Opinion: Vietnam’s 2020 strategy: a year of diplomatic force-multipliers

By:MICHAEL NGUYEN

Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc’s raising of the ASEAN gavel last month signalled not only Vietnam’s commencement as chair of the regional grouping, but also the start of a critically definitive period for its foreign policy in the South China Sea.

2020 is set to be a busy year for Vietnam, with several force multipliers for its foreign policy. Beyond its chairmanship of ASEAN’s Vision 2020 goals – predominantly stability in the region – Hanoi will also balance a non-permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council and potential international legal action against Beijing. While such diplomatic responsibilities come with significant pressure, the opportune timing provides Hanoi a chance to engage the international community in its maritime security interests.

Tactical diplomacy is neither simple nor straightforward. As Prime Minister Hun Sen of Cambodia has warned, ASEAN is not a regional judicial body, and many scholars have often criticised the inefficient need for consensus to the extent that some doubt the organisations’ practical utility.

Yet these views overlook upcoming circumstances.

2020 will be dominated by negotiations regarding the Code of Conduct for the South China Sea before its proposed adoption in 2022. As chair, Hanoi will represent ASEAN with external parties – predominately Beijing – and is likely to be more aggressive compared to the previous chairs who were either non-claimants or reluctant to antagonize Beijing.

Additionally, 2020 will be the first full year for the ASEAN Outlook for the Indo-Pacific. Aimed at counterbalancing the Beijing-Washington power competition, it is ASEAN’s own brokering of the strategic environment. Here, Vietnam will undoubtedly stress its reference to “freedom of navigation” to their advantage, much to the satisfaction of Washington.

Nevertheless, these do not detract from the hurdles Hanoi will face as ASEAN chair.

Similar to 2012 and 2016, there is a likelihood Cambodia will block ASEAN statements to defend its alliance with Beijing. Hanoi, though having made inroads with Phnom Penh, is unlikely to have tilted this balance.

Moreover, as analysts have noted, negotiations regarding the Code of Conduct (COC) are inherently difficult because of undefined geography, disagreements towards dispute settlement or conflict resolution, and, most importantly, the undefined and unlikely legal status of the COC. Ultimately, this search for legality is Hanoi’s biggest hurdle, given the collective doubt that Beijing would ever agree to a legal document limiting its consolidation of control.

One alternative suggestion has been for Vietnam to use its seat on the UNSC, given the council’s foremost legal standing and enforceability mechanisms. However, as any political cynic recognises, Hanoi’s UNSC seat will inevitably be confined to megaphone diplomacy rather than any realistic resolution.

A more pragmatic legal approach, and one that could in fact be complimented by megaphone diplomacy, is international arbitration.

Though commonly speculated about as a strategy by analysts and scholars, Hanoi had previously remained quiet about its position toward this option. This was until last month, when Deputy Foreign Minister Le Hoai Trung confirmed that Hanoi was considering using mechanisms within the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

Such “lawfare” is a risky strategy. China will certainly reject the ruling, irrespective of the verdict, on the same basis as its rejection of the 2016 Philippines South China Sea arbitration decision and its likely rejection of a legally enforceable Code of Conduct. Beijing is also guaranteed to retaliate, with Hanoi risking economic boycotts and leverages similar to those experienced by Manila when it initiated legal proceedings.

Nevertheless, the strategy does provide an equalizer to China’s aggressive maritime military tactics. Beijing’s quick response to Le Hoai Trung’s statements demonstrates an urgency to avoid international attention, and while Beijing can make threats, current distractions elsewhere provide the impetus for Hanoi to consolidate this advantage and opportunity to engage the international community in its plight.

Naturally, none of these opportunities will resolve Vietnam’s woes. Hanoi is acutely aware of this. However, what they do provide is potential diplomatic leverage, which Hanoi may then exploit to better defend its interests.

Hanoi appears to be positioning itself both implicitly and explicitly against Beijing’s policies. In its 2019 Defence White Paper there was a newly prominent emphasis on international integration and innocent passage, explicitly rejecting Beijing’s own interpretation of the issues as bilateral matters and implicitly dismissing its attempts to insulate Washington. If this is anything to go by, one could expect Hanoi to be similarly direct in both action and statements in 2020.

Ultimately, getting to such a position first requires that Hanoi skilfully use the opportune timing of its political opportunities to focus attention on the region and, more specifically, its own interests. Given how coverage of Vietnamese foreign policy often ebbs and flows, the value of having a prominent international voice while confronting the monolith of Asia is invaluable.

Fortunately for Hanoi, it has some appropriate tools at its disposal.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author.

