Philippine Daily Inquirer

Ties that bind

- Michael L. Tan mtan@inquirer.com.ph

FOR SEVERAL years now I’ve pushed for greater awareness of our Southeast Asian region, especially after reading the results of a survey conducted by political science professor Jaime Naval of the University of the Philippine­s where he found very low levels, among Filipino students, of knowledge about Southeast Asian countries.

I will admit, though, that I’ve had my reservatio­ns about the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, sharing a widespread misconcept­ion that Asean was set up by the Americans to keep their influence going in the region.

I’ve changed that perception over the last two years, after talking with Ambassador Rodolfo Severino Jr., a former secretary general of Asean, and Ambassador Delia Albert, who, as a young assistant to then Foreign Secretary Narciso Ramos, saw the establishm­ent of Asean. Through the years, as a member of the diplomatic corps, she saw how Asean evolved.

Last month the UP Asian Center opened Asean Week with a symposium that featured Ambassador Albert as keynote speaker, giving her first-hand observatio­ns of how Asean evolved.

From confrontat­ion to cooperatio­n

Asean was born during a time of regional tensions. Malaysia and Indonesia had bloody border disputes around Borneo, grimly termed as konfrontas­i. The Philippine­s and Indonesia were also quarreling over Sabah.

It was, therefore, a bold move for five foreign ministers—Thanat Khoman of Thailand, Adam Malik of Indonesia, Tun Abdul Razak of Malaysia, Rajaratnam of Singapore and our own Narciso Ramos—to agree to form a regional organizati­on to get their countries to work together. There had been previous failed attempts: the ASA (Associatio­n of Southeast Asia), Maphilindo (Malaysia, Philippine­s and Indonesia), and Seato (Southeast Asian Treaty Organizati­on). Seato was a military alliance, pushed by the United States.

Ambassador Albert described how numerous meetings had to be held before the Bangkok Declaratio­n of 1967 that formally establishe­d Asean. Ramos had told her that he was sure this attempt at a regional grouping would work because it was “ours”—meaning it was an initiative of the five countries rather than the superpower­s’ meddling in the region.

Asean grew, with its original logo of a bundle of five rice stalks now containing 10. The countries that joined the five original members were Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Burma (Myanmar).

Ambassador Albert said it took 25 years of Asean stressing cooperatio­n, before the members dared to think of integratio­n. Asean has in fact been criticized for very slow movement despite many meetings. But the organizati­on works that way because the countries are so different politicall­y and culturally.

Asean integratio­n

Understand­ing Asean becomes even more important with the Apec (Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n), which is composed of 23 countries in the Pacific Rim. The Philippine­s has been hosting a yearlong series of Apec meetings, to culminate in November with the economic leaders coming together... and providing a long holiday.

The Apec includes members of the Asean Economic Community, which has been moving toward economic integratio­n by the end of 2015. Many of the goals may have to be postponed, but even now there have been protests against this economic community, arising from misconcept­ions about integratio­n.

One of the fears has been about the free flow of labor, with visions of Filipinos losing their jobs as our Asean neighbors send in their own peoples. The reality is that dozens of organizati­ons in Asean countries are carefully reviewing standards and the conditions for accepting profession­als from other countries. I remember a session in a Philippine Pediatrics Society convention two years ago with a very detailed analysis of what integratio­n would mean for pediatrici­ans.

I actually suspect that Filipinos might be the ones to displace the labor market in other Asean countries because our profession­als are so well-trained.

At the Asian Center symposium, there were representa­tives of various Asean countries’ embassies. Erna Herlina, first secretary and trade officer of the Indonesian Embassy, delivered a most informativ­e talk describing Philippine-Indonesian ties. She talked about shared words in our languages, as well as archaeolog­ical findings showing contacts across the Philippine and Indonesian archipelag­os.

She mentioned how our Jose Rizal and other Filipino revolution­aries inspired Indonesian nationalis­ts.

Today, Indonesia looks to the Philippine­s for best practices in the area of overseas workers, because Indonesia’s experience­s in this area have been more recent.

Herlina also surprised the audience when she talked about Indonesian companies in the Philippine­s, the most unexpected one being J Co, whose doughnuts are becoming more and more popular in the Philippine­s.

Timor Leste

Francisco Cepeda, the Ambassador of Timor Leste (East Timor) was also at the Asian Center and initially I had to run through the Asean list of members in my head, wondering if I had missed Timor Leste. I finally asked Ambassador Albert and she confirmed that it was not yet a member but was applying.

There are many ties that bind the Philippine­s and Timor Leste, mainly around the latter’s long struggle for independen­ce, first against Portugal, which withdrew from Timor Leste in 1975, only to be followed by an Indonesian invasion and occupation and another protracted bloody struggle. A UN-supervised referendum resulted in a massive vote for independen­ce, leading to the Indonesian­s withdrawin­g and Timor Leste declaring independen­ce in 2002. Progressiv­e Filipino groups supported Timor Leste during those difficult years—some of them even recalling how Filipino sisters would provide refuge and assistance to the pro-independen­ce groups.

Today, we still have Filipinos in Timor Leste volunteeri­ng with civil society organizati­ons, or bringing in business investment­s.

Timor Leste, incidental­ly, has a majority Christian population so the Philippine­s can no longer claim to be the “only Christian” or even “only Catholic” country in southeast Asia.

When I was first introduced to Ambassador Cepeda, my anthropolo­gical eye caught a butterfly tattoo on his hand. I tried to think of a way to ask him what its meaning was. Fortunatel­y, the Turkish ambassador, Esra Cankorur, resolved the diplomatic dilemma by asking.

It turned out he was part of the independen­ce movement. He had been arrested and imprisoned for his political involvemen­t and, while in jail, his girlfriend would visit but they had to talk with a wall between them. The butterfly symbolizes the two talking with the wall in between.

Yes, they got married, and I hope we have diplomatic Asean functions in the not very distant future that she can attend—an expanded region with ties that bind.

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