25th ASEAN+3 Finance Ministers’ and Central Bank Governors’ Meeting

The 25th ASEAN+3 Finance Ministers' and Central Bank Governors' Meeting, AFMGM+3 exchanged views on current global and regional economic outlook as well as policy responses to risks and challenges. The Acting Minister at the Prime Minister's Office and Second Minister of Finance and Economy at the virtual meeting said the ASEAN+3 Ministers and Governors agreed that even though the region collectively continue to register growth, it must remain mindful of downside risks and ASEAN+3 countries should take appropriate policy actions to ensure robust long-term growth and development.

Dato Seri Paduka Doctor Haji Abdul Manaf bin Haji Metussin, further emphasised for ASEAN+3 countries to work together in addressing common challenges, among others, by supporting efforts to ensure resilient regional supply chains especially for essential products and commodities. Also shared, the initiatives that Brunei Darussalam has implemented to facilitate cross-border trade and to address the impacts of the global inflation. Joining the meeting was Dayang Hajah Rokiah binti Haji Badar, Managing Director of the Brunei Darussalam Central Bank, BDCB.

Source: Radio Television Brunei

Increase Precautionary Measures

Following the increase in Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease, HFMD cases among children in the neighbouring countries, parents and guardians are reminded to take precautionary measures.

The Ministry of Health reminds members of the public especially parents and guardians to continue to take precautionary measures, especially in emphasising personal and environmental hygiene as well as to avoid bringing children to crowded places.

Source: Radio Television Brunei

US ASEAN to Redouble Efforts to End Violence in Myanmar

The United States and leaders from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations said Friday they would “redouble collective efforts” toward a peaceful solution in Myanmar.

“We reiterate our commitment to peace and stability in the region and continue to call for the immediate cessation of violence in Myanmar and for the release of all political detainees, including foreigners,” according to the US-ASEAN Joint Vision Statement issued late Friday.

While the joint statement made no mention of opening informal channels with Myanmar’s civilian-led National Unity Government (NUG,) senior U.S. officials and a few ASEAN foreign ministers had talks with NUG foreign minister Zin Mar Aung who is also in Washington this week.

Hundreds of thousands of civilians have been displaced since a military coup toppled the democratically elected government of Myanmar, also known as Burma, in February of last year.

This week, U.S. President Joe Biden hosted his first in-person summit with ASEAN leaders in Washington. There was an empty chair for Myanmar to reflect dissatisfaction with the military coup and violence in the country.

For some analysts, the gathering is seen as a show of solidarity as the United States competes with China for influence in the region.

It also comes as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken prepares to outline the U.S. approach toward China in coming days.

On regional security, the US-ASEAN statement emphasized “confidence building” and the importance of “practical measures that could reduce tensions and the risk of accidents, misunderstandings, and miscalculation” in the South China Sea.

“Nothing new to see here,” tweeted Derek Grossman, a senior Rand Corp. defense analyst.

The Biden administration has announced $60 million in new regional maritime initiatives that include the transfer of ships to Southeast Asian countries to increase the coastal nations’ capacity to enforce maritime law and counter illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing.

ASEAN members Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam claim parts of the South China Sea – a waterway claimed almost entirely by Beijing, which has landfilled and militarized islets over the past decade.

Friday, U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris said the United States will work with ASEAN to “guard against threats to international rules and norms” during a luncheon with leaders from the regional bloc. Harris denounced China’s “unlawful claims” on the South China Sea during a speech in Singapore in August.

The South China Sea was high on the agenda during the U.S.-ASEAN special summit, according to a senior State Department official.

“South China Sea is an issue of great concern,” said Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Jung Pak in an interview this week.

“We've seen increasingly aggressive and coercive actions by PRC against claimant countries. And, you know, we continue to work with all of our allies and partners in the region and beyond to make sure that the South China Sea is free and open,” she said.