From: The Interpreter

Opinion: Buying time for Israel

By: Dr Mohammad Makram Balawi

As was widely expected, US President Donald Trump’s plan to resolve the Middle East conflict — the so-called “Deal of the Century” — is officially dead. According to Jason Greenblatt, one of the masterminds behind the deal, the long-awaited American plan will not be presented in the near future. He has since left the Trump Middle East team and gone back to what he knows best: business.

Greenblatt’s boss, Jared Kushner, was not as blunt. He chose to kill his deal silently, by replacing Greenblatt with his former aide Avi Berkowitz, labelled by the US media as Kushner’s “coffee boy”. Since then, all the delusions of peace that the Americans saturated the region with have evaporated with the whole charade heading into oblivion.

The end result of the widely-trailed “Deal of the Century” was simply to buy time for Israel to change the status quo in the occupied West Bank, which should, theoretically, accommodate the promised Palestinian State according to the solution which the Americans and the Europeans have worked for decades to impose on the Palestinians.

In complete identification with the most radical Zionist plans, the Trump administration has stopped talking about the two-state-solution in its official discourse; this is no coincidence. It has been clear from the beginning that the US stand on the conflict shifted overtly towards the Israelis, a move in which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has played a pivotal role. Zionist and Israeli politics which used to have secular left leanings have shifted to the extreme right.

Netanyahu describes this moment in time as something that will not be repeated: Israel is blessed by having the perfect US President in the White House, allowing Israel to seize more land and legitimise its actions, employing the might of the most powerful state on the planet. This president is not only willing to adopt the right-wing Israeli narrative, but has also virtually created his Middle East team in its image to serve this end. After years of America being anti-Palestinian in policy and practice, Washington is reflecting Netanyahu’s views and agenda; it is clear for all to see.

Nobody, US President or otherwise, has done so many favours for Israel as Donald Trump has: the US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal; recognising Israeli sovereignty over the occupied Syrian Golan Heights; moving the US Embassy to Jerusalem, thus acknowledging the occupied city as Israel’s capital; and basically accepting what amounts to the annexation of occupied Palestinian land for illegal Israeli settlements, to name but a few. Moreover, Trump closed the PLO office in Washington and cut all US aid to UNRWA, which provides essential services to millions of Palestinian refugees in Gaza, the West Bank and neighbouring countries.

Generally speaking, Netanyahu has succeeded in taking Israeli politics with him. The veneer that was necessary to present Israel as a democratic country, represented by the so called Israeli left, has practically vanished. The position of all major Israeli political parties are identical when it comes to such issues as the annexation of the West Bank and Jordan Valley; they all approve. Even the Palestinian “Arab Israeli” members of Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, are isolated; no individuals or parties dare to ally with them lest they are accused of being anti-Israel.

Yet despite all of Netanyahu’s “accomplishments”, what is the end result? Is Israel more secure and an integral part of the region? Will the nightmares that have haunted Israelis for decades whereby they face an existential threat at the hands of their Arab neighbours simply vanish? Where will the Palestinians go if and when the Zionist dream of a “Greater Israel” is accomplished? Will they be deported or will they stay; if the latter, what will their status be? Finally, what kind of state will Israel be at the end of the day?

It looks as if it is an Apartheid state in the making, but can it become the epitome of a one state solution? Either way, Israel will lose. The world does not approve of its excesses any more, and Apartheid is a serious crime which will disenfranchise a large proportion of the Israeli population. Zionists meanwhile will never accept a one state solution because it is the antithesis of Zionism. Israel is falling into a trap that it has made for itself.

In fact, events over the past few years suggest that Israel is in the initial stages of a civil war for the identity of the state and its Zionist soul. The inability to form the government after two elections and the country heading to a third without anticipating any way out of the impasse is merely what can be seen on the surface.

The reality is that Trump has helped Israel to escalate its internal differences and brought it closer to its inevitable collapse. This may not necessarily be at the hands of its enemies, but down to its failure to fulfil the aspiration of the founding fathers to create a modern, secular, democratic state. In driving far to the right, a chasm is appearing at the heart of the Zionist movement which will not only lead to civil war in Israel, but also the loss of support across the Jewish diaspora.

In contrast to Netanyahu’s praise for Donald Trump, the day will come when Israelis will wake up to the fact that the worst thing that happened to them is seeing him in the White House, and having Netanyahu as their Prime Minister. The writing is on the wall, but how much time can they still buy for Israel?

The views expressed in this article belong to the author

القمة الإسلامية خطوة إضافية على طريق التضامن والتنمية

استضافت العاصمة الماليزية كوالالمبور قبل أيام القمة الإسلامية التي انعقدت تحت عنوان رئيسي: “دور التنمية في تحقيق السيادة الوطنية”؛ وشاركت فيها ماليزيا وتركيا وإيران وقطر على مستوى رئيس الدولة، بينما شاركت 18 دولة أخرى رسميا لكن بمستويات مختلفة، كما حضر القمة 450 مفكرا وأكاديمياً وعالما ورائد فكر من مختلف بقاع العالم الإسلامي.

