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By Douglas Bakshian
Cebu, Philippines
12 January 2007
Southeast Asian foreign ministers have taken a step forward in the war on terrorism, preparing a draft convention that allows security agencies to cooperate more on tracking, finding and prosecuting1 terrorists. The draft was approved Friday, and leaders of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations are expected to give their final approval Saturday. Douglas Bakshian reports from the ASEAN summit in the Philippine city of Cebu.
Foreign Ministers of China, South Korea and Japan open meeting between three countries as a sidebar of ASEAN meeting in Mactan, Cebu province in central Philippines, 12 Jan 2007
The convention is designed to clamp down on the unregulated movement of arms and militants3 in the region. The draft says ASEAN's individual national security agencies would have to coordinate4 their efforts to track, arrest, detain and rehabilitate5 suspected militants. They would also be required to beef up border controls and suppress terrorist financing.
The convention would make it a legal obligation for the 10 ASEAN countries to work together in these areas.
Rohan Gunaratna, a terrorism specialist at the Singapore Institute of Defense6 and Strategic Studies, says this is a step in the right direction in the war on terror.
"It will have a significant impact because today the specialist counter-terrorism capabilities7 of individual governments are quite good, but there is limited cooperation, coordination8 and collaboration9 between the governments," he said. "If there is greater understanding and agreement … then certainly the national security agencies … will cooperate much better to fight terrorism and extremism more effectively."
Gunaratna says terrorist and extremist groups in the region are cooperating and collaborating10 with each other, so the authorities must work together in a similar manner to counter the threat. He says terrorists are constantly moving among the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia, nations with many large and small islands that make the borders difficult to police.
Summit spokesman Victoriano says the convention would bring ASEAN into line with internationally accepted definitions of terrorism.
"The ASEAN countries will adopt the definitions of what constitute terror-related crimes spelled out in various U.N. conventions, which could be against aircraft, airports, seacraft, maritime11 structures and the like," he said.
Phillipine bomb blast victim at General Santos hospital
Terrorism is a persistent12 problem in the region. Just days ago, the southern Philippines was rocked by several bombings that killed at least six people and wounded dozens. Authorities suspect the bombings were the work of a local militant2 who is working with the regional Islamic terrorist group, Jemaah Islamiyah.
Jemaah Islamiyah is accused of being behind bombings on the Indonesian island of Bali in 2002 and 2005 that together killed 225 people. The group is also accused of several other fatal bombings over the past several years in Jakarta, and in the Philippines.
There has also been terrorist activity in recent years in Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand.
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