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						Warnings of a 'domino effect' of protectionism as Asian 
						leaders meet
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		 [November 13, 2018] 
		 By Lee Chyen Yee and Fathin Ungku 
 SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Asian leaders 
		gathered for a summit on Tuesday amid warnings that the post-World War 
		Two international order is in jeopardy and trade tensions between 
		Washington and Beijing could trigger a "domino effect" of protectionist 
		measures by other countries.
 
 Malaysian Prime Mahathir Mohamad told a business forum ahead of the 
		summit in Singapore that other developed countries would take a cue from 
		the United States and China if their tit-for-tat tariff war is allowed 
		to spiral.
 
 "The trade tension between the two world powers is bound to create a 
		domino effect that will affect trade reactions and will be a reason for 
		other developed countries to adopt protective measures against 
		developing countries, including the ASEAN countries," Mahathir said, 
		referring to the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations 
		(ASEAN).
 
 Chinese Premier Li Keqiang - for a second day - struck a conciliatory 
		note on the trade spat, saying he was hopeful that the two sides will 
		find a way to prevent it escalating further.
 
 "I still hope we can hold talks based on mutual respect, balance and 
		mutual benefits to resolve the issue. There are no winners in a trade 
		war," Li said before his meeting with the ASEAN leaders.
 
		
		 
		
 U.S. Vice President Mike Pence will attend the Singapore meetings 
		instead of President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly panned existing 
		multilateral trade pacts as unfair and has railed against China over 
		intellectual property theft, entry barriers to American businesses and a 
		yawning U.S. trade gap.
 
 It was not clear if Li and Pence would meet separately on the sidelines 
		in Singapore, which would be a prelude to a summit scheduled between 
		Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the end of the month in Buenos 
		Aires.
 
 Before he arrived in Singapore on Monday, Li said China would further 
		open its economy in the face of rising protectionism, though he did not 
		refer directly to China's bruising trade war with the United States.
 
 "RIVAL BLOCS"
 
 Mahathir, a veteran strongman of the region who in May returned to the 
		prime minister's office he had occupied for 22 years, told reporters 
		that the United States is "a colonial power" that uses "economic 
		pressure to cow people".
 
 In his speech, he said "the rise of trade protectionism, resurgent 
		nationalistic movements and inward-looking policies" seemed to be 
		emerging even among ASEAN nations.
 
 That was echoed by summit host Singaporean Prime Lee Hsien Loong, who 
		told a welcome ceremony for his ASEAN counterparts that "the 
		international order is at a turning point".
 
 "The existing free, open and rules-based multilateral system which has 
		underpinned ASEAN's growth and stability has come under stress," he 
		said, adding that it was unclear if the international order would break 
		up into rival blocs.
 
		
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			ASEAN leaders Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi and Malaysia's Prime 
			Minister Mahathir Mohamad take their positions for the group photo 
			during the opening ceremony of the 33rd ASEAN Summit in Singapore 
			November 13, 2018. REUTERS/Edgar Su 
            
			 
Returning to the theme as the leaders sat down to dinner, he said: "Countries 
are becoming insular, retreating from multilateralism and globalization, which 
has been the cornerstone of ASEAN peace and stability." 
China's Li is expected to rally support at the Singapore meetings for the 
Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), a free trade pact that will 
encompass more than a third of the world’s GDP.
 "Free trade has, in some aspects, prevented war effectively," he said in a 
speech on Tuesday. "We are willing to negotiate with all sides to push ahead 
with free trade internationally, and we're also willing to discuss a fairer 
system."
 
 The RCEP agreement includes 16 countries, including ASEAN nations, Australia, 
China, India, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea, but not the United States.
 
The draft of a statement to be issued by RCEP nations later in the week, which 
was reviewed by Reuters, said the group would instruct "ministers and 
negotiators to work toward the full conclusion of the RCEP negotiations in 
2019".
 SOUTH CHINA SEA DEAL
 
 Li said that Beijing hoped a consultation with Southeast Asian nations on a code 
of conduct in the disputed South China Sea would be completed in three years, 
and that such an deal would bolster free trade.
 
 China and ASEAN agreed in August on a working text to continue long drawn-out 
negotiations over the code of conduct.
 
 
Some ASEAN members and China have overlapping claims to islands in the sea, one 
of the world's busiest waterways. For years, they have been discussing a pact to 
prevent an escalation of disputes.
 "It is China's hope that the COC (code of conduct) consultation will be finished 
in three years time so that it will contribute to enduring peace and stability 
in the South China Sea," Li said. "China and ASEAN countries will benefit in 
that process, it will also be conducive to free trade and go on to serve the 
interests of other parties."
 
 
 Last week, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis 
urged their Chinese counterparts to halt militarization of the South China Sea, 
drawing a rebuke from the Chinese for sending U.S. warships close to islands 
claimed by Beijing.
 
 (Additional reporting by Aradhana Aravindan, John Geddie and Jack Kim in 
Singapore; Manny Mogato in Manila, Joseph Sipalan in Kuala Lumpur; Writing by 
John Chalmers; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
 
				 
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