BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN: Southeast Asian and European
foreign ministers meet in Brunei on Friday to chart a "new chapter"
in their relations now that democratic reforms are under way in Myanmar.
Human rights abuses and the harsh suppression of
political dissent long made Myanmar a constant thorn in ties between the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the international community,
including the European Union.
But over the past year, Myanmar's quasi-civilian
government, led by President Thein Sein, an ex-general, has freed hundreds of
political prisoners, eased media restrictions and welcomed the opposition back
into politics.
Myanmar also held historic by-elections on April 1
in which democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi won a seat in parliament, floated its
currency and signalled it was ready to accept foreign investments.
The EU this month rewarded what it said were
"historic changes" in Myanmar by suspending for one year a wide range
of trade, economic and individual sanctions, although it left intact an arms
embargo.
"The remarkable transformation that is under
way in Myanmar will further strengthen EU-ASEAN relations," said EU High
Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton.
In an opinion piece published in the Jakarta Post
ahead of the one-day foreign ministers' meeting in Brunei, she said the
gathering would "jointly commend the significant progress made by Myanmar
towards a democratic future".
She also said she would visit Myanmar after the
meeting to "launch a new phase in EU-Myanmar" ties. The EU said in
January it would open an office in the country's main city Yangon to manage aid
programmes.
"I would say, yes, it is a new chapter because
Myanmar is no longer a constant thorn like in the past," a Southeast Asian
diplomat told AFP.
"We can now turn a page in our relations."
Analysts said it was still "early days"
and Myanmar needs to do more for ties with the West to fully bloom.
"Yes, there has been real progress on the human
rights front but this needs to be extended to the whole country and the new
government needs more time to show how committed it is to these reforms,"
said Justin Harper, market strategist at IG Markets Singapore.
"So while Myanmar is no longer a thorn in the
side, the wounds haven't yet healed."
At the Brunei meeting, ministers will discuss ways
to unleash the full potential of two-way trade between the two organisations'
members, which reached 167 billion euros ($221 billion) in 2011.
Plans for an ASEAN-EU free trade agreement (FTA)
failed to take off because of differences over the scope and depth of such an
accord, with the Myanmar issue also coming into play, according to diplomats.
The EU is now negotiating FTAs with individual ASEAN
members, hoping that these can become "building blocks" for a
region-to-region deal, diplomats say.
Harper said ASEAN - which covers Brunei, Cambodia,
Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and
Vietnam - has become vital for the EU economically.
"Given the government debt crisis within the
eurozone, the EU will need ASEAN more than ASEAN needs the EU," he said.
"ASEAN member nations are generally in a good
shape and are seeing domestic demand grow so (they) rely less heavily on
exports. The same can't be said for Europe."
- AFP/de
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