 

انطلقت صباح الخميس 2019/12/19 القمة الإسلامية المصغرة التي دعا إليها رئيس وزراء ماليزيا مهاتير محمد من أجل بحث إستراتيجية جديدة للتعامل مع القضايا التي يواجهها العالم الإسلامي.

سلطت قمة كوالالمبور الضوء على الواقع البائس الذي تعيشه الأمة الإسلامية من استضعاف وتخلف، وأشارت نحو السبيل الصحيح لنهضة المسلمين، من خلال التركيز على التنمية والتعاون بين الدول الإسلامية، مما يشكل خطوة إضافية على طريق التضامن الإسلامي، وإحياء لحلم جماهير الأمة الإسلامية بمستقبل أفضل عنوانه الرخاء والأمن والسلام.

ثبت من خلال مداولات قمة كوالالمبور الإسلامية، أنّ الدول الإسلامية قادرة تحييد خلافاتها، والالتقاء على المصالح المشتركة، وتوظيف ثرواتها وإمكانتها لتحقيق مشاريع تنهض بالمنطقة الإسلامية من وهدة التخلف والتبعية نحو الاستقلال الاقتصادي والكرامة والوطنية.

وقال مهاتير في افتتاح القمة إنه لا يريد الحديث عن الدين، ولكن عن شؤون المسلمين في العالم الإسلامي، وذلك في ظل المآسي والأزمات التي تعيشها الأمة الإسلامية، وذكر منها أزمات اللجوء والحروب الداخلية وفشل الحكومات واحتلال الأرض وظاهرة الإسلاموفوبيا.

وأوضح أن مداولات القمة ستسعى لمعرفة الأسباب وراء مشكلات الأمة الإسلامية، وإيجاد حلول للتغلب عليها.

ويشارك في القمة كل من أمير قطر الشيخ تميم بن حمد آل ثاني، والرئيس التركي رجب طيب أردوغان، والرئيس الإيراني حسن روحاني، ومسؤولون من دول إسلامية أخرى.

ويحضر القمة نحو 450 مشاركا من علماء ومفكرين وممثلين رسميين عن نحو 52 دولة، وتتناول جلساتها عدة محاور على علاقة بالتنمية والسيادة الوطنية والحكم الرشيد والأمن والتجارة والاستثمار والتكنولوجيا.

ليست بديلا
وكان مهاتير (94 عاما) قد صرح في وقت سابق بأن قمة كوالالمبور لا تهدف إلى أن تكون بديلا لمؤسسات إقليمية، وإنما تهدف إلى تحسين حياة المسلمين وإيجاد سبل لعلاج أوجه القصور وفهم مشكلات العالم الإسلامي ومواجهة الإسلاموفوبيا.

وذكر رئيس الوزراء الماليزي في مقابلة خاصة مع الجزيرة تبث مساء اليوم ضمن برنامج “سيناريوهات”، أنه دعا السعودية وإيران ودولا إسلامية أخرى إلى المشاركة في القمة.

ورأى أن منظمة التعاون الإسلامي لم تقدم شيئا لمعالجة قضايا الأمة الإسلامية، وأعرب عن أمله بأن تتمكن قمة كوالالمبور من تحقيق بعض الخطوات في هذا الشأن، وقال إن استمرار غياب الأفعال سيعرض المسلمين لما هو أسوأ.

انسحاب باكستان
وقد اتخذ رئيس الوزراء الباكستاني عمران خان -الذي كان من القادة المتحمسين لعقد القمة- قرارا في اللحظات الأخيرة بعدم الحضور.

ونقلت وكالة رويترز عن مسؤولين باكستانيين طلبوا عدم نشر أسمائهم، أن خان انسحب تحت ضغوط من السعودية، الحليف المقرب لبلاده.

غير أن تقارير إعلامية نقلت عن مسؤولين أيضا نفيهم أن يكون هذا سبب عدم تمثيل ثاني أكبر دولة إسلامية في العالم.

ولم ينشر منظمو القمة جدول الأعمال، لكن رويترز قالت إنها قد تبحث النزاعات الطويلة الأمد في إقليم كشمير والشرق الأوسط، والصراعات في سوريا واليمن، ومحنة المسلمين الروهينغا في ميانمار، وتنامي الغضب من معسكرات اعتقال المسلمين الإيغور في الصين -وهو ما سيغضب بكين بلا شك وفقا للوكالة- إضافة إلى سبل مكافحة ظاهرة الإسلاموفوبيا في العالم.

