Aug 7, 2012

A Bright Light Goes Out in the Tribal Belt

A Bright Light Goes Out in the Tribal Belt:

A Pakistani women’s rights activist is murdered—but why wasn’t she protected?

Farida Afridi
Women's rights activist Farida Afridi at her desk. Photo: Youtube user BlueVeinsPak
My heart broke when I heard about the death of Farida Afridi, a 25 year-old Pakistani woman who was shot in Peshawar, Pakistan last month. Afridi was a brave champion of women’s rights. Along with her sister Noor she founded the Society for Appraisal & Women Empowerment in Rural Areas (SAWERA), a local woman-led NGO dedicated to the empowerment of women and peace in the Khyber Agency of Pakistan’s tribal belt. As the human rights manager for SAWERA, Afridi was active in promoting social and economic development, with a particular focus on marginalized women and children.
  1. Pakistan is a country of contradictions – full of promise for growth, modernity and progress, yet shrouded by political, social and cultural issues that undermine its quest for identity and integrity. My bi-monthly column “Pakistan Unveiled” presents stories that showcase the Pakistani struggle for freedom of expression, an end to censorship, and a more open and balanced society.
  2. Bina Shah is a Karachi-based journalist and fiction writer and has taught writing at the university level. She is the author of four novels and two collections of short stories. She is a columnist for two major English-language newspapers in Pakistan, The Dawn and The Express Tribune, and she has contributed to international newspapers including The Independent, The Guardian, and The International Herald Tribune. She is an alumnus of the International Writers Workshop (IWP 2011).
Local Taliban groups are suspected in the attack on Afridi, who was shot in the head as she left her house to go to work on July 4. She reported having received threats from the Taliban before the attack, and chillingly predicted her own death a month ago.
Afridi is not the first social worker to be murdered by militants, who have publicly declared that they would kill anyone found working in the fields of social and human rights. The Taliban are opposed to NGOs that work in these fields because they see them as on-the-ground proof of Western interference and infiltration in the social system of the tribal belt. Social workers Zartif Khan Afridi and Mukarram Khan Atif were also shot and killed in the past year.
For her part, Afridi, who had a Masters in Gender Studies, correctly identified patriarchy as the root cause of the marginalization of women in the Khyber Agency. According to SAWERA’s website, in the tribal areas patriarchy allows men to keep women from gaining an education. Furthermore, a lack of peace and security in the region have stunted social and developmental progress. As a feminist and activist, Afridi challenged both the patriarchy and the violence. She courageously faced dangerous conditions to work in sectors as varied as social engineering, participatory development, disaster relief, gender mainstreaming, and poverty alleviation.
To assuage her family’s fears about her safety and honor Afridi always respected the religious and cultural boundaries of her deeply conservative society. By wearing a chador and full-face veil, and avoiding controversial programs like AIDS and family-planning awareness, Afridi and her sister managed to overcome traditional and cultural resistance to development, but they did not overcome the local militancy.
Afridi’s senseless and violent death could have been prevented if the government had provided her with adequate security. But in Pakistan, women who work for the improvement of their sisters’ plights never get the same protection as army generals and politicians. This, I’m afraid, is the real tragedy of my country.

VIDEO: Indonesia enjoys a spending boom

VIDEO: Indonesia enjoys a spending boom: Indonesia has seen strong growth figures, fuelled by strong domestic demand.

Ben Hil burning

Ben Hil burning:
A crimson sky hangs over Bendung Hilir as plumes of smoke rise into the air. Tiny cracklings of fire catch the breeze and fly upward like winged insects. From a mosque crowds of onlookers hug the balcony to watch as firefighters spray what remains of a slum dwelling in this central Jakarta neighborhood. Their efforts seem fruitless. Only a few structural frames remain – the walls and doorways illuminated by flames that lick around their edges.
Families flee with their few belongings, bedding, baskets of clothes, a few electronics. Fans, televisions and some refrigerators lie along walkways or dumped in piles – the neighborhood’s prized possessions.
Abu Makmus, a member of the coast guard who lives in the neighborhood, says an electrical short started the fire. People can only speculate about the number of homes destroyed by the blaze – 50, maybe 100, some say. They know better the people who lived here. Most were street vendors, many were migrants from East Java. All lived on meager salaries.
Squatters and slum dwellers have never had it easy in Jakarta, even less so as this booming metropolis works to build its urban infrastructure. Property developers are snapping up land for apartments and office towers, pushing out people without land rights.
When homes are so close together, made from flammable materials – scrap metal, old planks – and filled with paper garbage, it doesn’t take long for a spark to spread. Nearly a year ago a fire swept through several shanty houses along the canal at the other end of the neighborhood. Ias, who lives next to where that fire occurred, said it was sparked by a rice cooker.
That was only three or four homes, he says of the fire last year. This is … so much more. “It’s sad,” I say.
“Yes, a big pity,” he agrees. “And just before Lebaran.” In two weeks most people in Indonesia will celebrate the end of the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan. It is a time for joy and indulgence, a time to give blessings.
But not everyone is feeling so lucky. Ias says the homes that burnt down last year still have not been rebuilt, while a new property development is clearing land just behind the site of today’s fire. Men and teenagers grab buckets and plastic kitchen tubs, anything they can to try and extinguish the fire. Others tug on the fire hose to give it more slack. All are fighting to salvage what they can.
Tomorrow police will likely conduct an investigation. The cause will probably be blamed on poor wiring. And for the untold number of residents here, Lebaran will be spent in either the kindness of kin or out on the sidewalk.

