Bangkok Post

President-elect meets Xi before Japan talks on sea clash

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BEIJING: Indonesian President-elect Prabowo Subianto met Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing on Monday before heading to Japan for similar top-level talks amid rising tensions over the South China Sea.

Mr Xi told Mr Prabowo that China is willing to boost “all-round strategic cooperatio­n” with Indonesia and make positive contributi­ons to regional and world peace, China Central Television reported. Mr Xi also said China is willing to deepen maritime cooperatio­n with Indonesia, and help the Asean nation in poverty relief, according to CCTV.

Mr Prabowo, who will succeed Joko Widodo in October, is scheduled to have an audience with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Defence Minister Minoru Kihara today. His plan to visit Japan was announced on Monday, just days after China’s foreign ministry said Mr Prabowo’s first internatio­nal visit since winning the election in February would be to Beijing, describing the journey as an event that “fully demonstrat­es the robustness of ChinaIndon­esia ties.”

The visit to Japan — a key US ally — suggests that Mr Prabowo will continue his predecesso­r’s middle-of-the-road strategy in navigating the US-China rivalry. China is Indonesia’s biggest economic partner and is pouring more than $7 billion (256.4 billion baht) into the nation’s commodity processing capacity.

Confrontat­ions between China and the Philippine­s have ratcheted up over the past year as President Ferdinand

Marcos Jr shifted his foreign policy back to the nation’s longtime ally, the US. Since Mr Marcos took office in 2022, he has boosted security ties with Washington and its allies. He has also asserted the Philippine­s’ territoria­l claims, which overlap with China and other neighbours.

Jokowi has maintained a non-confrontat­ional approach over the sea dispute — though Beijing’s claims cut into Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone — and Mr Xi would prefer Indonesia continue that approach.

Mr Prabowo said during his campaign that he wouldn’t pick sides in the dispute. China claims almost all of the waterway that’s vital for global trade and is estimated to contain vast energy reserves. Beijing has ignored a 2016 internatio­nal court ruling that said its efforts to assert control over the South China Sea exceeded the law.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and Indonesia’s President-elect Prabowo Subianto shake hands at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Monday.
REUTERS Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and Indonesia’s President-elect Prabowo Subianto shake hands at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Monday.

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