UNITED NATIONS—Indonesia is circulating among Southeast Asian nations
a draft code of conduct for the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea),
hoping for progress before a regional summit in November, its foreign
minister said Tuesday.
Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa has been trying to patch up
differences among Association of Southeast Asian Nations members on how
to manage the maritime territorial disputes that pit China against
several of its neighbors in a region where sea lanes are crucial to
world trade, rich fishing grounds and potentially major reserves of
natural gas and oil.
He said that the situation in the region — also rattled by a
separate island dispute between China and Japan — is very troubling, but
countries including China recognize they have much to lose from
conflict.
“There’s a recognition that the countries of the region have
prospered and have developed precisely because there’s been very benign,
stable conditions,” Natalegawa told The Associated Press on the
sidelines of the UN General Assembly’s annual gathering of world
leaders. “This is something we don’t want to be tinkering with. It could
become like a Pandora’s box.”
China claims most of the West Philippine Sea. In July it upped
the ante in its sharp disagreements with the Philippines and Vietnam
over who owns what by establishing a military garrison, which Beijing
claims will administer a vast area of sea and tiny islands scattered
across it.
Beijing wants to settle conflicting claims with individual
nations rather than through a multilateral mechanism that will give the
smaller members greater clout in negotiations.
Natelagawa, who met with his Chinese counterpart Tuesday, said there had been some adjustment in China’s position.
He said China recognizes “as much as anyone else” the need for
diplomatic progress, including implementing a declaration of conduct —
the non-binding agreement that Beijing signed up to with Asean in 2002.
The code of conduct on peacefully resolving the West Philippine Sea
sovereignty disputes is intended as the mechanism for putting that
declaration into practice.
“What we are looking for is a basic rules-of-the-road type of
arrangement for the South China Sea,” said Natelagawa, “so that
countries behave in a manner that is expected of them in maintaining
stability.”
In his speech to the General Assembly on Tuesday, Indonesian
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said the disputes had been festering
for the better part of a century and Asean was engaged in “earnest
negotiations” for a legally binding code of conduct.
Natelagawa said “we will begin to test the waters” on the draft
code in consultations with Southeast Asian governments this week in New
York, hoping for progress before a summit of East Asian leaders to be
held in Cambodia in November.
He said that was needed so the disputes don’t run “out of control.”
Indonesia, by far the largest of Asean’s 10 member states, is not
itself a claimant in the West Philippine Sea, although as a sprawling
island nation it has a major stake in the region’s stability.
In recent years, Jakarta has assumed a more prominent leadership
role within the grouping, and remains on good terms with both the US and
China, which are increasingly at odds over how to handle the sea
disputes.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Indonesia seeks rules of road for West Philippine Sea
8:03 AM