وكان رئيس وزراء البلد المضيف قد أعلن الشهر الماضي عن تشكيل هذه “القمة الإسلامية المصغرة”، وقال إن ماليزيا وتركيا وباكستان وإندونيسيا وقطر تشكل نواة لبداية تعاون إسلامي أوسع يشمل مجالات عدة، مثل التنمية الاقتصادية والدفاع والحفاظ على السيادة وقيم الثقافة والحرية والعدالة، إضافة إلى مواكبة التكنولوجيا الحديثة.

اعتذار سعودي
من ناحية أخرى، نقلت وكالة رويترز عن مصدر سعودي قوله إن الرياض تلقت دعوة للحضور، لكنها لن تحضر إلا إذا عقدت القمة تحت رعاية منظمة التعاون الإسلامي.

ووفقا للوكالة، فإن السعودية ترى أن القمة ليست الساحة المناسبة لطرح القضايا التي تهم مسلمي العالم البالغ عددهم 1.75 مليار نسمة. لكن رويترز أضافت أن بعض المحللين يعتقدون أن المملكة تخشى العزلة الدبلوماسية في القمة من خصومها بمنطقة الشرق الأوسط.

لكن وكالة الأنباء السعودية الرسمية ذكرت أن اتصالا هاتفيا جرى أمس بين مهاتير محمد والملك سلمان بن عبد العزيز الذي أكد خلاله أن تلك القضايا يجب أن تناقش عبر منظمة التعاون الإسلامي.

في المقابل، أصدر مكتب مهاتير بيانا بشأن القمة قال إنه ليس ثمة نية لتشكيل “تكتل جديد كما لمح إلى ذلك بعض المنتقدين”.

المصدر : الجزيرة + وكالات

56nations to give input at KL Summit

The stage is set for the convening of the Kuala Lumpur Summit (KL Summit) 2019, where the ummah’s state of affairs will come under the spotlight, with participants endeavouring to chart the way forward for the Muslim world.

All eyes will be on the proceedings at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre here, the venue for the four-day gathering that ends on Saturday.

It will be steered by Prime Minister and summit chairman Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, who is known for his vocal views on issues concerning the Muslim world.

Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim Hamad Al Thani, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani are expected to join him, according to a statement by summit organisers.

Erdogan and Rouhani are already in town for the summit, while Sheikh Tamim is expected to arrive today.

Indonesia will be represented by its vice-president, Ma’ruf Amin, and Uzbekistan by its state adviser to the president, Rustam Kasimov.

With 450 delegates from 56 countries of the Muslim world present, issues such as Islamophobia, the incarceration of Muslims and mass migration of Muslims due to civil wars are expected to be highlighted.

Participants in the summit, themed “The Role of Development in Achieving National Sovereignty”, comprise thinkers, intellectuals, politicians and community leaders.

Discussions will be framed by seven thrusts, namely national development and sovereignty; integrity and good governance; culture and identity; justice and freedom; peace, security and defence; trade and investment; and technology and Internet governance.

In recognition of the importance of youth in the Muslim world, the summit’s inaugural youth edition, Youth KL Summit 2019, was held to discuss the role of youth in the development of Muslim countries.

Themed “Youth Empowerment in Facing Global Challenges”, the two-day summit, which concluded yesterday, featured dialogues on six clusters.

The dialogues aimed to boost the wellbeing of youth via the education sector, catalysing digital economy, strengthening the future of youth in politics, gig economy and sustainability, adapting to the challenges of the 4th Industrial Revolution, and boosting integrity and transparency in ensuring good governance.

Resolutions of the Youth KL Summit will be presented to leaders of the KL Summit.

Close to 800 local and international media practitioners are expected to cover the KL Summit.

From: Bernama

KL Summit to address Muslim issues

The Kuala Lumpur Summit (KL Summit) 2019 can potentially take cooperation between Muslim nations to new heights, ultimately reviving the spirit of the Muslim world.

In his message to the participants on the event website, klsummit.my, Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad highlights the challenges faced by Muslim nations.

Among them are abuse of power, corruption and being accused of becoming a breeding ground for terrorism.

Due to those reasons and others, Dr Mahathir said the most important task was to turn the decisions taken at the summit into reality.

“We proclaim that all Muslims are brothers and yet, our nations are involved in endless civil wars, sectarian wars, wars with our Muslim neighbours and inviting non-Muslim nations to assist us in our wars with fellow Muslims.

“For far too long we have been associated with bad governance, endemic corruption and a breeding place for terrorism,” wrote the prime minister, who is also the chairman of the summit.

The summit is scheduled to take place from Wednesday to Saturday.