The White House on Thursday announced new initiatives of more than $150 million that include investments in infrastructure, expanding maritime cooperation, health security, and education in ASEAN countries.

The US-ASEAN Joint Vision Statement also laid out plans to expand cooperation on COVID-19 recovery, fighting the climate crisis, stimulating economic growth, and deepening people-to-people ties.

Source: Voice of America

Biden touts ‘free and open’ Indo-Pacific in summit with ASEAN rulers

U.S. President Joe Biden declared to Southeast Asian leaders on Friday that "our relationship with you is the future," as he wound up a summit with the ASEAN bloc of nations aimed at shoring up trans-Pacific ties and countering China's heavy influence in the region.

Biden's remarks to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations followed statements from Vice President Kamala Harris offering ASEAN countries maritime security assistance to address “threats to international rules and norms” and Secretary of State Antony Blinken holding talks with regional heavyweight Indonesia and budding partner Vietnam.

"A great deal of history of our world over the next 50 years is going to be written in the ASEAN countries and our relationship with you is the future in the coming years and decades," Biden said on the final day of the two-day U.S.-ASEAN Special Summit.

"ASEAN centrality is the very heart of my administration’s strategy in pursuing the future we all want to see. The Indo-Pacific is an Indo-Pacific that is free and open, stable, and prosperous, and resilient and secure. It’s what we’re all seeking," the U.S. president said.

Experts describe "ASEAN centrality" as the concept that the 10-nation bloc serves as the driver and architect of institution-building and of relations with and among outside actors in the Asia-Pacific region.

"We’re committed to a future where the rules and norms that have made possible so much growth and prosperity and stability in the Indo-Pacific are upheld and strengthened, including respect for the rule of law and for human rights," Biden added.

In a gesture seen as significant in a region that often feels neglected by Washington even as governments seek a counterbalance to China's extensive presence, he nominated a close advisor, Yohannes Abraham, as U.S. ambassador to ASEAN, filling a post in Indonesia that has gone without a confirmed envoy for more than five years.

"He’ll be a trusted representative to continue deepening this critical partnership among all of us," Biden said of Abraham, who serves as chief of staff and executive secretary at the National Security Council and was a senior aide in the Barack Obama administration.

ASEAN consists of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. The region has a population of over 662 million people and a combined GDP of $3.2 trillion.

Earlier Friday, hosting the ASEAN leaders for a working lunch, Harris stressed the security concerns many of the countries share over aggressive Chinese actions in the South China Sea, where several of the 10 ASEAN states have territorial disputes with Beijing.

“Our administration recognizes the vital strategic importance of your region, a role that will only grow with time. And we recognize ASEAN’s centrality in the region’s architecture,” she told the gathering at the State Department in Washington.

“As an Indo-Pacific nation, the United States will be present and continue to be engaged in Southeast Asia for generations to come,” Harris said, adding that with a shared vision for the region, “together we will guard against threats to international rules and norms.”

“We stand with our allies and partners in defending the maritime rules-based order which includes freedom of navigation and international law,” she said, without mentioning China.

To underscore U.S. commitment, Harris said the U.S. will provide $60 million in new regional maritime security assistance led by the U.S. Coast Guard, and will deploy a cutter as a training platform and will send technical experts to help build capacity in the region.

That offer followed Biden's commitment at the summit’s opening dinner Thursday to spend U.S. $150 million on COVID-19 prevention, security, and infrastructure in Southeast Asia as part of a package his administration hopes will offset China’s much larger involvement in the region along its southern border.

A U.S. Coast Guard ship will also be deployed to the region to patrol waters ASEAN nations say are illegally fished by Chinese vessels, Biden said.

Not all ASEAN countries are comfortable taking on China, the mostly unnamed subject of U.S. comments this week on rule of law and regional stability.

Thailand's Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-o-cha told the Thai diaspora on Thursday his government would not side with any superpower in the volatile atmosphere.

