New Straits Times

KEEPING PEACE ON THE SEAS

A Code of Conduct can guarantee freedom and safety of navigation in the South China Sea, writes

- DR YAN YAN

THE South China Sea has been at the centre of concern in the internatio­nal community due to its strategic and geopolitic­al importance. No single issue might be more eminently dangerous than the South China Sea issue to drive regional tension and great-power rivalry.

The past three years witnessed a relatively stable and peaceful period, due to joint efforts by China and Asean member states, especially bordering countries.

What will the situation be in 2019? Will tension rise again between relevant states? How can freedom and safety of navigation in the South China Sea be guaranteed?

Approachin­g the Code of Conduct (COC) is the priority task for a rules-based order in the South China Sea Region.

In the past decade, there have been calls for a regional code of conduct for the South China Sea to ensure peace and stability through regulating behavior. The first Working Group Meeting for 2019—the 27th JWG Meeting was held in Naypyidaw, Myanmar from Feb 27 to 28.

Since the official launch of the COC negotiatio­n in September 2013, the Code of Conduct negotiatio­n achieved quite a lot of progress.

In May 2017, the 14th Senior Officials Meeting held in Guiyang reviewed and approved the draft framework of COC.

In November 2018, Singapore Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishn­an announced that the Asean member states and China had reached the single draft of the COC negotiatin­g text.

The leaders of the 11 countries also agreed to complete the first reading within 2019. At the East Asia Summit, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang proposed the vision of completing the COC consultati­on

within three years, which means we will see a Code of Conduct within 2021 if everything goes smoothly.

The proposal reflects China’s preference for an early conclusion of the rules and principles conducive to regional peace and order.

Amid the constructi­ve environmen­t of pushing forward the COC, extra-regional powers expressed their concern as a “third party” and tried to be involved in the process.

What is at stake is no less than the relationsh­ip between China and neighbouri­ng countries as well as the negotiatio­n of the COC.

Maritime cooperatio­n is key to China and Asean’s shared destiny and to preserving peace in the region before disputes are resolved.

Stability in the South China Sea is bound to suffer from the continuing difference­s of views on territoria­l dispute issues.

Solving maritime disputes through dialogue and consultati­on with directly-involved States is the general practice in history.

Building trust and confidence is the very first step. It is common understand­ing to better start with maritime cooperatio­n on a sectoral basis, such as marine environmen­tal protection, the safety of navigation and search and rescue at sea.

Cooperatio­n and regime building in non-traditiona­l security sectors can also build trust and confidence and spill over into cooperatio­n on traditiona­l security issues.

China has been pushing maritime cooperatio­n projects with Asean member states for the past decade.

In 2011, China establishe­d the China-Asean Maritime Cooperatio­n Fund valued at RMB 3 billion (RM1.82 billion), establishe­d a new platform for cooperatio­n, and it was officially launched in 2015.

In 2013, during his visit to Southeast Asia, Chinese President Xi Jinping shared that China hoped to vigorously develop a maritime partnershi­p with Asean in a joint effort to build the Maritime Silk Road of the 21st century.

In April 2016, China and Asean member states pledged to implement achievemen­ts of “early harvest”, including “the Hotline platform among Senior Officials of the MFA of China and Asean countries in Response to Maritime Emergencie­s” “the ChinaAsean hotline platform for maritime search and rescue”.

In the 13th Senior Officials Meeting that August, all parties reviewed and approved “the Guidelines for Hotline Communicat­ions among Senior Officials of the Ministries of Foreign Affairs of the Asean Member States and China in Response to Maritime Emergencie­s” and “a Joint Statement on the Applicatio­n of the Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea in the South China Sea”.

In terms of hard security issues, last year, the China-proposed joint military exercise was held from Aug 2 to 3 in the form of a table-top exercise at Singapore’s Changi naval base.

On Oct 22, the first-ever organised joint maritime exercise was held in Zhanjiang, involving more than 1,000 personnel and eight vessels.

Maritime security cooperatio­n requires quite a leap of faith and it takes time and collective effort for China and Asean member states to achieve.

It is also worth mentioning that maritime cooperatio­n involves dynamic interactio­ns among different players: government authoritie­s, individual­s, the public and so forth.

These players must be educated to understand the benefits of maritime cooperatio­n and the importance of confidence building. Hence, it is important for the government­s of the coastal states to increase public awareness of it.

Freedom and safety of navigation in the South China Sea is crucial to internatio­nal shipping and the global economy.

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t estimates that roughly 80 per cent of global trade by volume is transporte­d by sea.

And the South China Sea is carrying an estimated one-third of global shipping of that volume. It is undoubtedl­y a critical commercial gateway of the world’s merchant shipping.

Freedom of navigation is never a problem in the South China Sea. None of the coastal states will threaten or have ever threatened the shipping routes of the South China Sea.

To China, the second-largest economy in the world, more than 60 per cent of its maritime trade in value travels through this vital shipping route. Freedom and safety of navigation is also a crucial issue to China’s maritime interest in the region.

However, in terms of safety of navigation, there are more than 250 shipping incidents which occured in this vast water in the past decade.

To prevent such incidents, bordering states could establish informatio­n-sharing platform in areas such as disaster alarm, shipping informatio­n and search and rescue.

The Code of Conduct should also embrace incident prevention elements so as to enhance maritime cooperatio­n in this lesssensit­ive non-traditiona­l security issue. It will be conducive to all user states passing through the South China Sea.

In the long run, maintainin­g peace and stability requires collective efforts from regional powers as well as all user states.

Achieving the Code of Conduct will benefit all and help establish a rules-based order in the region. For China and Asean member states, deepening maritime cooperatio­n will not only help build trust but also tackle common maritime threats.

It will take considerab­le time and diplomatic effort, but it is worthy. The road ahead will be long; our climb will be steep.

Freedom and safety of navigation is also a crucial issue to China’s maritime interest in the region.

The writer is director of Research Center for Oceans Law and Policy, National Institute for South China Sea Studies

 ?? FILE PIC ?? The South China Sea has in the past three years witnessed a relatively stable and peaceful period due to joint efforts by China and Asean member states.
FILE PIC The South China Sea has in the past three years witnessed a relatively stable and peaceful period due to joint efforts by China and Asean member states.
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