Bangkok Post

Ministers look to defuse South China Sea incidents

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PEARL HARBOR: Countries need to look for practical ways to defuse incidents in the South China Sea, where China is pitted against smaller neighbours in multiple disputes over islands, Singapore’s defence minister said.

Ng Eng Hen told reporters on Friday on the sidelines of a meeting in Hawaii that incidents may not necessaril­y involve military ships. He noted navies have establishe­d protocols for when they encounter each other at sea. Instead, confrontat­ions may develop between fishing vessels or other civilian ships, the defence minister said.

Defence ministers from the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) and US Defence Secretary Ash Carter talked at their Hawaii meeting about ways to prevent such incidents from escalating, Mr Ng said.

Singapore doesn’t have any claims to disputed islands, but Mr Ng said his country is interested in the issue because the South China Sea is a major shipping route and many economies depend on it.

China claims virtually the entire South China Sea as its own, citing historical reasons. That has pitted it against the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei, all members of Asean.

China has recently developed shoals and coral reefs into seven islands with massive land-reclamatio­n work. Some of the islands have airstrips capable of handling military aircraft.

In July, an internatio­nal arbitratio­n tribunal ruled against China’s claims, saying they were illegal. Beijing has rejected the ruling and continued its activities.

Mr Ng said the tribunal’s ruling is law, but there are “practical concerns” to consider.

“For Singapore, a non-claimant state, our main interest is, either with or without a ruling, how do you make sure the region is still stable and to make sure you actually have mechanisms to prevent any escalation­s?” he said. Mr Carter told reporters he and his counterpar­ts discussed improving coordinati­on and cooperatio­n between their militaries to keep the region’s waterways open. He said he asked the heads of the US Navy and US Coast Guard to hold a meeting with Asean partners next year to share their best practices for maritime security.

Mr Ng said the terror threat posed by the Islamic State group was uppermost on the minds of the ministers at the meeting. “Compared to a year or even two years ago, they are more organised, they are more networked, they are more clear in their articulati­on of what they want to achieve,” he said.

The group has more than 1,000 fighters from Southeast Asia, aims to establish a caliphate in the region and has networks to move money and weapons, he said.

But Asean would suffer in the short term if the group were defeated or diminished in Iraq and Syria because the Southeast Asian fighters there would return, potentiall­y re-energised and trained, he said.

“It’s certainly very much a core concern,” Mr Ng said. The ministers recognised there was a lot they could do to address the situation by sharing informatio­n and technology, he said.

 ??  ?? NO ESCALATION­S: Minister Ng Eng Hen.
NO ESCALATION­S: Minister Ng Eng Hen.

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