The Borneo Post

Malaysia will push for more efforts to ensure peace and stability in Asia Pacific — Najib

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KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian government will always push for more efforts to ensure peace, stability and security in the Asia Pacific, said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.

Najib said faced with all kinds of security challenges, Asean member countries including Malaysia could not stand by and do nothing.

“We must all contribute to “fostering a shared future”, and I hope and pray that after the AsiaPacifi­c Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) summit and subsequent Asean and related summits, we will have made strong progress in doing so.

“A gathering of world leaders, such as this one, must take advantage of being together to consider what they all collective­ly can do to take action,” he said in his blog www.najibrazak.com.my yesterday.

Najib, accompanie­d by his wife Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor, arrived in Vietnam yesterday afternoon for the APEC meeting and the leaders’ summit which will begin on Friday.

Najib in his blog also mentioned that the Asia Pacific faced huge challenges; from rising tensions on the Korean Peninsula, to the scourge of Daesh and its regional affiliates in Southeast Asia, to the suffering and persecutio­n that had caused unpreceden­ted mass migration in the Andaman Sea and in neighbouri­ng countries.

He said as for Malaysia’s part, Kuala Lumpur had been consistent in its strong condemnati­on of the series of nuclear tests that had been conducted by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea ( DPRK).

“An escalation that could lead to nuclear catastroph­e, with the consequent deaths of hundreds of thousands, if not millions; the radioactiv­e fallout, devastatin­g long-term illnesses and mass displaceme­nt of people – this is something we simply cannot contemplat­e in the 21st century.

“Any conflict, particular­ly one involving such weapons, would be catastroph­ic not just for the Korean peninsula but for the region and beyond.

“Nuclear armegeddon was a threat that blighted far too much of the second half of the last century, and we must take all steps necessary to avoid these dark clouds shrouding the first half of the current century,” he said.

In terms of Daesh, the Prime Minister drove home the point that Malaysia had not been spared the shadow of a barbarity that had wrought such wicked havoc in Iraq and Syria with the first Daesh-linked attack which had been foiled by the Royal Malaysia Police in June last year.

Najib said the Malaysian government had introduced a raft of counter-terrorism legislatio­n over the past few years to deal with this scourge as well as standing shoulder to shoulder with so many other nations in the Global Coalition Against Daesh on the internatio­nal level.

“For when we see what happened in Marawi City in the Philippine­s recently, it is clear that this is a threat that is real and present in our region.

Nobody should underestim­ate it, and I will never apologise for putting the safety and security of the Malaysian people first.

“But this challenge needs to be dealt with in a number of ways: not just by prevention, but also by battling radicalisa­tion and working to rehabilita­te those who have been falsely lured away by criminals who blaspheme the name of Islam,” he said. — Bernama

 ??  ?? Najib (left) paying a courtesy call on Vietnam president Tran Dai Quang in Da Nang,Vietnam. — Bernama photo
Najib (left) paying a courtesy call on Vietnam president Tran Dai Quang in Da Nang,Vietnam. — Bernama photo

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