From the Philippine News Agency (Mar 6):
ASEAN defense chiefs reiterate call for COC in South China Sea
Military chiefs of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations on Wednesday
jointly reiterated the importance of having a legally binding Code of Conduct
to ease tensions in the South China Sea.
The military chiefs gathering for the three-day informal meeting starting
Tuesday in Myanmar's
administrative capital Naypyitaw said in a joint statement Wednesday that
"the early conclusion of the Code of Conduct in the South
China Sea is crucial to maritime security and to a stable security
environment in the region."
The chiefs are in Naypyitaw for the 11th ASEAN Chiefs of Defense Forces
Informal Meeting, to discuss regional security challenges, particularly
nontraditional ones.
China's increasingly assertive claim to most of the disputed sea -- which
has some of the world's busiest shipping routes and is believed to be rich in
oil and gas -- overlaps claims from Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan
and Vietnam.
China has long maintained
that territorial and maritime disputes in the
South China
Sea, which it claims almost in its entirety, should be resolved
bilaterally among claimant states.
Speaking to reporters at a press briefing Wednesday at the venue, the host
to the event,
Myanmar
Commander-in-Chief Senior Gen. Min Aung Hling stressed the importance of
peaceful means in resolving the dispute.
Min Aung Hling also hinted at
Myanmar's
support for
China's
position, saying the dispute should be settled among the claimant countries.
"The
Myanmar military
believes that the
South China Sea dispute
should be settled peacefully, only among the countries that are involved with
the matter, in a bilateral or in a multilateral manner," he said.
"We would always welcome and support every friendly and peaceful effort
to resolve the issue with means acceptable to the nations involved," he
added.
ASEAN groups
Brunei,
Cambodia,
Indonesia,
Laos,
Malaysia,
Myanmar,
the
Philippines,
Singapore,
Thailand
and
Vietnam.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=&sid=&nid=&rid=622655
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