|
 Malaysian Police guards in Kuala
Lumpur, capital of Malaysia, Dec. 8, 2005. Officials from ASEAN's
(Association of Southeast Asia Nations) 10 member countries and those from
Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea will attend
the first East Asia Summit (EAS) and the 11th ASEAN Summit from Dec. 12 to
14 in Kuala Lumpur. To make sure the summits could be held in a peaceful
condition, Malaysian Police has intensified their security forces in Kuala
Lumpur. (Xinhua photo) | KUALA LUMPUR, Dec. 8
(Xinhuanet) -- Senior officials wrapped up preparatory meetings Thursday for the
11th ASEAN Summit and related summits as well as the inaugural East Asia Summit
(EAS), taking ASEAN and its dialogue partners a step closer to realizing greater
cooperat ion in various fields.
With some fine-tuning left to be done in some areas,
officials from ASEAN's 10 member countries, including Brunei, Cambodia,
Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and
Vietnam, and those from Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand and South
Korea have almost finalised the agenda for the summits.
Ministers would take a look before coming up with the
final agenda prior to the summits, scheduled for Dec. 12 to 14 in the Malaysian
capital of Kuala Lumpur.
The topics on the table for greater cooperation among
ASEAN, ASEAN+3 (ASEAN plus China, Japan and South Korea), and the EAS (ASEAN+3
plus India, Australia and New Zealand) include terrorism, Avian flu, HIV/AIDs,
the environment and the economy, said Malaysian Foreign Minister Syed Hamid
Albar.
He told a press conference here that the meetings
have been conducted "in a spirit of cooperation" and "the discussions have been
very substantive."
"We want to move toward a brighter, more peaceful and
prosperous future in line with the summit's theme of one vision, one identity,
one community," he said.
Officials are still working on the finer points of
several subjects, including free trade agreements (FTAs) which are to be signed
by ASEAN with India and South Korea.
"Discussions have not yet yielded the desired outcome
but they are ongoing," Indonesian Foreign Ministry spokesman Marty Natalegawa
said of the Asean-India FTA.
Thailand Thursday reiterated its stance that it will
not back the ASEAN-South Korea FTA if rice is not included for tariff cuts in
the agreement.
The officials have prepared more than 20 documents
that are expected to be endorsed by the leaders.
These include several documents to be inked between
Russia and ASEAN, which would enable both sides to tap the full potential of
their relations. Russia has been ASEAN's dialogue partner since 1996.
Additionally, the ASEAN Charter now being drawn up
will enable the 10-member grouping to raise its own funds to finance regional
projects instead of having to depend on its dialogue partners for capital.
Diplomats have described the Malaysian-mooted ASEAN
charter as crucial because it will give ASEAN a legal identity.
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