MANILA — Senior Southeast Asian foreign ministry officials met in the Philippines
on Wednesday to try to improve maritime cooperation amid sea disputes that
threaten regional stability.
Discussions during the three-day
ASEAN Maritime Forum will focus on maritime security, sea piracy and ensuring
"freedom of navigation" in the seas they share, the foreign
department said in a statement.
ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia,
Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and
Vietnam.
"The Philippines would like
to positively engage our partners to discuss cross-cutting maritime issues and
explore ways and means to enhance activities aimed at bolstering maritime
security and cooperation in East Asia," said foreign department spokesman
Raul Hernandez.
He said a chairman's statement
spelling out agreed cooperation efforts would be released Thursday after the
closed-door sessions.
The officials at the meeting are
mostly deputy foreign ministers and senior foreign ministry officials.
The forum is to be expanded
Friday to include ASEAN partners Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand,
South Korea, Russia and the United States, the department said.
Japan's delegation is led by
deputy minister for foreign affairs Koji Tsuruoka, who is expected to deliver a
speech on Friday.
One diplomat at the talks said
the speech may touch on an ongoing dispute with China over a group of islands
called Senkaku in the East China Sea, which China also claims and calls Diaoyu.
China is also embroiled in
territorial disputes with Southeast Asian nations over the South China Sea.
It claims sovereignty over nearly
all of the South China Sea, which is believed to hold vast amounts of oil and
gas, is a rich fishing ground and is home to shipping lanes vital to global
trade.
But the Philippines, Brunei,
Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan also have claims to parts of the sea, some of them
overlapping.
The Philippines and China have
been locked in a months-long diplomatic stand-off over Scarborough Shoal, an
outcrop of rocks in the South China Sea, which Manila calls the West Philippine
Sea.
The Philippines insists the shoal
sits well within its 200-mile exclusive economic zone spelt out under the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
The nearest major Chinese land
mass is 1,200 kilometres northwest, according to Philippine navy maps.
The Chinese embassy in Manila
would not release the names of its officials attending this week's meeting.
AFP
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