ASEAN breaks deadlock in China's favor
(last modified Mon, 25 Jul 2016 13:46:45 GMT )
Jul 25, 2016 13:46 UTC
  • ASEAN breaks deadlock in China's favor

China has scored a diplomatic victory after Southeast Asia nations did not fulfill a demand by the Philippines to mention a recent ruling on the South China Sea dispute in their final statement.

The request had pushed the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) into deadlock over the past few days but the Philippines finally had to drop it amid opposition from some members. 

Maritime disputes are among the most contentious issues for ASEAN nations, with most of the group's 10 members having competing claims to the South China Sea. 

Last month, a tribunal in The Hague ruled in favor of the Philippines, dismissing Beijing's claims in the South China Sea that channels more than $5 trillion in global trade each year as illegal.   

The Philippines and Vietnam both wanted the ruling to feature in the ASEAN communique which threw the regional block's weekend meeting in the Laos capital of Vientiane into disarray.

After hectic negotiations, the members issued a watered-down rebuke, which did not mention China by name. 

In their communique, the ASEAN nations only said they "remain seriously concerned over recent and ongoing developments" in the South China Sea.  

"We just averted another potential debacle," one ASEAN diplomat in the meeting said. 

The communique urged the nations to avoid militarization of the region. It also called for freedom of navigation to be maintained in the sea.

China publicly thanked Cambodia for supporting its stance on maritime disputes, saying the position would safeguard unity of ASEAN and cooperation with China.

"China greatly approves of Cambodia and other ASEAN countries taking charge of impartiality and safeguarding fairness," China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi said.

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