Windsor Star

Trudeau in Manila to pursue ties on trade, security

At table with U.S., China to discuss N. Korea

- ANDY BLATCHFORD The Canadian Press

MANILA, PHILIPPINE­S • Justin Trudeau landed in the Philippine­s on Sunday with the goal of raising Canada’s profile in the Asia-Pacific region, especially on security issues and trade.

This week, Trudeau will become the first sitting Canadian prime minister to participat­e in the annual East Asia Summit and is the only one who’s ever been invited, his office said.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Sunday, after she and Trudeau arrived in Manila, that the East Asia Summit will give him a chair at the top security table in the region.

He will sit alongside Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump during discussion­s on the security situation involving North Korea, she said.

“That is a really big deal,” Freeland said of the forum, which is held in conjunctio­n with the annual summit of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations. “Canada has never been there before.”

The ASEAN summit itself will give Trudeau an opportunit­y to advance his trade agenda with the emerging bloc of 10 Southeast Asian countries, which is already Canada’s sixth-largest trading partner.

Combined, the countries boast a market of 640 million people and an expanding middle class. They have been churning out significan­t economic growth.

With the uncertaint­y surroundin­g Canada’s NAFTA renegotiat­ion, the Asia-Pacific has become increasing­ly important in the government’s eyes.

Ottawa has been taking steps to increase its presence in the region. In September, the federal government opened explorator­y freetrade talks with ASEAN and last year it named an ambassador for the region.

“We are very much positionin­g ourselves in the AsiaPacifi­c,” Internatio­nal Trade Minister François-Philippe Champagne said in an interview before Trudeau left for his week-long trip to the region.

Experts, however, say Ottawa has largely failed in the past to maintain a consistent connection with ASEAN members.

David Mulroney, a former Canadian ambassador to China, believes forging closer relations with ASEAN should be Ottawa’s secondmost important priority in the region after Beijing.

Canada, however, has struggled to maintain a discipline­d focus on the region and hasn’t been as plugged in with ASEAN as Australia or even the United States, Mulroney added.

“When we’re at our best, we are a very popular partner in ASEAN,” said Mulroney, who noted that members of the group still recall a time when Canada was more deeply engaged with them, decades ago. “We haven’t given them reason to believe that it’s anything other than nostalgia, but I think Canada could be a very capable player in the region.”

He said ASEAN maintains tighter dialogue partnershi­ps with other countries outside the region, like Russia, the U.S. and Australia.

“We have yet to kind of crack that inner circle, in part because there are doubts about our commitment and our staying power,” Mulroney said.

Former Quebec premier Jean Charest, now the honorary chair of the Canada-ASEAN Business Council, said in a recent interview that Trump’s protection­ist story makes the case every day on the importance of diversifyi­ng.

Compared to China, Charest said ASEAN is a lesscomple­x partner to work with. “Canadians will have more reservatio­ns about China, which doesn’t mean that we should not pursue an initiative with China, but it’s just politicall­y more complicate­d,” he said.

In moving closer to ASEAN, Ottawa would still have to navigate the delicate issue of human rights — particular­ly amid concerns about serious, state-led violence by two of its members: Myanmar and the Philippine­s.

On Saturday, Trudeau was asked whether he intended to challenge Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte about the deadly, anti-drug crackdown by security forces in his country. The campaign has killed thousands of suspects, most of whom are poor.

Trudeau has said he has no one-on-one meeting planned with Duterte, who will host the ASEAN summit.

“There are a range of issues that I could bring up with him, that I may bring up with him, if we have an opportunit­y,” Trudeau told reporters Saturday in Danang, Vietnam.

“There’s always human rights concerns to bring up with a wide range of leaders.”

On Sunday, Freeland said Canada has “some serious concerns about human rights violations and violations of due process in the Philippine­s.”

“If we get the opportunit­y, we will talk about these issues,” said Freeland, who added that she raised them in a meeting last summer with the Philippine­s’ deputy minister of foreign affairs.

David Welch, CIGI chair of global security at the Balsillie School of Internatio­nal Affairs, said ASEAN countries likely wouldn’t appreciate Canada pressuring them on these issues, which could put Trudeau in an awkward position as he tries to deepen the relationsh­ip. “They don’t want us to talk about human rights,” Welch said.

The ASEAN bloc includes the Philippine­s, Indonesia, Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar.

WHEN WE’RE AT OUR BEST, WE ARE A VERY POPULAR PARTNER IN ASEAN.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives in the Philippine­s Sunday for the ASEAN summit. The meeting will give Trudeau an opportunit­y to advance his trade agenda with the emerging bloc of 10 Southeast Asian countries, which is already Canada’s...
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives in the Philippine­s Sunday for the ASEAN summit. The meeting will give Trudeau an opportunit­y to advance his trade agenda with the emerging bloc of 10 Southeast Asian countries, which is already Canada’s...

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