Los Angeles Times

Southeast Asia presses North Korean sanctions

- Associated press

SYDNEY, Australia — Southeast Asian leaders and Australia’s prime minister on Sunday called for North Korea to end its nuclear program and urged United Nations member states to fully implement sanctions against the country.

Leaders at the first Assn. of Southeast Asian Nations summit to be held in Australia issued a joint statement with the host country that also called for non-militariza­tion and a code of conduct in the contested waters of the South China Sea, where China has become increasing­ly assertive.

ASEAN leaders also said they were working to provide humanitari­an assistance for the continuing crisis involving Muslim Rohingya refugees fleeing Myanmar. Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said Myanmar’s leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, addressed the matter “comprehens­ively” in meetings Sunday.

The ASEAN-Australia joint statement urged North Korea to “immediatel­y and fully comply with its obligation­s under all relevant United Nations Security Council Resolution­s,” and called on all countries to implement sanctions.

Turnbull went further at a closing news conference, saying ASEAN and Australia had affirmed their commitment to respond strongly over the “grave concerns we share about North Korea’s reckless and illegal nuclear missile programs.”

President Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who are planning to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in spring, pledged last week to maintain “maximum pressure” on Kim’s authoritar­ian regime and seek action to force him to give up his nuclear weapons.

Singapore’s prime minister, Lee Hsien Loong, the current chairman of ASEAN, said the bloc had been encouraged by negotiatio­ns for the summits and had “noted reports of North Korea’s commitment to denucleari­zation and its pledge to refrain from further nuclear missile tests during this period.”

On territoria­l conflicts with China, which, like Australia, is not a member of ASEAN, the statement said, “We emphasize the importance of non-militariza­tion and the need to enhance mutual trust and confidence, exercise self-restraint in the conduct of activities and avoid actions that may complicate the situation.”

China and the five neighbors that have conflictin­g territoria­l claims over the South China Sea — which include four ASEAN members — plan to negotiate a code of conduct for the busy waterway aimed at reducing the risks of armed confrontat­ions in the contested areas.

Lee said ASEAN policy meant it was “not able to intervene and to force an outcome” over the Rohingya crisis, in which more than 700,000 refugees have fled to neighborin­g Bangladesh amid a Myanmar military campaign that the U.N. has called “ethnic cleansing.”

But Lee said the matter was a cause of concern for all of ASEAN, whose members would be anxious “if there is any instabilit­y or any trouble” in member countries.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said Saturday that the crisis was no longer solely a domestic issue for Myanmar, with fleeing Rohingya potential targets for terrorist radicaliza­tion.

 ?? Rick Rycroft Associated Press ?? SINGAPOREA­N Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, left, and Australian counterpar­t Malcolm Turnbull shake hands at a closing news conference during the ASEAN summit on Sunday in Sydney, Australia.
Rick Rycroft Associated Press SINGAPOREA­N Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, left, and Australian counterpar­t Malcolm Turnbull shake hands at a closing news conference during the ASEAN summit on Sunday in Sydney, Australia.

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