The Star Malaysia

Managing regional ties

South-East Asia hails world’s first multilater­al air encounter code.

-

SINGAPORE: South-East Asian countries agreed to guidelines to manage unexpected encounters between their military aircraft, with host Singapore calling the pact a world first and saying they would encourage their internatio­nal partners to join.

The agreement, signed by defence ministers of the 10-member Asean at a conference in Singapore, includes a region-wide pact on the exchange of informatio­n on terrorism threats.

The voluntary, non-binding guidelines on air encounters build on an existing code to manage sea encounters adopted last year by Asean and its “plus” partners – Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand, Russia, South Korea and the United States.

“I am happy to announce the first multilater­al guidelines for air encounters between military aircraft have been adopted,” Singapore’s defence minister Ng Eng Hen told a news conference.

“This is a significan­t achievemen­t.”

The Asean ministers will meet their eight internatio­nal partners today and Ng said they would “seek their agreement” on the guidelines.

The framework for the guidelines said a pact was needed because Asia’s rising growth and prosperity had spurred an increase of maritime and air traffic in the region.

The United States and China in 2015 signed a pact on a military hotline and rules governing air-toair encounters.

But even with the existing guidelines, tensions remain, especially in the hotly contested South China Sea.

China claims almost all of the busy waterway while Vietnam, the Philippine­s, Malaysia and Brunei claim parts of the potentiall­y ener- gy-rich maritime territory. Taiwan also claims the sea. This month, China expressed anger after a US Navy destroyer sailed near islands it claims, saying it resolutely opposed an operation that it called a threat to its sovereignt­y.

Asked if the sea guidelines were working, Ng said, “In a way they are like seatbelts, not completely protected, but at least they provide some protection.”

At a lunch meeting with his Asean counterpar­ts, US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis said the United States wanted a “constructi­ve relationsh­ip” with China but remained concerned by what it saw as the militarisa­tion of the South China Sea.

In August, South-East Asian nations and China adopted a negotiatin­g framework for a broader code of conduct in the South China Sea.

That framework seeks to advance a 2002 Declaratio­n of Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, which has mostly been ignored by claimant states, particular­ly China. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? Good move: Ng gives the opening address at the Asean Defence Ministers’ Meeting in Singapore.
— Reuters Good move: Ng gives the opening address at the Asean Defence Ministers’ Meeting in Singapore.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia