Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono delivers his speech during the opening ceremony of the 18th ASEAN Summit in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: AP |
Jakarta, Indonesia (CNN) -- Leaders of the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations met in Indonesia on Saturday for a two-day
summit expected to focus on efforts to achieve economic integration by
2015.
The meeting started under the cloud of security issues such as the Thai-Cambodia border conflict.
Indonesia,
which chairs the summit this year, has been trying to mediate talks
between Thailand and Cambodia in their dispute over the ancient Preah
Vihear temple.
Renewed fighting in the area has prompted
displacement of thousands on both sides. Fighting along the turbulent
border has raged since last month as the two sides accuse each other of
trying to seize ancient temples.
Much of the border between the two countries remains in dispute.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono urged member nations to promote peace.
"We
realize that to ensure peaceful and stable east Asia region, we must
ensure stability and security in the region," he said in his opening
speech.
"History recalls that as one of the pioneers of regional
integration in the world, ASEAN was established based on the strong
desire to establish peace, building consensus, promoting stability
through regional cooperation and integration."
Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa met separately with his Thai and Cambodian counterparts on Friday.
Last
month, both nations agreed to the deployment of an Indonesian observer
team to the disputed area, but have not agreed on conditions set by
either country. There are no indications so far that the leaders of both
nations will meet on the sidelines of the summit.
Other issues
expected to be discussed is Myanmar's bid to host the summit in 2016,
two years before its turn to assume the chairmanship.
Human Rights Watch urged ASEAN leaders to reject the proposal.
"Rewarding
Burma with ASEAN's chairmanship after it staged sham elections and
still holds 2,000 political prisoners would be an embarrassment for the
region," said Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights
Watch. "ASEAN leaders need to decide if they will let Burma demote ASEAN
to the laughingstock of intergovernmental forums."
Myanmar was formerly known as Burma.
The
regional group rotates the chairmanship every year among its members:
Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. International pressure forced Myanmar
to skip its turn in 2005.
Yudhoyono also stressed the need for ASEAN leaders to address the challenges of food and energy security.
"We
must give serious attention and take concrete measures to address the
soaring of food prices and world energy, which in turn will negatively
affect the prosperity of our people," he said. "History shows that the
rise of food and energy prices usually caused the increase in the
number of people living in poverty."
Source: CNN
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