Nusa Dua - Japan on Friday pledged
assistance to Southeast Asia's infrastructure projects worth US$25 billion
(S$32.5 billion) and called for a multilateral forum to discuss maritime
cooperation across Asia, in an implicit challenge to China's clout in the
region.
Japan, worried about its declining regional
and global role, wants to deepen ties with the Association of South East Asian
Nations (ASEAN) as China, which surpassed Japan as the world's No.2 economy,
becomes a vital player in the region.
At a summit with leaders from the 10-member
ASEAN, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda offered support for 33 flagship
infrastructure projects in Southeast Asia, using government aid and credit as
well as private-sector finances, a Japanese foreign ministry official told
reporters.
"It will create some 2 trillion yen
(S$32.5 billion) worth of business opportunities," the official said.
The move comes as China, which separately held
a meeting with ASEAN leaders on Friday, offered $10 billion in loans to the
regional grouping.
The Japan-ASEAN summit took place ahead of the
East Asia Summit (EAS), which brings together ASEAN leaders and eight dialogue
partners -- Japan, China, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, India, the
United States and Russia, on the Indonesian resort island of Bali.
Maritime security will be front and center
when the EAS leaders meet on Saturday, with territorial disputes in the South
China Sea -- a crucial shipping lane believed to contain valuable oil and
minerals -- at the heart of tensions.
Beijing wants to resolve the dispute through
bilateral negotiations but other claimants -- Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan,
Malaysia and Brunei -- prefer a multilateral approach, which opens the way for
an indirect role for the United States.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said on Friday that
"outside forces" had no excuse to get involved, offering a veiled
warning to the United States and others not to stick their noses into the
sensitive issue.
Multilateral efforts
In a move that could put pressure on China,
Noda proposed holding a multilateral conference on maritime cooperation, which
will be open to EAS government officials as well as private-sector experts.
In a joint declaration for enhancing their
strategic partnership, Japan and Southeast Asian leaders also said they would
"promote and deepen ASEAN-Japan cooperation on maritime security and
maritime safety in the region in accordance with universally-agreed principles
of international law."
Crude oil from the Middle East is shipped
through the South China Sea to Japan.
But the Japanese official said Tokyo has no
intention to interfere with the South China Sea conflict and called for efforts
to resolve the dispute.
"We believe it is important that they
seek a peaceful resolution in a transparent matter based on international
law."
As China grows in confidence and military
power, Tokyo has recently boosted defense cooperation with Southeast Asia.
In September, Japan agreed with the
Philippines to strengthen ties between their coast guards and naval forces,
while in October it agreed to boost defense cooperation with Vietnam.
ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia,
Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
Yoko Nishikawa
Reuters
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