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Vietnam to be proactive force for peace,
stability in SE Asia: Deputy PM
Vietnam's Deputy Prime Minster Pham Binh Minh is seen in this file
photo. Reuters
Vietnam will be a responsible, active, and proactive member of
the ASEAN family that strives to strengthen the regional integration of the
bloc and accelerate the building of the ASEAN Community, according to
Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Pham Binh Minh.
Deputy PM Minh, who is also Minister of Foreign Affairs, made the assertion
in his article “Vietnam 2015: A Proactive Force for Peace, Stability and
Community-Building in Southeast Asia” recently published in the weekly
NewEurope in Belgium,
according to the Vietnam News Agency.
Vietnam
expects Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations will be concluded this year,
which will take the total number of free trade agreements (FTAs) the country
has signed with its partners to 12, Deputy PM Minh wrote, adding that these
pacts cover over 50 countries, including more than 15 members of the G20
bloc.
“Vietnam
optimistically foresees itself to be the first (and perhaps only) ASEAN
member state to have FTA arrangements, whether bilateral or multilateral,
with all the major powers and economies of the world,” the article says.
Regarding regional conflicts, the official
noted Vietnam
believes strongly that the responsibility to exercise self-restraint lies
firstly with the major powers, which are best positioned and equipped through
their actions to build trust and proceed with the peaceful settlement of
disputes.
In respect of Vietnam’s ties with the European
Union (EU), the Vietnamese official affirmed that the EU is one of the most
important partners and supporters during the Southeast Asian country’s
ongoing course of reform.
He wrote in the article that Vietnam and the other ASEAN nations share a
common desire to see greater European involvement in ensuring cooperation,
peace, stability, and prosperity throughout East Asia.
ASEAN is a political and economic organization of ten countries in Southeast
Asia, including Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore,
Thailand, Brunei, Cambodia,
Laos, Myanmar, and Vietnam.
Foreign Minister Minh also mentioned the EU’s interests in a peaceful,
stable, and integrated ASEAN.
Regarding the East Vietnam Sea
disputes, Deputy PM Minh said that ASEAN and China
are working hard with a view to obtaining early outcomes in managing rifts,
and that the two sides have agreed to the early conclusion of the “Code of
Conduct in the East
Sea.”
The Vietnamese diplomat made references to
increased concerns over continued major challenges faced by the Asia-Pacific
region in 2015, including adaptability to the intersection of the interests
of major regional powers.
Disputes over territories and maritime zones
may become more complex, while non-traditional security issues including
piracy, transnational crime, and disorderly or illegal migration will likely
become more serious as well, the article says.
Deputy PM Minh concluded his article by
expressing optimism about Vietnam’s
position as an increasingly important gateway and bridge in the EU-ASEAN
relations.
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