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Thai Studies in the Shadow of (Self) Censorship

Thai Studies in the Shadow of (Self) Censorship:
How do Thais deal with seditious topics in the Thai language? How do Thais talk about or act on things that might bear risky consequences? How do Thais manage to talk about the same topic, but express it differently depending on where and when they are talking about it in Thai?
In the wake of a dramatic increase in the use of the lèse majesté law (Article 112 of the Thai Criminal Code) to restrain the unrestrainable, there are calls from progressives, notably the Khana Nitirat, to abolish the law. The movement led to a campaign called Campaign Committee for the Amendment of Article 112 (CAA112). Thailand has now entered a period when the limits of these constraints are being challenged constantly. Talks and discussions are being organised. Thais are talking about the Article 112 wherever they are, and whatever their political affiliation may be.
While the lèse majesté law has become the center of the debate for transitional Thailand, there is a need to look into the constraints that scholars and students in Thailand work under. What limits their intellectual curiosity? We can ask a more specific question: are these limits and constraints only about the Article 112?
Why are Thais so reluctant to criticize the phu yai? Why is bua mai hai chum nam mai hai khun [บัวไม่ให้ช้ำน้ำไม่ให้ขุ่น] (1) so important as a way to smooth, or avoid, social conflict? It seems that censorship is not just about Article 112, but is the effect of deep-seated cultural code of conduct that governs Thai life and society.
On July 16 2012 at the Australian National University, three scholars sat down and talked about this in a discussion entitled “Thai Studies in the Shadow of (Self) Censorship”.  Craig Reynolds, Thanes Wongyannawa, and Prajak Kongkirati kindly agreed to give their thoughts on the topic.
The Panelists
Craig Reynolds: “there is no free speech”
In no country in the world can you say anything you want. In no country in the world is speech free. It always comes with a cost. We find in post-WWII America that people were criticised or persecuted for saying something ‘anti-American’. Or you can be denied a visa to enter Australia if your public opinion on a controversial issue is seen as vilifying.
There are two reasons for the increased attention to the lèse majesté law in Thailand during the past decade. One reason can be traced back to what happened in the early 1930s, when the People’s Party ended the absolute monarchy but, after a power struggle between King Prajadhipok and the Party, the monarch was retained as head of state. The second reason has to do with the evolution of the institution of the reigning monarch who has been on the throne for sixty-six years.
There is another level besides this legal one, however. This is the hidden and unarticulated world inside of Thai language is where writers, academics, and artists have to figure out where the boundaries are.
Thanes Wongyannawa : Truth is Pain [the document]
For many Thais, “Saying something profits us only a couple of pennies, keeping silent yields many ounces of gold” [พูดไปสองไพเบี้ย นิ่งเสียตำลึงทอง] seems to be the best tactic in the politicised political environment of Thailand today. No one wants to break one’s own rice pot, especially in the upper echelon of society, where members are related by kinship, marriage, alma maters, colleagues, and so forth. Being a kae dam [black sheep] is costly.
But self censorship in Thai society is not just about dos and don’ts, but it is a rational calculation of behavior in Thai Theravada Buddhism culture that relates to the notion of truth. Truth does not belong to everybody, but it belongs to a certain social class.  Truth will not lead anyone to happiness, it will only bring pain. On 21 March 2012, General Sonthi Boonyaratkalin replied to General Sanan Kachornprasart who asked “who was behind the 2006 coup?”, that he had been trained to pay loyalty to the nation, and that is not a question that is supposed to be asked (2).
The answer to who gains access to the truth lies in the cognitive structure. For Thai Theravada Buddhism, truth is eternal and absolute. In the notion of Buddhist reincarnation, on one has the ability to know one’s previous lives. In Thai political reality, when one is reborn, one forgets what has happened in his/her past lives. Forgetting and remembering are vital to the logic of nation-state. For the nation to survive, one cannot only remember, but one must also forget. For the Thai elite, the important question is not ‘what’ had happened, but ‘how’ to conduct oneself.
Thus it is not surprising to hear a classic example : General Tritos Ronritvichai gave an interview saying that those who have the privilege of reading top-secret information of Special Branch Police are only those with enough bun [the accumulation of merit]. For the elite, the truth belongs to them, and has nothing to do with the people who do not have much bun. This can also be seen from Thai political history, where the figures – high-ranking army officers, police, the royal family, etc – who were involved in important political events hardly ever revealed what actually happened. And the best example of this can be seen in their cremation volumes, where obituary is eulogy. Truth is pain.
Prajak Kongkirati : “The Thai political Trai Phum [three worlds]”
There are three interrelated areas that restrain academic work: the sacred world, the mundane world, and the underworld.
The sacred world is base on the three pillars, the monarchy, religion, and the nation. In this world, apart from fear, several people self-censored themselves because they see self-censor as the right thing to do to protect the institution and figures that they love and respect. There was once a Thai scholar who came and gave a talk at the ANU about politics after the 2006 coup. He was asked to give a comment on the role of the monarchy. He did not want to discuss it because he believed that the monarchy is above politics, and said “leave the monarchy and ‘him’ alone”. For many Thai scholars, certain issues are beyond rational debate.
In the mundane world, Thai scholars and intellectuals shut their eyes on certain issues. Before the 2006, several public intellectuals admitted that they refrained from criticizing the Yellow Shirts even though they disagreed with some of their ideas and tactics. This was because they thought it was the only option available to topple former PM Thaksin, hence they did not want to weaken the movement. This is not uncommon among scholars sympathetic to the Red Shirts too.
In the underworld, brute force, murder, intimidation, and physical threat are daily constraints for students and scholars in conducting studies. Local scholars and journalists are under pressure as there is no law to protect them, and they must be realistic. For example, local scholars in the South were put under pressure by both government agencies and the separatist movement.
The military is an interesting institution, and surprisingly understudied. It is situated in both the sacred world (i.e. protecting the monarchy and the nation) and under world (i.e. arms trade, smuggling, contraband, forced disappearances, torture, etc).
The discussion left open-ended questions and answers relating to censorship. But when one looks into Thai society, one might not hesitate to ask if censorship/self-censorship really explains the constraints on speech in Thai language.
Notes
(1) About a week after the Revolution, on 30 June 1932, the leaders of the People’s Party had an audience with King Prachathiphok. The king reprimanded the People’s Party for their announcement on the day of the Revolution. Pridi Bhanomyong and General Phraya Pahon Phonphayuhasena had to apologise for offending the king and to ask for his forgiveness. See Sonthi Techanan (2545).
(2)   Khaosod, 22 March 2012.

