In summit with SE Asia, Japan champions open seas, Australia defends
AUKUS pact
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[October 27, 2021]
By Ain Bandial
BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN (Reuters) - Japanese
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Wednesday stressed to Southeast Asian
leaders his country's strong opposition to challenges to a free and open
maritime order, underscoring regional concerns about China's growing
military clout.
Kishida took part in a virtual summit with leaders of the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), who earlier discussed concerns about
militarisation and confrontation in the South China Sea and called for
the conclusion of an ASEAN-China code of conduct "consistent with
international law".
U.S. President Joe Biden will join the virtual East Asia Summit later on
Wednesday, with leaders of China, India, Australia, New Zealand, Russia
and South Korea, Japan and ASEAN members.
Southeast Asia has become a strategic battleground in the rivalry
between the United States and China, with Washington and its allies
stepping up patrols to challenge Beijing's vast maritime fleet, which it
deploys to buttress its claims to sovereignty over most of the South
China Sea.
An international arbitration tribunal in 2016 invalidated China's
claims, which overlap with Malaysia, Vietnam, Taiwan, the Philippines
and Brunei.
A trilateral security pact agreed last month between the United States,
Britain and Australia, under which Australia will get access to
nuclear-powered submarines, has added to fears of an arms race taking
shape in Southeast Asia.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo on Wednesday said he was concerned the
agreement, known as AUKUS "could spark rivalry in the region", according
to his foreign minister, Retno Marsudi.
The Philippines has backed AUKUS but its president, Rodrigo Duterte, on
Wednesday said it "must complement and not complicate our working
methods for cooperation."
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Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida speaks during the virtual ASEAN
Plus Three Summit, hosted by ASEAN Summit Brunei, in Bandar Seri
Begawan, Brunei October 27, 2021. ASEAN SUMMIT 2021 HOST
PHOTO/Handout via REUTERS
The leaders' remarks were made a meeting between
ASEAN and Australia, whose prime minister, Scott Morrison, proposed
a strengthening of relations to the level of comprehensive strategic
partnership (CSP), which would make it the first country to agree
such a deal with ASEAN.
Morrison also sought to reassure ASEAN that AUKUS did not mean a
pursuit of nuclear arms and was not a security threat.
"AUKUS adds to our network of partnerships that support regional
stability and security," he said.
A day earlier, ASEAN addressed another burning issue in Southeast
Asia, the ongoing crisis in Myanmar following a coup eight months
ago. ASEAN chair Brunei said they reiterated a call for special
envoy Erywan Yusof to visit the country as mediator "with full
access to all parties concerned".
Myanmar was not represented at the summit, as ASEAN had snubbed the
leader of the coup, Min Aung Hlaing, for his failure to follow an
agreed peace process, and the junta refused the bloc's offer to send
an alternative representative.
Despite the acrimony of Myanmar's no-show, ASEAN chair Brunei took a
conciliatory tone in its summit statement.
"Myanmar needs both time and political space to deal with its many
and complex challenges," it said.
(Additional reporting by Stanley Widianto in Jakarta; Kiyoshi
Takenaka in Tokyo, Colin Packham in Canberra; Writing by Martin
Petty; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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