The Borneo Post

Asia Pacific Roundtable revisits cyber security issue

- By Ismail Amsyar Mohd Said

KUALA LUMPUR: Since its inception 30 years ago, the Asia Pacific Roundtable (APR) has faced challenges in putting together topics to be discussed at highly-anticipate­d meetings to ensure its relevance to the region while trying to avoid being repetitive at the same time.

The APR has consistent­ly maintained a holistic point of view when deciding on topics to be tabled at the meetings, including security issues, regional trade arrangemen­ts and their strategic implicatio­ns, climate change, irregular migration and human security issues, said Elina Noor, Director for Foreign Policy and Security Studies at the Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies (ISIS) Malaysia .

“This year, at the 31st APR, we will revisit the issue of cyber security after a debate session on the issue two years ago. It is a hot and topical issue that has not been so well understood in the Asia Pacific region.

“There is a lot of focus on cyber crime but not on the strategic aspect of cyber security, as to how government­s are contending with the issue with privacy, national security and how the private sector, which is an integral part of cyber security, can be brought into the picture,” she said to Bernama in an interview here.

Elina said the issue of cyber security had become a grey area, not only to the region but also globally where different sectors in the industry try to find ways to have an open conversati­on about cyber security without trespassin­g on national security ground.

She said that while government officials were less willing to talk about espionage and surveillan­ce, there were open source reports by private cyber security companies revealing that countries like Malaysia and its neighbours in this region had been targeted regularly over the years for certain informatio­n.

There had been cases like the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI)-Apple encryption dispute, the recent ‘WannaCry’ ransomware and also incidents where government­s sought to extract private informatio­n but private cyber security companies were not willing to give up such informatio­n, she said.

“There were also cases where government­s and the National Security Agency (NSA) allegedly released some of the malware to gain access to the informatio­n they needed. In this scenario, how will the private cyber security sector come to terms with this problem when malware is exploited by the government?

“Hence, this year’s APR will focus on tensions between the private sector and the government and, hopefully, help them come to terms. It’s one thing when government­s seek to extract informatio­n from private cyber security companies but what will these companies do when government­s try to exploit malware on ‘national security grounds’?” she said.

The May 22-24 forum, organised by ISIS Malaysia and supported by Asean-ISIS, is expected to gather some 300 participan­ts, among them government officials, policy makers, private and corporate sectors and academicia­ns.

Moving on to other issues of concern for the Asia Pacific region, Elina also touched on post-Brexit and the ‘death’ of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP) and what that would mean to businesses, from large corporatio­ns to small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs) in this region.

She argued that while the European Union (EU) model could serve as a guidance for this region, it was not necessaril­y in the best interest to replicate the exact model of the EU, noting that the aspiration of the Asia Pacific region, especially Asean, had always been very different from the EU’s.

“We have been very clear that we don’t want to be the exact copy of the EU. So, now that Asean is turning 50 this year, the panellists will probably aim to discuss how we are going to differenti­ate ourselves from the EU but, at the same time, be aware that some of the challenges faced by the EU would visit us in the future.

Elina said the issue of SMEs being hit hard by the ‘death’ of the TPP would probably be brought up in the strategic arrangemen­ts discussion at the meeting but not as a specific focus.

She said that while the abandoning of the TPP would have an impact on SMEs, the region was still facing a lot of uncertaint­ies and expressed the hope that with the session on economic regionalis­m, APR would find new avenues to move forward so that SMEs, which are very important to the Asean region, would benefit as well.

Now that the TPP, as controvers­ial as it was, had died in its original form, Elina raised the question of whether or not the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) would pick up that drive, even though they are two different sets of arrangemen­ts.

She said that if Asean was supposed to be people-oriented and supposed to involve the people on the ground, especially if that person was the owner of an SME, it was hoped that RCEP would be able to make a difference in their lives.

Viewed as an alternativ­e to the TPP, RCEP is a proposed free trade agreement (FTA) among the 10 member states of Asean and the six states with which Asean has FTAs, namely Australia, China, India, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand.

The negotiatio­ns were formally launched in November 2012 at the Asean Summit in Cambodia and the agreement is scheduled to be finalised by the end of 2017.

“So, these are some of the bigger issues in economic regionalis­m that will be discussed. With the ‘death’ of TPP, it is hoped that APR will steer the region and its spirit to another form of economic cooperatio­n as the spirit among countries in the region is still very much alive,” she said.

After five years and 19 rounds of negotiatio­ns, the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p Agreement (TPPA) has failed to see the light of day following the signing of the Executive Order by US President Donald Trump on Jan 23 to back out of the agreement.

The agreement was considered the most comprehens­ive in history. After it fell through, many started to question the implicatio­ns on the member countries, namely Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, United States and Vietnam. — Bernama

 ??  ?? Elina Noor (right) with president of South Asian Strategic Stability Institute (SASSI) University Islamabad Pakistan, Dr Maria Sultan during the ISIS Internatio­nal Affairs Forum ‘Strategic Developmen­ts in South Asia’ on April 3 this year. — Bernama photo
Elina Noor (right) with president of South Asian Strategic Stability Institute (SASSI) University Islamabad Pakistan, Dr Maria Sultan during the ISIS Internatio­nal Affairs Forum ‘Strategic Developmen­ts in South Asia’ on April 3 this year. — Bernama photo

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