The Borneo Post

China, Asean to finalise code of conduct on disputed sea

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BEIJING: China and a grouping of Southeast Asian nations aim to finish by the middle of next year a framework for a code of conduct to ease tension in the disputed South China Sea, state media said yesterday.

Since 2010, China and the 10 members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) have been discussing a set of rules aimed at avoiding conflict among rival claimants in the busy waterway.

Last month, an arbitratio­n court in the Hague ruled that China had no historic title over the South China Sea and had breached the Philippine­s’ sovereign rights there.

The decision infuriated Beijing, which dismissed the court’s authority.

But Beijing has been keen to get diplomacy back on track since.

Meeting in northeaste­rn China, the two sides agreed to get the framework for the code of conduct done by mid-2017, and also approved guidelines for a Chinaasean hotline for use during maritime emergencie­s, the official China Daily said.

They also agreed that a pact on unplanned maritime encounters, signed in 2014 by countries in the region, applied to the South China Sea, the newspaper added.

Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin said documents on the hotline and unplanned encounters would be presented for final approval to leaders in Laos next month at a meeting between China and Asean members, the paper said. “There is another achievemen­t - we reached broad consensus on pushing forward the negotiatio­ns on a code of conduct for the South China Sea,” it quoted Liu as saying. “All sides agreed to raise the frequency of the negotiatio­ns in a situation without interferen­ce, and seek to finish a draft framework of the code of conduct by the middle of next year,” he added. This is the third meeting on the code this year. “It shows that as the situation in the South China Sea is getting more and more complicate­d, especially with the interferen­ce of external forces, Asean countries and China have realised that we have to grasp the key to the South China Sea issue in our own hand,” Liu said. China has blamed the United States and its allies in the region, such as Japan and Australia, for stoking tension in the South China Sea. — Reuters

There is another achievemen­t - we reached broad consensus on pushing forward the negotiatio­ns on a code of conduct for the South China Sea. Liu Zhenmin, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister

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 ??  ?? China’s Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin speaks during a news conference in Beijing. — Reuters photo
China’s Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin speaks during a news conference in Beijing. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A government doctor checks Indonesian hostage Mohammad Safyan after he escaped from Abu Sayyaf captors, in Jolo, Sulu in southern Philippine­s. — Reuters photo
A government doctor checks Indonesian hostage Mohammad Safyan after he escaped from Abu Sayyaf captors, in Jolo, Sulu in southern Philippine­s. — Reuters photo

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