ASEAN SG appeals for maximum restraint over Cambodia-Thailand dispute

Posted on Sunday, November 8th, 2009 and is filed under ASEAN. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

JAKARTA, Indonesia/08 November 2009–The Secretary-General of ASEAN, in expressing concern over the escalation of tensions between Cambodia and Thailand, has appealed to both countries to exercise maximum restraint. Dr Surin Pitsuwan further urged the ASEAN Foreign Ministers to assist the two ASEAN Member States to settle their bilateral dispute amicably and as soon as possible.

Dr Surin, in a letter to the ASEAN Foreign Ministers dated Friday, 6 November 2009, informed them that he has received many inquiries and expressions of concern from ASEAN’s Dialogue Partners and friends over the apparent deterioration of relations between Cambodia and Thailand, as evidenced in the recalling of their Ambassadors earlier this week.

Noting that the dispute could undermine the credibility of ASEAN, Dr Surin said, “We in ASEAN cannot afford to be seen as being so seriously divided prior to the upcoming APEC Economic Leaders Meeting and the historic ASEAN-US Leaders Meeting in Singapore this month.”

The Secretary-General pointed out that in line with the spirit of the ASEAN Charter and the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia (TAC) of 1976, all other Member States in ASEAN are obliged to offer assistance to help fellow Member States settle their bilateral disputes, even when the two disputing parties cannot agree to refer their dispute to any regional means of dispute settlement.

Article 16 of the TAC in particular provides for other State Parties to offer “all possible assistance” to help settle a bilateral dispute that could threaten regional stability and regional harmony. Moreover, the said Article further stipulates that “Parties to the dispute should be well disposed towards such offers of assistance”.  (ASEAN Secretariat)

Leave a Reply

Photo Gallery