Manila Standard

Welcoming ASEAN-EU supreme steps

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WE JOIN others in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in welcoming milestones achieved recently by the 10-nation bloc and the 20-member European Union.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., home from a three-day Commemorat­ive Summit in Brussels, has referred to these mileposts as country coordinato­r for ASEAN in the 10th meeting of the group and described them as “clear commitment­s from both sides, an active partnershi­p for the post-COVID economic recovery of our region.”

These milestones include the adoption of the plan of action to implement the ASEANEU Strategic Partnershi­p for 2023-2027 last August.

Under this plan, ASEAN and the EU will pursue cooperatio­n in conformity with their respective member states’ obligation­s under internatio­nal law, and in accordance with member states’ domestic laws, regulation­s and policies.

The President also cited the signing of the ASEAN-EU Comprehens­ive Air Transport Agreement (CATA) in October, the world’s first bloc-to-bloc air transport agreement which reflects the latest policy thinking in air transport regulation.

“As coordinato­r of our relations from 2022 to 2024, I assure you of the Philippine­s’ continuing efforts to sustain successful and vibrant relations between our regions, and as always the case, we are stronger together than we are alone,” he said.

The Philippine­s has been the ASEAN-EU country coordinato­r since 2021 and will stay in that role until 2024.

The 10th ASEAN-EU Business Summit aimed to reinforce the existing strong trade and investment relationsh­ip between ASEAN and the EU and reignite Europe’s interest in Southeast Asia as a region of opportunit­ies.

At the same time, we are buoyed up by the strategic support of the European Union in regard to the rule of law in disputed areas, particular­ly in the South China Sea.

Replying to questions, the 65-year-old Filipino leader said the strategic support of the European Union placed the ASEAN and the Philippine­s in “a very strong position” to negotiate issues as regards the South China Sea.

At the press conference of the ASEANEU Commemorat­ive Summit, the President talked of concrete steps, underscori­ng that objections to violations of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea would be stronger if raised by a group of nations such as the ASEAN and the EU.

He said the EU’s commitment, readable in the joint declaratio­n to “the doctrine of behaviors in the South China Sea, is already a very, very big step for us in the Philippine­s, for example, and all the countries around the South China Sea.”

China, invoking its historical nine-dash line, is claiming most of the South China Sea.

In 2016, the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in The Hague invalidate­d China’s claims and upheld the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone as provided under the UNCLOS.

We raise our hopes that the rule of law will shine despite the difference­s in political persuasion.

We are buoyed up by the strategic support of the European Union in regard to the rule of law in disputed areas, particular­ly in the South China Sea

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