“As I am coming here to the special ASEAN-U.S. Summit, many keep an eye on me, which side the prime minister would choose and how. We have to do our best to keep our country intact and people have resources to survive. Our principle is that we don’t make conflict with anyone,” he said in live remarks on his government's Facebook page.

In bilateral meetings Friday with Indonesia and Vietnam, two of ASEAN’s three most populous nations, Blinken stressed deepening partnership in security and stronger economic ties.

The second U.S.-ASEAN summit to be held in the United States, following an inaugural gathering in California in 2016, “puts an emphasis on the great importance that we attach, the United States attaches to ASEAN, our relationship, ASEAN centrality,” Blinken told Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi.

“We are working together across the board to advance a shared vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific region. We’re working to strengthen economic ties among countries in the region,” he said at the State Department.

'Dreadful humanitarian crisis' in Ukraine

Retno welcomed “intensified communication and cooperation between our two countries,” and said “we should use this strategic partnership also to contribute to the peace, stability, and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific.”

Departing with a general reticence about discussing the war in Ukraine among of ASEAN states–which include Russia-friendly Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam–the Indonesia minister said: “Our hope is to see the war in Ukraine stop as soon as possible.”

Retno’s remarks echoed those made to U.S. lawmakers Thursday by Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo, who noted the Ukraine war’s impact on the global economy, including food and energy price surges.

“The Ukrainian war has led to a dreadful humanitarian crisis that affects the global economy,” he said, according to remarks released by his cabinet.

Blinken told Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh that Washington and Hanoi are “now the strongest of partners, with a shared vision for security in the region we share and for the strongest possible economic ties.”

The crisis following the February 2021 military coup in Myanmar, which was a top focus of Thursday’s meetings on the sidelines of the ASEAN summit, was at the fore of Blinken’s meeting with Cambodia Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn, who also serves as ASEAN’s special envoy to Myanmar.

“We’re working very closely together as partners to try to advance a shared vision for the region, including regional security,” said Blinken. Cambodia is this year's rotating ASEAN chair.

“And of course, we welcome the leadership role that you’re playing at ASEAN on a number of issues, including hopefully working to restore the democratic path of Myanmar,” Blinken added.

Absent but high on the agenda

Myanmar was one of only two ASEAN countries whose rulers were not at the summit.

The Philippines is being represented by its foreign minister as it wraps up a presidential election this week, while Myanmar’s junta chief, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, was barred from the summit amid a brutal crackdown on opponents of his military regime that rights groups say has claimed the lives of at least 1,835 civilians.

While absent in Washington, the country the U.S. still officially calls Burma was much on the agenda of its fellow ASEAN members Thursday.

Malaysian Foreign Minister Saifuddin Abdullah called out junta officials in a series of tweets for failing to honor their commitment to end violence in the country, while U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman held a meeting with Zin Mar Aung, the foreign minister of the shadow National Unity Government in Myanmar.

“The deputy secretary highlighted that the United States would continue to work closely with ASEAN and other partners in pressing for a just and peaceful resolution to the crisis in Burma,” according to a statement by State Department spokesperson Ned Price.

“They also condemned the escalating regime violence that has led to a humanitarian crisis and called for unhindered humanitarian access to assist all those in need in Burma.”

In Naypyidaw, RFA’s Myanmar Service asked military junta spokesman Maj Gen Zaw Min Tun for comments but he did not respond.

But the head of a think tank made up of former military officers who often reflects the regime’s hardline views called the U.S. meeting with the parallel administration "unethical.”

“To put it bluntly, it’s an unethical act by a superpower showing disrespect to another country,” said Thein Tun Oo, executive director of the Thayninga Institute for Strategic Studies.

The State Administrative Council, as the junta formally calls itself, “is currently holding the three branches of power in Myanmar,” he said.

"As it will move on to deliver its promises in time, no matter what the West may say or push or do, it will follow its own road map,” said Thein Tun Oo.

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