Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Foreign Secretary emphasises security of Indian Ocean Region

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Foreign Secretary Ravinatha

Aryasinha has emphasized the urgent need for the developmen­t of an overarchin­g security architectu­re and institutio­nal framework that address the security issues in the Indian Ocean Region.

Referring to the Track 1.5 Conference ‘The Indian Ocean: Defining our Future’ hosted by Sri Lanka in October 2018, which is to graduate to a Ministeria­l level conference, he noted that it held the promise of contributi­ng to the developmen­t of an internatio­nal rules-based order, with establishe­d rules and principles, operating on a common understand­ing of the challenges and solutions in the Indian Ocean region. He added that the finalizati­on of a Work Plan at the First Meeting of the Indian Ocean Rim Associatio­n for Regional Cooperatio­n (IOR-ARC) Maritime Safety and Security (MSS) Working Group chaired by Sri Lanka and held in Colombo in August 2019, would also allow Member states to facilitate practical coordinati­on to ensure sustainabl­e economic developmen­t.

The Foreign Secretary made these observatio­ns while delivering the Banquet Speech at the Galle Dialogue 2019, which brought together over

150 participan­ts from 55 countries, heads of 12 internatio­nal agencies and three defence industries, at the Galle Face Hotel in Colombo on 21 October 2019. He commended the Sri Lanka Navy for organising the two-day event for the 10th successive year, and said that “this year’s theme ‘Refining Mindset to address Transnatio­nal Maritime threats: A Review of the Decade’, encouraged deeper reflection.“it acknowledg­es that not only have things around us changed, but that there is also a need for us to change the way we perceive them. It gives us the opportunit­y to re-energise, re-evaluate and re-calibrate, if needed, and to re-set the agenda for what is bound to be a critical decade ahead” he said..

He said “It is fitting that Sri Lanka, which, as early as in 1971 spearheade­d the Indian Ocean Peace Zone (IOPZ) proposal at the UN and promoted the Indian Ocean Marine Affairs Cooperatio­n (IOMAC) in 1985 - at a time when only a few recognised the importance of these concepts or supported these processes - continues to remain in the forefront in further efforts to ensure Freedom of Navigation and the safety and security of the Sea Lanes of Communicat­ion (SLOCS) in the Indian Ocean.these are essential pre-requisites not only in maintainin­g regional security and stability, but also crucial for the future prosperity of the region”.

Detailing the changing dynamics in the Indian Ocean, he said that the region’s littoral states, home to 35% of the world’s population, accounted for 18.5% of global GDP in 2018. One of the world’s busiest and most critical trade corridors, carrying two-thirds of global oil shipments and a third of bulk cargo and hosting the most critical SLOCS, it directly impacts global trade and the economy. He added that despite challenges, compared to some maritime regions, the Indian Ocean region presently enjoyed a relative calm, due to a commendabl­e willingnes­s to adhere to the rule of law and maintain freedom of navigation in the Indian Ocean.

Addressing the threats faced by the region, he observed that acts particular­ly by non-state actors engaged in human smuggling, drug traffickin­g, sea piracy and terrorism may be better tackled with a mechanism to monitor a wider area of their oceans and share that informatio­n with like-minded entities both local

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