Dr Mahathir also addressed the issue of terrorism.

“We can keep on shouting that such labels, especially being breeders of terrorism, as callous anti-Islam propaganda.

“We know that it is really true but our weakness and disunity have given credence to this propaganda.

“Such is the state of affairs among our nations that Muslims end up on the shores of nations governed by those from other faiths and our brethren’s fate rests solely on their mercy.

“It is against these backdrops that the KL Summit was hatched and it is earnest in wanting to contribute in the improvement of the state of affairs among Muslims and the Muslim nations.

“We have always reflected on how great, enriching and powerful the Islamic civilisation was. It is a chapter in history and we yearn for its return. It will remain a yearning unless we do something about it.

“The KL Summit, which gathers Muslim leaders, intellectuals and scholars, was conceived with the noble objectives of identifying the problems afflicting the Muslim world and finding solutions to them.

“But, no matter how many brilliant ideas the KL Summit hatches, without the support of leaders and governments of the Muslim nations, these ideas will remain ideas.

“It is my fervent hope that participants at this KL Summit will take this challenge of turning all our declarations and decisions into realities.”

Among the most recognisable Islamic leaders who are expected to attend the summit are Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim Hamad Al Thani, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

Early indications are positive with more than 50 countries confirming their presence.

There will be 400 participants, half of them from abroad.

The event will give a chance not only to Muslim leaders but also intellectuals and scholars to discuss and exchange ideas. The aim is to produce new, creative and viable solutions to the problems facing Muslims.

The summit will focus on seven areas, or “pillars”, including development and sovereignty, integrity and good governance, culture and identity, justice and freedom, peace, security and defence, trade and investment and lastly, technology and Internet governance.

From: NST

?Is Israel facilitating ‘genocide’ in Myanmar

Israel has gone after people across the world for genocide denial, but now it seems to be supporting Myanmar, a state accused of genocide.

Myanmar has strong ties with Israel going back to the 1940s and has purchased sophisticated weaponry from Tel Aviv to facilitate its operations against the country’s long-oppressed minority.

Despite numerous condemnations from the international community and an arms embargo and sanctions over Myanmar by the US and the EU, Israel has kept its relations with the troubled country intact, allegedly continuing to supply weapons to the state.

In June 2019, Myanmar’s military officials were seen at a Tel Aviv weapons expo despite Israel publicly saying they would stop selling weapons to the country.

The latest evidence of Israel’s relationship with Myanmar surfaced as the country’s ambassador to Myanmar, Gilor Ronen, wished “good luck!” to Aung San Suu Kyi, the state counsellor, who was at The Hague to face charges of genocide and war crimes for her state’s conduct against the Rohingya people in the International Criminal Court (ICJ).

The Rohingya people are a predominantly Muslim minority, living mostly in Myanmar’s Rakhine state. Their population was estimated to be around one million before the Myanmar regime’s crackdown against them began in 2016.

Suu Kyi, the daughter of Myanmar’s founding father, was long persecuted by the country’s military rulers and her democratic resistance earned her a Nobel prize in 1991. But after she came to power in 2016, Suu Kyi justified what the UN has termed as ‘genocidal intent’ regarding the military’s treatment of Rohingya Muslims. Suu Kyi’s reputation has taken a massive hit and people have called for the Nobel prize to be rescinded.

The Israeli envoy later deleted the controversial tweet. The country’s foreign ministry claimed that his tweet was written “in error”.

“Israel, founded in the embers of the Jewish people’s genocide, failed to live up to that ideal,” wrote Charles Dunst, a researcher and journalist, in an article published by Haaretz, an Israeli newspaper.

“Never again should the Jewish State enable any country, particularly one of its allies, to carry out a genocide,” Dunst concluded in his article.

The plight of Rohingya Muslims

While the Rohingya are a protected people under the UN Genocide Convention, since 2016 Myanmar’s Buddhist-dominated government has waged a brutal campaign against them, which amounted to a genocidal conduct according to the UN.

According to a recent report of the UN Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar, they were the victims of: “Numerous underlying acts of genocide, including killing, serious bodily and mental harm, and conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical destruction, and may also have been victims of measure intended to prevent births.”

“Those acts were attributable to the State and committed intentionally,” the report continued, concluding: “The State engaged in a pattern of conduct with, through inference, the genocidal intent to destroy the Rohingya in whole or in part as a people.”

At the UN court, Suu Kyi defended Myanmar’s conduct, rejecting the charges.

Since 2017, more than 700,000 Rohingya, who were living in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, were forced to leave their homelands for neighbouring Bangladesh, where they live in refugee camps. Hundreds of them have been killed by Myanmar security forces.

