Bangkok Post

Thailand gets ready to take Asean chair

- Kavi Chongkitta­vorn Kavi Chongkitta­vorn is a veteran journalist on regional affairs.

Adecade after living through the devastatin­g experience of the 2008 Asean summit, the kingdom will have another chance to regain its regional leadership and reputation. Singapore will pass the baton to Thailand on Nov 15 as the Asean chair. Although the official role will kick off in January, Bangkok will get the ball rolling immediatel­y.

Preparatio­ns have been well under way for the past two years to ensure that Thailand’s time as chair will proceed without hiccups. Like a kanom chan (multi-layered rice-cake), several domestic hurdles need to be cleared in the next three critical months.

First of all, on Dec 11 the organic laws related to the electoral process will take effect, paving the way for the official announceme­nt of Feb 24 as election day. Bans will be lifted on political activity and campaignin­g approximat­ely 60 days before the election. During the second week of January, all registered parties must file the names of their candidates. Qualified candidates will be announced on Jan 25. Advance voting will be held on Feb 17. The outcome of the election will be officially announced within 60 days by April 24.

Then, the focus will be shifted to the new session of the National Assembly under the reign of King Maha Vajiralong­korn. May will be an exciting month, as freshly elected politician­s will gradually display their true colours as the parties with the most votes try to form the next government. A new House Speaker is expected to be named in the third week of May. The speaker will play a crucial role in electing the next prime minister. Whoever leads Thailand next year will have less than four weeks to get ready to chair Asean.

The 34th Asean Summit has been fixed for the third week of June at a five-star hotel, and the 52nd Asean Ministeria­l meeting is set for the end of July. Thailand’s time as chair will culminate during the first week of November 2019, when the leaders of the great powers will converge in Bangkok to attend the 14th East Asia Summit on the sideline of 35th Asean Summit.

According to Suriya Chindawong­se, director-general of the Asean Department, Thailand will focus on three broad objectives: a people-centred community, leaving no one behind, and looking ahead beyond 2040. These have been recurring priorities in Thailand’s Asean policies since it first held the Asean summit in 1995.

At the previous summit, held in Hua Hin in, Thailand placed the utmost importance on the concept of empowering Asean citizens. With the strong voices and large presence of local and regional civil society organisati­ons (CSOs), the chair has been paying a great deal of attention to their views and possible input, much to the chagrin of some Asean member countries, which do not share this view.

Thailand would like to bring back the interface between Asean leaders and Asean-based CSOs. Over 50,000 entities are stationed in Thailand. Depending on the Asean chair’s preference, the format of such an interface varies from year to year. Judging from the past 12 years since the interface begun in 2005, Asean leaders are inclined to avoid face-to-face dialogue, and they have often treated the CSOs’ ideas as too liberal or impractica­l. Also, certain Asean leaders felt uneasy and irritated when talking directly with independen­t CSO representa­tives. Looking ahead, Asean leaders need a new mindset in engaging their own citizens.

As Asean coordinato­r on issues of sustainabl­e developmen­t, Thailand is linking the Asean agenda with the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals 2030. It is not a surprise that the Thai chair’s priority will have a strong component of sustainabl­e developmen­t and the self-sufficient economy. For the past few years, Thailand has worked closely with UN agencies to work out action plans and other deliverabl­e outcomes in this area. “Leaving no one behind” is the current government’s mantra.

As one of the founders of Asean back in 1967, Thailand is also concentrat­ed on the bloc’s relevancy. Truth be told, the kingdom has had the most consistent and unwavering policy toward the Asean grouping. Every government over the past five decades has embraced Asean and its principles without fail, and Asean has remained the main pillar of Thai foreign policy. Once again, the kingdom’s stint as Asean chair would allow Thailand to display its vision for, and dedication to, the group.

Thailand has commission­ed the Jakarta-based think tank, the Economic Research Institute of East Asia and Asean, to prepare a report on the Asean Vision 2040. The report will examine what Asean needs to do in the next two decades to maintain its centrality in all dimensions. The chair would like to ensure that Asean has stronger institutio­ns and the political will to overcome future challenges that come its way. The fluidity and uncertaint­y of the regional and internatio­nal environmen­t has glued its members together, knowing full well that the power of their leverage depends on the grouping’s collective political will and common decisions.

Indeed, it was with this new mindset that Asean decided to tackle the nascent Indo-Pacific concept. Asean members, especially Indonesia, Vietnam

and Thailand, have specific ideas on how to shape the original plan into an all-encompassi­ng one, not aiming at any one particular country. At next week’s East Asia Summit, the current chair will summarise the grouping’s position on the framework. Further discussion­s among Asean are still needed. The incoming chair, Thailand, will be working closely with Indonesia and other members to fine-tune Asean’s input.

Outstandin­g economic, security/ political, and social/cultural issues will still be on the agenda. These include the fate of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p, the digital economic connectivi­ty, the progress of negotiatio­ns on a code of conduct for the South China Sea, security on the Korean Peninsula, cyber security, tackling extremism and radicalism, the Rakhine State crisis in Myanmar, and more human rights protection­s in Asean.

At the final preparator­y meeting last month, Prime Minister Prayut Chan-ocha reiterated that the success of Asean chair next year would depend on the full support of all stakeholde­rs inside the country. It is hoped that there will not be any political mishaps and shenanigan­s, as in the past, that could easily derail the host’s ambitions.

The kingdom has had the most consistent and unwavering policy toward the Asean grouping.

 ?? AFP ?? Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha and his Singaporea­n counterpar­t Lee Hsien Loong look on as they attend an EU Asean leaders meeting at the European Council in Brussels on Oct 19, 2018. Thailand is about to take over Asean chair from the city state this week.
AFP Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha and his Singaporea­n counterpar­t Lee Hsien Loong look on as they attend an EU Asean leaders meeting at the European Council in Brussels on Oct 19, 2018. Thailand is about to take over Asean chair from the city state this week.
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