Mar 31, 2012
ArabNews.com
PHNOM PENH: Chinese President Hu Jintao asked close economic ally Cambodia on Saturday not
to push talks on the vexed issue of the South China Sea “too fast” as
he pledged to double bilateral trade to $5 billion and announced fresh
aid to the impoverished country.
Cambodia holds the rotating chair of the 10-member Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) this year, giving it influence over the
agenda and talks over resolving growing tensions in the disputed
maritime area.
Hun Sen told Hu that while other ASEAN countries would likely raise the issue at the body’s two-day summit in Phnom Penh starting on Tuesday, Cambodia shared China’s belief that the issue should not be “internationalized,” according to Sri Thamrong.
Phnom Penh has already said the issue is off the official agenda for the meeting.
The Philippines and Vietnam have accused China of flexing its
military muscles over the region believed to be rich in energy reserves
and which has seen a rise in naval brinkmanship among the three nations
in recent years.
Hu told Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen that China wanted to move
toward finalizing a code of conduct in the South China Sea but not “too
fast” so that the dispute does not threaten regional stability, Hun
Sen’s adviser Sry Thamrong told reporters after the leaders’ meeting in
Phnom Penh.
That would risk worsening a divide in ASEAN over how to handle the
decades-old territorial dispute at a time when Washington is refocusing
its military attention on Asia and strengthening its alliance with the
Philippines.
China, which says it has sovereignty over the sea and the islands
within a looping “nine-dashed line” on its maps, rejected a Philippine
proposal within ASEAN in November to define contested areas and allow
joint development.
The two leaders agreed to target a doubling in bilateral trade to $5
billion by 2017, according to Cambodia’s top government spokesman Khieu
Kanharith.
China has pledged more than $2 billion in aid to Cambodia since 1992, mostly in soft loans, Cambodia’s government says.
China’s foreign direct investment in the country was $1.19 billion in
2011, almost 10 times that of the United States, according to an
estimate by the government’s Council for the Development of Cambodia.
No comments:
Post a Comment