“It is an ongoing genocide that is taking place at the moment,” Marzuki Darusman, the head of the international fact-finding mission for Myanmar, said during a UN Security Council meeting in late October.

Myanmar, formerly Burma, has been on good terms with Israel for decades. Burma’s prime minister, U Nu, became the first premier to visit Israel back in 1955, when he also urged the communist Soviets to allow its Jews to emigrate to Israel.

From: TRT World

الصين ترفع حجم ناتجها المحلي لأكثر من 13 تريليون دولار

بكين/

عدلت الصين، الجمعة، حساب قيمة اقتصادها إلى 91.93 تريليون يوان (13.08 تريليون دولار) في 2018، بزيادة حوالى 1.9 تريليون يوان (270 مليار دولار) عن تقديرات سابقة.

وقام المكتب الوطني الصيني للإحصاء بإجراء المراجعة بناء على نظام حساب الناتج المحلي الإجمالي للبلاد ونتائج التعداد الاقتصادي الوطني الرابع.

وقال المكتب في بيان إن التغير في حجم الناتج المحلي الإجمالي لعام 2018 لن يؤثر بشكل كبير على حساب معدل النمو في 2019.

ودأبت الصين على تعديل بيانات الناتج المحلي الإجمالي لديها .

وخفضت الصين معدل نمو اقتصادها إلى 6.8 بالمئة من 6.9 بالمئة في 2017.

وتنخرط الصين في حرب تجارية مع الولايات المتحدة منذ مارس/آذار 2018، دون التوصل إلى حل حتى الآن، رغم جولات من المفاوضات.

ومؤخرا، خفض صندوق النقد الدولي توقعاته لنمو الاقتصاد الصيني إلى 6.2 بالمئة في 2019 مقابل 6.3 بالمئة في تقديرات سابقة.

المصدر/ الأناضول

“KL Summit a new marker for Muslim cooperation”

The defence sector of Malaysia and Turkey would be further boosted during the Kuala Lumpur Summit (KL Summit), as five Islamic leaders will discuss Muslim revivalism, say observers.

The summit is also expected to set a new marker for closer relations with bilateral and multilateral memorandums inked in other areas, including food security, youth, industry and technology.

Turkey’s Industry and Technology Minister Mustafa Varank said Ankara and Kuala Lumpur would sign various deals to strengthen cooperation during the summit together with Pakistan, Qatar and Indonesia.

Heightening expectations, Varank said “thrilling projects will come to life during the summit”.

“There is also a plan to establish centre of excellence premises between research centres,” said Varank during his visit to Qatar for a preparatory meeting before the summit.

“These steps will be returned to the participating countries as added value, both through trade growth and technology transfers.

“Therefore, this summit aims to take Islamic countries even further by setting up effective communication channels in the fields of industry, technology and innovation.”

The summit will be held from Dec 18 to 21 to discuss sustainable development and result-oriented policy solutions.

The Asia Times portal expounded on the significance of the emergence of this potential new bloc led by the KL Summit participants.

“One needs to understand how the last decade has seen a rapid decline in Arab influence in the wider Muslim world.

“Despite the initial hope imbued in the Arab Spring, much of the Middle East has now descended back into civil war or authoritarianism,” said the portal.

The KL Summit was the culmination of diplomatic overtures by Malaysia, Pakistan and Turkey since the elections of leaders Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad and Imran Khan last year.

Recently, Dr Mahathir, Khan and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan held a meeting on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly to discuss issues afflicting Muslims.

It led to an agreement to establish a new international television station dedicated to combating Islamophobia and voicing a more positive view of Islam.

From: NST

Vietnam to promote ASEAN unity during ASEAN Chairmanship Year 2020

Vietnam wants ASEAN to unite in all aspects, from institutions to economy and human resources, which is very important for ASEAN to uphold its central role, said Deputy Foreign Minister and Head of SOM ASEAN Vietnam Nguyen Quoc Dung.

The diplomat recently granted an interview to the press on the country’s role and position in 2020, when Vietnam will serve the double roles of Chair of ASEAN and non-permanent member of the UN Security Council, which is both an honour and a heavy task.

According to Deputy FM Dung, the theme of Vietnam’s ASEAN Chairmanship Year 2020 is “Cohesive and Responsive,” which reflects Vietnam’s wish to have an ASEAN standing firmly against impacts of regional and international situations.

When uniting, ASEAN will share a common stance and interests, and respond in a consistent manner to regional and global issues, Dung said.

Asked about preparations for Vietnam’s ASEAN Chairmanship Year 2020, the Deputy FM said Vietnam will promote five priorities, first of all bringing into play ASEAN’s role and positive contribution in maintaining a peaceful, security and stable environment in the region.

