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US Urges Calm in Sea Disputes During SE Asia Summit 在东南亚峰会上,美国呼吁在南海争端上保持冷静
Senior diplomats1 from Southeast Asian nations, China and the United States wrapped up talks in Myanmar's capital Sunday with a statement urging all sides to avoid confrontations2 in the South China Sea.
Overlapping3 ownership claims in the oil- and gas-rich sea continue to be a major regional flashpoint, but efforts by the U.S. and Philippines to temporarily halt all so-called “provocative4 acts” such as oil drilling, failed to attract broad support.
The gathering5 in Myanmar's capital city Naypyidaw marks another milestone6 for the country's political opening, as it plays host to this year's major meetings of the Association of Southeast Asian nations.
But just like recent ASEAN gatherings7, the bloc's key issue: how to address maritime8 territorial9 disputes in the South China Sea remains10 unresolved, says Myanmar's foreign minister.
"It is not that one party is trying to influence others, the others against the one country," he said. "All ASEAN, not ASEAN versus11 China. This is what we call it the ASEAN...we would like to settle all these kind of disputes in a very peaceful manner."
The emphasis on diplomacy12 comes after months of sometimes violent territorial confrontations.
In May, China moved an oil rig to waters near the Paracel islands, which Vietnam also claims. The move sparked a violent backlash against Chinese businesses in Vietnam. Chinese land reclamation13 efforts near islets claimed by the Philippines also set off alarms in Manila.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry says he remains hopeful the matter can be resolved without hostilities14.
“We all underscored the importance of negotiations15 on a binding16 code of conduct," he said. "And I stressed the importance of everybody clarifying claims under international law and proceeding17 under the legal process through the law, through arbitration18, and also through bilateral19 relationships.”
Efforts to agree on a binding code of conduct have faltered20 for more than a decade, partly because of Chinese opposition21. The lack of progress has led some countries such as the Philippines to try other legal venues22 to determine ownership.
ASEAN Secretary General Le Luong Minh tells VOA that because of the growing tensions, negotiators must find a peaceful breakthrough.
“It is urgent, it is important now that ASEAN can engage China and can intensify23... these consultations24, these negotiations, towards the early conclusion and adoption25 of a code of conduct,” he said.
Chinese state-backed media Monday played up the failure of the U.S. proposal to freeze provocative acts in disputed parts of the Sea, claiming Washington uses the issue to meddle26 in the region.
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