ASEAN foreign ministers agree on Charter, mull Myanmar, N. Korea+
Jul 30 11:03 AM US/Eastern
(AP) - MANILA, July 30 (Kyodo)
Foreign ministers of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations agreed Monday to create a human rights body as part of a Charter to strengthen the 40-year-old grouping and dealt mainly with regional concerns such as Myanmar's lack of democracy and the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula at their annual meeting here.
The ministers reached a consensus to mandate the provision of a human rights body in the ASEAN Charter after overcoming earlier resistance from Myanmar.
The Charter is expected to boost the 10-member group's standing on the international stage by transforming it into a rules-based organization.
ASEAN members Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand have been pushing for bolder changes to ASEAN in the charter, including the establishment of a human rights body. On the other hand, Singapore along with Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar had earlier expressed various reservations over the human rights mechanism, sources said. All members eventually went along with the proposal, with Myanmar dropping its opposition only on Monday.
The region is a hodgepodge of political systems -- a military junta in Myanmar, socialist governments in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, a sultanate in Brunei, democratic governments in the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia and to a lesser extent Singapore. Thailand has been under de facto military rule since the ouster of Thaksin Shinawatra's elected government last year.
A task force assigned to draft the charter will continue to work on the details and the final charter is expected to be adopted by ASEAN leaders at their Singapore summit in November.
At a dinner Sunday night, Myanmar's Foreign Minister Nyan Win came under fire from other ASEAN foreign ministers for the junta's slow progress toward democracy and its continued detention of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
Reflecting these sentiments in a joint statement issued at the end of their meeting, the ministers "expressed concern on the pace of the national reconciliation process and urged Myanmar to show tangible process that would lead to a peaceful transition to democracy in the near future."
The statement also voiced concern "on the detention of all political detainees and reiterate our calls for their early release."
However, on a softer note, the statement also acknowledged that the military junta "has tried to address the many and complex changes she is facing."
ASEAN, which depends heavily on foreign investment and trade with the United States and Europe, fears that Myanmar's intransigence will worsen its relations with the West.
On the North Korean denuclearization process, it welcomed North Korea's move to shut down the Yongbyon nuclear facility earlier this month, expressed support for the six-party talks and called for humanitarian assistance for North Korea.
As in past years, Monday's meeting, which involves only ASEAN ministers, will be followed in the next several days by a series of other meetings with major trade partners, including a meeting involving ministers from Japan, China and South Korea on Tuesday and a ministerial gathering Thursday of the soon-to-be 26-member ASEAN Regional Forum on security in the Asia-Pacific region.
ASEAN foreign ministers agree on Charter, mull Myanmar, N. Korea+