The second priority is enhancing linkages and connectivity in the region, as well as adaptability to the Fourth Industrial Revolution; and promoting sustainable and inclusive growth in economics, finance and society based on innovation and the application of digital and new technologies.

The third priority is to promote the sense of community and ASEAN characteristics, create common values of ASEAN and popularize those values among ASEAN people, thus raising awareness of the ASEAN Community and the image of the community in the region and the world.

Fourthly, strengthening partnership relations for peace and sustainable development with countries, and increasing ASEAN’s role and contribution in the international community.

The fifth priority is to improving ASEAN apparatus’s adaptability and operation efficiency.

Deputy FM Dung noted that assuming two roles at the same time means more tasks but there are also some advantages. He pointed out that as ASEAN Chair, Vietnam can work for ASEAN consensus, thus adding more weight to its voice in the UN Security. Meanwhile, UN programmes and plans will be better implemented by ASEAN, and the bloc’s plans will be more aligned with the UN’s.

He added that as the situation now is very different from when Vietnam chaired the ASEAN for the first time in 2010, the country will face both new difficulties as well as have new advantages in the task.

From: Vietnam+

Pakistan, Bangladesh vow to stand behind Palestine

Pakistan and Bangladesh on Thursday rejected Israeli settlement activities in the West Bank and reaffirmed their full support for Palestine.

Responding to a question regarding the announcement by the U.S. on Monday that the establishment of Israeli settlements in the West Bank is not inconsistent, per se, with international law, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Faisal said his country’s position remains unchanged.

“Pakistan’s position regarding illegal settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories remains unchanged in line with several UN Security Council resolutions, especially Resolution 465 (1980), 1860 (2009) and more recently resolution 2334 adopted in December 2016,” Faisal told reporters during his weekly briefing.

He added that Pakistan considers all Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank illegal under international law, and it would further hamper the viability of the two-state solution and prospects of lasting peace in the region.

“Moreover, the OIC has also repeatedly pronounced on the issue of illegal settlements, considering it a violation of international law. Being a founding member, Pakistan’s position is also aligned with that of the OIC,” Faisal said, referring to the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, a coalition of 57 nations with significant Muslim populations.

Bangladesh reiterates support

Bangladesh meanwhile reaffirmed its position of supporting Palestine’s territorial integrity and rejecting Israeli occupation and settlement activities in the Palestinian territories.

“Bangladesh reiterates its unflinching support for Palestine and its territorial integrity as established through UNSCR 242 and other UNSC resolutions, including UNSCR 338, 425, 1397, 1515 and 1544 and the principle of land for peace,” Bangladesh’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement late Thursday.

“The Security Council, the UNGA, the HRC and the International Court of Justice have all confirmed that the construction and expansion of Israeli settlements and other settlement related activities in the Occupied Palestinian territories are illegal under international law,” it said, referring to the UN General Assembly and United Nations Human Rights Council.

“Bangladesh is convinced that there is no ambiguity about the illegal status of Israeli occupation and settlement activities in the Palestinian territories,” it added.

Bangladesh also urged Israel to comply with international law in this regard, the statement said, adding “Bangladesh reaffirms its support towards the inalienable rights of the People of Palestine to their homeland.”

The U.S. on Monday reversed course on its position regarding Israeli settlements built in the occupied West Bank, breaking with over four decades of precedent in saying that they will no longer be viewed as illegal.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced the move, doing away with the State Department’s 1978 legal opinion which held that settlements are “inconsistent with international law.”

Roughly 650,000 Israeli Jews currently live on more than 100 settlements built since 1967, when Israel occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The Palestinians want these territories along with the Gaza Strip for the establishment of a future Palestinian state.

International law views both the West Bank and East Jerusalem as occupied territories and considers all Jewish settlement-building activity there illegal.

From: Anadolu Agency

S. Korea, ASEAN strive for free trade, anti-protectionism

South Korea — South Korea and the 10 member countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) strived for free trade and anti-protectionism during their special summit that ran for two days through Tuesday in the South Korean southern port city of Busan.

“Amid growing concerns over protectionism around the world, we reaffirmed that free trade is the way leading to common prosperity,” South Korean President Moon Jae-in said in a joint press conference with Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha after wrapping up the ASEAN-ROK Commemorative Summit.

“(South) Korea and ASEAN will build on free trade to move toward an innovative community of mutual prosperity,” said Moon who repeatedly welcomed the conclusion of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) during the two-day summit to commemorate the 30th anniversary of dialogue relations between the two sides.

Fifteen RCEP participating countries concluded text-based negotiations and all market access issues early this month in Bangkok, Thailand, with an aim to sign the mega free-trade pact next year.

