The Borneo Post

M’sia committed to ratifying RCEP by December 2021 — Azmin Ali

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia has given its commitment to complete the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) ratificati­on process by mid-December this year.

Senior Minister and Internatio­nal Trade and Developmen­t Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali said the ratificati­on process is pursuant to the agreement signed by 15 countries, comprising 10 Asean member states and five free trade agreement (FTA) partners, at the Fourth RCEP Summit on Nov 15, 2020.

He said based on the provisions of the RCEP Agreement, it will come into force 60 days after at least six Asean member states and three Asean FTA partners submitted the instrument­s of ratificati­on to the Asean secretaria­t.

“To date, countries that have ratified the agreement include Singapore, China and Japan. Myanmar has sent the instrument of ratificati­on to the Asean secretaria­t while Thailand has completed the domestic ratificati­on process and would submit the instrument of ratificati­on to the Asean secretaria­t at the end of the year,” he said.

Mohamed Azmin was replying to a query from Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing (PDP-Bintulu) in the Dewan Rakyat today on the current status of the RCEP and plans to increase cooperatio­n among the signatorie­s.

The senior minister pointed out that at the 53rd Asean Economic Ministers Meeting on Sept 9, 2021, Asean member states looked forward to the entry into force of the RCEP Agreement on Jan 1, 2022, as targeted.

Countries such as Brunei, the Philippine­s, Indonesia, Cambodia and Vietnam have announced their intention to complete the domestic ratificati­on process by November 2021.

Mohamed Azmin said that for Malaysia, the RCEP ratificati­on process requires amendments to three Acts under the purview of the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry relating to intellectu­al property rights, namely the Patents Act, Copyright Act and Trademarks Act.

This, he said, is to ensure that the Acts are in line with the country’s obligation­s under the RCEP Agreement.

According to the senior minister, if Malaysia were to delay the ratificati­on, the country would be left behind in enjoying the benefits and preferenti­al treatment as contained in the agreement.

“This includes tariff reduction on exports of goods, market access for trade in services, movement of skilled profession­als as well as opportunit­ies to increase investment activities among the RCEP member countries,” he said.

RCEP is the world’s largest FTA with a market that covers almost one-third of the world’s population or 2.2 billion people.

On plans to boost cooperatio­n among RCEP members, Mohamed Azmin said efforts would continue towards enhancing the cooperatio­n in line with the agreement’s main objective to strengthen the regional value chain activities and make RCEP more user-friendly.

 ??  ?? Datuk Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali
Datuk Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali

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