministers discussed pushing
forward the target date for regional integration from 2020, George
Yeo told reporters at the end of their annual meeting here. The
ministers will put the proposals to their leaders who will hold
their annual summit in December in the central Philippine city of
Cebu, he said. "We discussed the importance of advancing the process
of ASEAN integration -- whether or not we should move the target
date for establishing an ASEAN community from 2020 to 2015," Yeo
said. "It's something that we will put up to the leaders for their
consideration in Cebu when they meet in the summit in December."
Countries like Singapore and Thailand were for the acceleration of
the timetable, Yeo added. It was "very important" for ASEAN to
integrate "because the world is changing rapidly," Yeo said. "Right
now because we are united, we are able to play a decisive central
role in Asia. To continue playing that role we must be much more
integrated than we are now." In his address to the ministers earlier
Tuesday, Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi urged ASEAN
to speed up economic integration, saying it should never slide back
to the Cold War era when countries sat on opposing sides of the
ideological fence. The calls for regional cohesiveness came a day
after global trade talks collapsed in acrimony over disagreements
between major players. Yeo, who played a key role in the global
trade talks when he was Singapore's trade minister, expressed regret
at the collapse of the talks under the World Trade Organisation. "To
me it's very painful... There's so much on the table in terms of
potential gains to global welfare," he said. "So I hope that one way
or another, the main players will come back and negotiate and find a
way to break the deadlock. Because to abandon it now, there will be
adverse consequences to the global trading system and it's not good
for small countries like ASEAN countries." ASEAN, a market of 500
million people, aims to abolish tariffs by 2015 under a regional
free-trade agreement -- a key ingredient to plans to become a single
market and manufacturing base by 2020. ASEAN is also negotiating
separately for free-trade agreements (FTAs) with China, Japan and
South Korea, hoping this will become a catalyst for a wider East
Asian free trade zone, potentially the biggest in the world. Some
ASEAN countries, notably Singapore, have signed FTAs with key
trading partners or are in the process of negotiating such deals.
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