Initiated in 2012, the RCEP brought together the 10 ASEAN member countries and their six trading partners in the region, including China, South Korea, Japan, India, Australia and New Zealand.

“We welcomed the conclusion of text-based negotiations for all 20 chapters of the RCEP by 15 participating countries earlier this month in Thailand with a view to signing the agreement in 2020,” the Thai prime minister told the joint press conference.

Asked about the repeated emphasis on the RCEP, Chung Hae-moon, former South Korean ambassador to Thailand and former chief of the state-run ASEAN-Korea Center, said in an interview with Xinhua in Busan that the regional trade deal would benefit both the ASEAN and South Korea, which depends on export for about half of its economy.

“We are in the middle of uncertainties in the global economic and trade environment. This RCEP will breed a new air into the world community that must be very anxious about the uncertainties,” said Chung.

“I believe RCEP will serve as an anchor for an open, inclusive, transparent, rules-based, multilateral trading system, from which (South) Korea, ASEAN and China have benefited tremendously over the last several decades,” said the former career diplomat.

In the joint vision statement released after the ASEAN-ROK summit, the two sides agreed to their “commitment to support for the enhancement of trade and investment and the resistance to all forms of protectionism in order to improve regional development and prosperity.”

South Korea’s free trade agreement (FTA) with the ASEAN came into force in 2012,  with the country already signing separate bilateral FTAs with some of the ASEAN member countries or pushing for negotiations for new bilateral free-trade deals.

Chung said the ASEAN and South Korea had clearly expressed their support for the “expansion of multilateralism and international trade” in several occasions as the multilateral trade system “has benefited so much to all of us.”

“Every country has a common interest in spreading the philosophy of multilateral trade… No country should be an exception,” Chung noted.

The South Korean president advocated a so-called New Southern Policy since his inauguration in May 2017 as part of efforts to raise the country’s strategic partnership with ASEAN to a higher level.

ASEAN is South Korea’s second-biggest trading partner, with trade between the two sides reaching about US$ 160 billion in 2018. South Korea is the fifth-largest trading partner for ASEAN.

Moon said in a formal session of the group summit that his country and ASEAN can overcome such challenges as “trade protectionism, transnational crimes and the Fourth Industrial Revolution” through cooperation and solidarity.

The South Korean leader offered to his ASEAN counterparts building a fair, free “trade community” to prevent trade protectionism from shrinking trade and investment in the region.

“Every relation has both opportunities and challenges. The wisdom is how to cooperate overcoming the challenges,” said Chung.

From: China Daily

Hyundai Motor to invest US$1.55 billion in first Indonesia car plant

South Korea’s Hyundai Motor said on Tuesday (Nov 26) it has signed a preliminary deal to build a new factory in Indonesia, which would be its first car plant in Southeast Asia and a crack at Japanese rivals that dominate the market.

The deal comes as Hyundai and affiliate Kia Motors struggle with a prolonged sales downturn in China, where they suspended two factories this year.

Hyundai Motor said it will invest about US$1.55 billion in the Indonesia auto manufacturing plant from now until 2030, including product development and operation costs.

The facility, to be built in the city of Bekasi, east of Jakarta, will start production in late 2021, with an annual capacity of 150,000 vehicles and a plan to grow that to 250,000 vehicles a year, Hyundai said.

Hyundai plans to make small sport utility vehicles (SUVs) and multi-purpose vehicles (MPVs), while electric vehicles (EVs) tailored to Southeast Asian market are under consideration.

Hyundai said it is building the production facilities to avoid import tariffs ranging from 5 per cent to 80 per cent in the ASEAN region. The plant will cater to Indonesia, the region’s largest automobile market, and other countries belonging to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), it said.

The plant will allow the automaker to secure future growth to help it “combat slowing demand in the global automotive market”, Hyundai said in its statement.

The deal was signed at an event attended by Indonesian President Joko Widodo and Hyundai Motor Executive Vice Chairman Euisun Chung. Widodo is in South Korea for a meeting of ASEAN leaders hosted by South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Moon has been pushing a “New Southern Policy” aiming to deepen ties with Southeast Asia as Seoul seeks to curb its reliance on traditional trading partners like China and the United States.

Hyundai is far behind Japanese rivals in Southeast Asia, with its sales reaching 122,883 vehicles versus Toyota’s 854,032 from January to September this year, according to research firm LMC Automotive.

LMC Automotive forecast a 4 per cent year-on-year decline in total vehicle sales in the ASEAN region in the fourth quarter, partly because the slowdowns in the Thai and Indonesian economies show no signs of abating.

Hyundai said key ASEAN countries including Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Singapore are expected to see combined vehicle sales grow to 4.49 million units in 2026, from 3.16 million in 2017.

From: CNA