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No agreement on South China Sea reached at ASEAN Summit | Earth Times News
Hanoi - The annual summit of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) wrapped up Friday in Hanoi without reaching any agreement on territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
Conflicts over territorial claims in the resource-rich sea have become increasingly tense over the past year due mainly to assertive moves by China, which claims most of the sea for itself.
Chinese naval forces in recent months have repeatedly seized Vietnamese fishing boats, and China has established government departments governing islands that are also claimed by Vietnam and Taiwan.
Vietnam has pressed for ASEAN members to resolve their mutual territorial claims in the area and then negotiate as a bloc with China while China insists on individual country-to-country negotiations. The issue had been expected to play a major role at the summit.
But the final statement issued by ASEAN leaders at the summit's conclusion made no mention of the South China Sea dispute.
In response to a question at a post-summit press conference, Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung only referred back to the Declaration on a Code of Conduct (DOC) signed by China and ASEAN in 2002, which commits the parties to seek a peaceful, negotiated settlement of the disputes.
"ASEAN and Chinese officials have agreed to hold meetings to discuss solutions to push the implementation of the DOC," Dung said.
On Thursday, Dung held a one-on-one meeting with Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. The Philippines has resolved a number of its disputes in bilateral negotiations with China and objected along with China in May when Vietnam and Malaysia submitted a joint declaration of their territorial claims to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
After the meeting, the Philippines said Arroyo and Dung had agreed to find a "win-win solution" to the Philippines' objections to the joint Vietnamese-Malaysian claims.
The lack of a joint declaration implied there had been no progress toward a common ASEAN position on Chinese territorial claims.
"The fact that China has continued to negotiate bilaterally is a reflection not just of Beijing's strength, but ASEAN's weakness," said Nazery Khalid, a specialist on the disputes at the Maritime Institute of Malaysia. "ASEAN needs to work towards addressing that."
Hanoi - The annual summit of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) wrapped up Friday in Hanoi without reaching any agreement on territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
Conflicts over territorial claims in the resource-rich sea have become increasingly tense over the past year due mainly to assertive moves by China, which claims most of the sea for itself.
Chinese naval forces in recent months have repeatedly seized Vietnamese fishing boats, and China has established government departments governing islands that are also claimed by Vietnam and Taiwan.
Vietnam has pressed for ASEAN members to resolve their mutual territorial claims in the area and then negotiate as a bloc with China while China insists on individual country-to-country negotiations. The issue had been expected to play a major role at the summit.
But the final statement issued by ASEAN leaders at the summit's conclusion made no mention of the South China Sea dispute.
In response to a question at a post-summit press conference, Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung only referred back to the Declaration on a Code of Conduct (DOC) signed by China and ASEAN in 2002, which commits the parties to seek a peaceful, negotiated settlement of the disputes.
"ASEAN and Chinese officials have agreed to hold meetings to discuss solutions to push the implementation of the DOC," Dung said.
On Thursday, Dung held a one-on-one meeting with Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. The Philippines has resolved a number of its disputes in bilateral negotiations with China and objected along with China in May when Vietnam and Malaysia submitted a joint declaration of their territorial claims to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
After the meeting, the Philippines said Arroyo and Dung had agreed to find a "win-win solution" to the Philippines' objections to the joint Vietnamese-Malaysian claims.
The lack of a joint declaration implied there had been no progress toward a common ASEAN position on Chinese territorial claims.
"The fact that China has continued to negotiate bilaterally is a reflection not just of Beijing's strength, but ASEAN's weakness," said Nazery Khalid, a specialist on the disputes at the Maritime Institute of Malaysia. "ASEAN needs to work towards addressing that."