ASEAN 2020: 10th Meeting of East Asia Summit Foreign Ministers held

Hanoi (VNA) – The 10th East Asia Summit Foreign Ministers’
Meeting was held online on September 9 within the framework of the ongoing 53rd
ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting (AMM-53) and related meetings hosted by
Vietnam.
Chaired by Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh, the video
conference was attended by ASEAN Secretary General Lim Jock Hoi, ASEAN foreign
ministers, and representatives from EAS partners, namely Australia, China,
India, Japan, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea, Russia, and the US.
Acknowledging progress in implementing the Manila Action Plan 2018-2022, the
EAS countries agreed to continue boosting cooperation in priority areas,
including environment, energy, education, finance, health, disaster management,
connectivity, economics, trade, food security, and marine cooperation.
Foreign ministers said amid the COVID-19 and its complicated developments, EAS
countries need to enhance practical cooperation, raise their capacity to
respond to and minimise negative impact of the pandemic while promoting
sustainable regional recovery.
The EAS partners spoke highly of Vietnam's role as the 2020 ASEAN Chair for
actively coordinating the COVID-19 response efforts of ASEAN and partners, and
supported ASEAN initiatives such as the COVID-19 Response Fund and the Regional
Reserve of Medical Supplies.
ASEAN recommended the EAS partners, with their strengths, support ASEAN to
improve its capacity for preventive medicine, coordinate information sharing
and exchange of experience in treatment, research and production of vaccines,
and minimise socio-economic impact while promoting sustainable economic
recovery and growth.
Participants welcomed Vietnam's proposal to host an EAS inter-sectoral expert conference
on COVID-19 to strengthen response and recovery efforts in the region, slated
for October 2020.
Fifteen years after its establishment, the EAS is now facing both new
opportunities and challenges in the context of unprecedentedly rapid and
complex changes in the region. The countries need to coordinate closely to
strengthen the group in the new phase, contributing positively to dialogue and
cooperation, maintaining peace, security and prosperity, and effectively
responding to emerging challenges in the region.
The countries agreed to support the 15th East Asia Summit (EAS-15) to adopt an
announcement marking the EAS 15th founding anniversary and cooperation
documents on sustainable marine cooperation, promoting stable regional economic
growth, capacity building in response to epidemics, and enhancing the role of
women in ensuring peace and security.
Participants exchanged views on regional and international situations of mutual
interest, including the situation on the Korean Peninsula, the East Sea,
Myanmar’s Rakhine state, and Hong Kong (China).
Regarding the situation in the East Sea,
they emphasised the importance of peace, stability, security, safety and
freedom of navigation and aviation in the East Sea, which is a common interest
of all countries. They also expressed concerns about recent developments in the
waters that cause harms to peace, security and the rule of the law in the
region, especially amid the COVID-19 outbreak.
The countries stressed the need to push up
dialogues and intensify the building of trust; and to refrain from the acts
that worsen tension and complicate the situation, from militarisation, and from
the use of or threat to use force. The disputes must be settled by peaceful measures
on the basis of international law, including the 1982 UNCLOS.
The meeting called on ASEAN and China to fully and effectively implement the
Declaration of the Conduct of the Parties in the East Sea (DOC), and work to
soon complete the building of an effective Code of Conduct in the East Sea
(COC), consistent with international law and recognised by the international
community.
Addressing the conference, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister Pham Binh Minh
affirmed the strategic role and important contributions of the EAS in the past
15 years. He emphasised the EAS chair's coordination role in EAS cooperation
activities, and in enhancing the EAS role in responding promptly and
effectively to emerging challenges in the region. Participants expressed their
support for Vietnam's proposal on issuing a Hanoi Declaration marking the 15th
anniversary of the EAS.
Regarding the East Sea situation, Minh reaffirmed ASEAN's principled position
stated at the 36th ASEAN Summit and the 53rd ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting.
He suggested related parties uphold the law, refrain from the acts that further
complicate the situation and from militarisation, settle disputes through
peaceful measures, continue to fully and effectively implement the DOC and soon
complete the effective and efficient COC in accordance with international law,
especially the 1982 UNCLOS, contributing to maintaining peace, security and
stability in the East Sea and in the region.
According to the agenda for September 10, the ASEAN Foreign Ministers will
attend the ASEAN-US, ASEAN-Canada, ASEAN-Australia, and ASEAN-New Zealand
Foreign Ministers’ meetings, the dialogue between ASEAN Foreign Ministers and
representatives of the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights
(AICHR), and the ASEAN ministerial dialogue on strengthening women’s role for sustainable
peace and security./.