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ASEAN Summit to Create Single Market, Inks
Historic Deal with China
by Martin Abbugao = (PICTURES) = ATTENTION -
RECASTS, ADDS China trade deal ///
VIENTIANE, Nov 29 (AFP) - Southeast Asian
countries moved a step closer to forging their own European-style
single market here Monday, and also signed deals with China towards
creating the world's largest free-trade area by 2010. The 10 leaders
of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) sealed a
six-year programme to fast-track trade liberalisation and regional
integration to create a powerful ASEAN community by 2020, or
earlier. Political reforms in military-ruled Myanmar following a
leadership shake-up and violence in Thailand's restive southern
provinces cast a shadow over their two-day summit, but discussions
on the concerns were limited to sideline talks. The six-year plan
foresees the removal of tariffs for products by 2010 for ASEAN's six
more developed members -- Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore and Thailand -- and 2015 for less-developed
Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam. ASEAN members signed a separate
agreement to liberalise tariffs in 11 key sectors, including autos,
textiles and electronics, by 2007 for their six more developed
members and 2012 for the other four. These are key measures in
ASEAN's vision to establish a single market of more than 500 million
people by 2020, to forge an economic bloc capable of standing up to
rising competitors such as India and China. Chinese Prime Minister
Wen Jiabao and his ASEAN counterparts meanwhile signed historic
trade pacts to pave the way for the world's biggest free-trade zone
by 2010, covering nearly two billion people. The pacts include an
agreement to liberalise tariff and non-tariff barriers on traded
goods and one to set up a mechanism to resolve trade disputes. "Our
economies have a great deal of complementarity. It's important for
both parties to promote their cooperation going forward," Chinese
Finance Minister Jin Renqing told AFP. ASEAN also plans to start
free trade negotiations with Japan and South Korea next year, while
Australia and New Zealand, attending an ASEAN summit for the first
time, hope to announce the start of their own talks on a free trade
deal. Australian Prime Minister John Howard arrived in Laos for the
summit under pressure to sign ASEAN's non-aggression pact, amid
concerns in the region about his threats to carry out pre-emptive
strikes on foreign terror bases. But Howard has resisted, saying
that signing the treaty would prevent Canberra from criticising
other member countries over issues such as human rights. The pact
bars ASEAN from interfering in the domestic affairs of its members,
a clause Thailand has used to try to suppress the summit raising
Muslim unrest that has left more than 550 people dead in the south
this year. Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra threatened to walk
out of the summit if leaders raised the unrest, which in particular
concerns ASEAN members Malaysia and Indonesia, both Muslim-majority
nations. Thaksin met Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
and Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi late Sunday to
soothe tensions over his stance, and it was not raised in the
leaders' meeting Monday. ASEAN is also worried about the slow pace
of democratic reform in Myanmar, which on Monday extended opposition
leader Aung San Suu Kyi's period of house arrest for another year,
according to her party and security officials. The internationally
condemned Myanmar regime takes over chairmanship of the ASEAN in
2006, a potential source of embarrassment for the group. bur-br/ph/mtp |