U.S., China trade tensions a pressing
concern for ASEAN: Singapore PM
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[April 28, 2018]
By Jack Kim
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Singapore Prime
Minister Lee Hsien Loong said on Saturday a mounting trade spat between
the United States and China was one of the most pressing worries for
Southeast Asian nations as their leaders echoed the concern over rising
protectionism.
Lee flagged his concerns in remarks made as he opened a summit of the
10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), for many of
which the United States and China are the top two trading partners.
"In particular, the recent trade tensions between the U.S. and China are
worrying concerns," he said. Singapore occupies the group's rotating
chair for this year.
"We are deeply concerned over the rising tide of protectionism and
anti-globalisation sentiments," said a statement issued on behalf of the
ASEAN chair at the end of summit talks.
The U.S. Trump administration has threatened to impose tariffs on up to
$150 billion of Chinese imports, and Beijing has vowed retaliation
against American exports.
On Saturday Lee said the open and rules-based multilateral trading
system, which has backed the growth of ASEAN, has come under pressure as
the political mood in many countries has shifted against free trade.
There was little progress on the push to resolve the humanitarian crisis
in Myanmar, despite a fresh plea by ASEAN leaders for Myanmar to
implement the recommendations of an international panel.
The situation in Myanmar's western state of Rakhine, where hundreds of
thousands of minority Rohingya Muslims have fled for neighboring
Bangladesh after a military crackdown, is one of the biggest challenges
facing the ASEAN group.
Lee said negotiations for a code of conduct in the South China Sea had
started last month between ASEAN and China, and there was hope for an
early conclusion. Four ASEAN member states have claims to the disputed
South China Sea, one of the world's most volatile hotspots and one of
its busiest waterways.
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Singapore's Prime Minister hosts an ASEAN working dinner in
Singapore April 27, 2018. Picture taken April 27, 2018. ASEAN2018
Organising Committee/Handout Via REUTERS
"We emphasized the importance of non-militarization and
self-restraint in the conduct of all activities by claimants and all
other states...that could further complicate the situation and
escalate tensions in the South China Sea," the chair's statement
said.
ASEAN, formed more than half a century ago, has struggled with
challenges facing the region because it works by consensus and is
reluctant to get involved in matters considered internal to its
members.
Singapore is this year's chair of the bloc, which includes Myanmar,
Laos, Cambodia, the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia,
Brunei and Vietnam.
The group is working on initiatives to jointly tackle the threat of
extremism and cyber attacks, as well as to promote trade and
cross-border e-payment systems.
Meanwhile ASEAN welcomed Friday's summit meeting of the two Koreas
and their pledge to work for peace and a nuclear-free Korean
peninsula, as well as the plans for U.S. President Donald Trump to
meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
Lee said Singapore has not had any request to host the Kim-Trump
meeting, despite reports that the island state is on a short-list of
potential venues for the talks expected in June.
(Reporting by Jack Kim; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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