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ASEAN Leaders to Get Tougher on Terror, Open up Economies
by Martin Abbugao =(PICTURE)= ATTENTION - ADDS
quotes, details ///
CEBU, Philippines, Jan 13, 2007 (AFP) - Southeast
Asian leaders pledged Saturday to get tougher on terrorism, move
faster towards a single market and reshape their regional grouping
ASEAN to meet the demands of the 21st century. Facing economic
pressure from heavyweights China and India, and the twin shadows of
terrorism and poverty, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
adopted an ambitious agenda it hopes can transform the region.
Following a day of talks at a summit that was postponed last month
amid fears of a terror attack, it set a goal of 2015 for a
free-trade zone that would cover almost 570 million people, more
than the population of Europe. "ASEAN is committed to expanding its
trade area to create one of the world's greatest trading blocs,"
said Philippine President Gloria Arroyo, who hosted the gathering in
a five-star seaside resort in Cebu. The leaders also signed their
first convention on fighting terrorism, making it easier to track
suspects and money across borders, share intelligence information
and extradite suspects from one ASEAN country to another. Even
though the region has suffered a series of bloody attacks in recent
years, leaders also pledged to try to reintegrate convicted
terrorists into society -- a sharp departure from usual western
approaches. Perhaps the biggest change is a plan to revamp how this
disparate group of nations -- run by everything from sultans to
old-school communist ideologues -- will handle its internal
diplomacy. The group signed a commitment to create ASEAN's
first-ever charter, aimed at turning it into a European Union-style
entity with binding rules and regulations. "ASEAN has matured into a
regional organisation and is expanding its role as an integrated
regional economy and a dynamic force in maintaining regional peace
and stability," member nations said in their signed accord. "We are
committed to establish an ASEAN charter as a crowning achievement of
40 years of ASEAN." The bloc has always acted in the past on
informal consensus and refrained from interfering in each other's
internal affairs, leaving it open to criticism that it is little
more than a "talking shop". The issue has come up most often
regarding the ruling generals of Myanmar, who have snubbed regional
and international pressure to move to democracy. Myanmar escaped
censure at the UN Security Council on Friday when China and Russia
used a rare double veto to block a US-backed resolution that would
have called on the junta to release all its political prisoners. The
ASEAN charter is to be drawn up and is scheduled to be adopted in
November by the group, which was founded by five nations as a
bulwark against communism at the height of the Vietnam War. Leaders
endorsed a charter blueprint that allows for the possible expulsion
of members in extreme circumstances. Analysts doubt whether the
group will take the hard step that would allow the outright
punishment of its members, and Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi admitted there had been differences over the charter.
But he cautioned: "In order for an organisation to survive, it has
to be a rules-based organisation." The group also signed an
agreement to safeguard the rights of millions of migrant workers,
whose labour is essential to many of the region's economies. China,
South Korea, India and Japan will hold summits with the 10 ASEAN
leaders on Sunday. They will be joined by Australia and New Zealand
Monday for the East Asia summit. ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia,
Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore,
Thailand and Vietnam. bur-sm/mc/skj
ASEAN-SUMMIT - 01/13/2007 19:04 - AFP |