PALEMBANG (MI) : Indonesia: It is just a matter of time before the
territorial rows in the Spratlys are settled peacefully and the region
is declared a “peace zone”, where every country has equal right for
joint use of its resources.
After 10 years of trying to convince claimants to come up with a Code
of Conduct, a high-ranking Indonesian defense official disclosed that
the articles of the proposed code are being finalized.
“It took us 10 years to convince our partners to agree to a code of
conduct. Finally, after explaining to our counterparts that the zone
should be a peace zone and that every country has equal right for joint
use for prosperity, the declaration of conduct will be transformed into a
more legally binding contract,” said Air Chief Marshall Djoko Suyanto,
who is also Indonesia’s Coordinating Minister for Legal, Political and
Security Affairs.
Suyanto said the members of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (Asean) that are claiming parts of the Spratlys can deal with
the problem as one united community, especially in the face of a much
bigger threat, China.
“Asean communities agreed and its leaders agreed that if anything
should happen between our countries we should talk about it in the
context of being one Asean community. It is easier for us to take the
view as one big united group rather than talk about between one country
to another,” Suyanto told The Manila Times in an exclusive interview.
“Should we need to discuss something toward our counterparts outside
Asean [like China], we should consolidate first as one big group with
the same vision and views,” he said.
Suyanto said that while Indonesia is not a claimant state, “we cannot
stay away from the issue” since it is part of a united Asean front.
“Indonesia’s message that we’re trying to convey is that the region
should be free of conflict and there should be dynamic equilibrium. We
are for joint use of the area,” Suyanto said.
The proposed Code of Conduct would be more binding and more operational because all claimants will work on its articles.
“The Asean foreign ministers are working on it now. It took a
difficult 0 years to convince them to agree on a declaration of conduct.
Now, a more binding Code of Conduct is being done,” he said.
He said China is expected to abide by the Code because it has to deal
not only with a single country like the Philippines but the Asean as a
whole.
“My perception is that now that they agreed on declaration of conduct
and code of conduct, the issue has now shifted to how they will manage
the articles of the Code,” Suyanto said.
Sumber : Manilatimes
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