by Reinhard Hohler, Chiang Mai
According to the breaking news on www.bangkokpost.com, ASEAN’s Foreign Ministers are meeting in Bali, Indonesia to take stock of progress in the grouping’s key community-building and economic integration targets. The 10-member grouping has a vision to create an ASEAN Community comprising the pillars of political security, economy, and socio-cultural values by 2015.
One of the agenda items is to review ASEAN’s efforts so far in realising a single community. It seems progress has not been fast enough. ASEAN has just four years left, and time is not on its side. ASEAN Secretary-General Dr. Surin Pitsuwan said: “The implementation has to be faster…I have been trying to encourage every member state that we do not stop at the ratification of the agreements, we will have to go down to the actual implementation. So, in the end…how do you translate what has been agreed at the regional level, down to the national implementation?”
Dr. Surin said he wants to do more to put pressure on member states to speed up ASEAN’s integration process.
During the meetings, ASEAN Foreign Ministers are also expected to touch on security issues in the region. These include the border problem between Thailand and Cambodia, as well as disputes in the South China Sea.
Parts of the South China Sea contain some of the busiest shipping lanes in the world and are believed to be rich in oil and gas. They are being claimed by Brunei, China, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan and Viet Nam.
Dr. Surin continued: “There is also a sense of urgency that we need to send out the right signals…to the world that ASEAN and China can manage our differences, because this issue has been an issue of high anxiety, not only for us in the region, in East Asia, but also in the global community.”
The meetings of ASEAN Foreign Ministers are expected to bring the regional grouping and China at least a step closer to finalising a “Code of Conduct” in the South China Sea.

