Cambodia’s preferred method to narrow regional development gaps: Forced Evictions to make way for Development |
Philippine President Benigno Aquino, Singapore’s PM Lee Hsien Loong, Thai PM Yingluck Shinawatra, Vietnam’s PM Nguyen Tan Dung and Cambodia’s PM Hun Sen at ASEAN Summit opening. (AFP/Hoang Dinh Nam) |
Channel News Asia (Singapore)
PHNOM PENH: Cambodia said on Tuesday it will focus on financial stability and narrowing regional development gaps during its chairmanship of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in 2012.
Prime Minister Hun Sen told an ASEAN summit in Phnom Penh that
Cambodia’s priorities for its year at the helm also included promoting
an infrastructure investment fund and protecting migrant workers’
rights.
But he said his number one task was “strengthening the mechanisms for
ensuring financial stability in the region as well as for preventing
future crises” in the global economy.
This would require the doubling in size of the Chiang Mai Initiative,
a multilateral currency swap system likened to an Asian Monetary Fund,
from $120 billion to $240 billion.
ASEAN should also push ahead with its plans to create a single market
of almost 600 million people by 2015, and establish an infrastructure
fund to improve infrastructure links.
Hun Sen said this was vital for “narrowing the development gap”
between the association’s 10 member states, which range from deeply
impoverished Myanmar to advanced city state Singapore and emerging
powerhouse Indonesia.
Countries such as the Philippines and Indonesia are sources of huge
labour flows in the form of construction workers, maids and nannies for
wealthier ASEAN members like Malaysia and Singapore, as well as the
Middle East.
Hun Sen said the block had spoken in the past of creating a regional
mechanism to protect such workers’ rights but too little progress had
been made.
“We should include this issue as a priority in our agenda and agree
on some concrete measures in 2012 for implementation,” he told the
assembled leaders at the summit’s opening ceremony in Phnom Penh.
Boosting cooperation on disaster management in a region frequently
lashed by floods, tsunamis and earthquakes is another priority of
Cambodia’s tenure, he said.
Food security also needed to be enhanced through greater cooperation on improving productivity and investment in agriculture.
ASEAN has often been dismissed as a talking shop but it has grown in
strategic importance in line with the region’s economic strength and, in
the eyes of the United States, as a potential bulwark against China.
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