Thailand’s Mekong water grab

Thailand’s Mekong water grab:

Glancing at a map highlighting the proposed dams in the Mekong Basin, especially in Laos, casts doubt on the assertion that hydropower is being driven by energy demand and that environmental and social concerns are a priority for local governments and industry.
In a new article entitled Water grabbing in the Mekong basin – An analysis of the winners and losers of Thailand’s hydropower development in Lao PDR’  Nathanial Matthews argues that powerful actors from the Thai and Laos’ government and private sector are controlling the benefits of hydropower expansion in the Mekong Basin, while the environment and local communities are negatively impacted. Framing hydropower under water grabbing helps to illuminate the drivers and enablers of the Basin’s current hydropower boom and provides an alternative explanation to the regional rhetoric that these dams will help Thailand, Laos and the region.

Developing the monarchy

Developing the monarchy:

The relevance of the Thai monarchy has increasingly been questioned, if not so loudly, in the country’s current discourse.  Over the past several years, the institution has been weathering social and political storms.  At issue is not whether or not the institution should be abolished but, rather, how it can maintain its popularity.  In fact, without popularity, the institution may be further challenged and, as the result, risk expiring.
The Diamond Jubilee recently celebrated in the UK demonstrated how much Queen Elizabeth II and the British monarchy remain at the top of their game.  National polls have suggested concretely that they will not be overshadowed by the republican movement anytime soon.
This has prompted some Thais to reflect on the current role and future of their most supreme and privileged institution.  Thai PBS, for example, made a special report on the British monarchy, inevitably exposing the Thai audience to questions and discussion about their own monarchy.  With rapid economic growth, improved livelihoods, and stronger demand for political participation, the Thai monarchy has struggled to find a real and sustainable place in the society.  Attempts to glorify the golden age of the monarch being a strong force for national security and well-being may have proved to be adequate up to the present, yet a growing fear is its failure to capture the attention of the new generation of Thais.
Change is both global and inevitable.  The British monarchy appears to have allowed for more room to accommodate this reality.  ‘Adapt to conquer’ is the strategy in essence, and it has proved a successful and relatively easy task.  BBC News home editor Mark Easton wrote of the unyielding popularity of the monarchy in the UK that it was the product of existing anxieties about global and social change.  The role of the British monarchy has been, for the most part, to continue the tradition or, to quote social critic Sulak Sivalaksa, the fairy tale underpinning national identity.
The Thai monarchy has served a greater role in national development.  It can be argued that King Bhumibol Adulyadej had been offered a golden opportunity from poverty caused by widespread corruption and incompetent public agencies, as well as the threat posed by communism in 1960s for political maneuvering. With the state of healthcare, natural resources, agriculture and education which had left much to be desired, the king’s development initiatives began to take root and continued to gain momentum over the following decades.
The royal development work has expedited national development although its impact has not often been measured.  Nonetheless, the king’s attempts deserve praise.  Undoubtedly, his moral authority has been rendered through implementation of development projects nationwide.  He has won the hearts and minds of his subjects in all regions, and his development work has become an integral part of his reign.  Intrinsically, it has served to legitimize it, and maintain the status quo.
To reassert itself, the Thai monarchy needs to rethink this important pillar.
Critical thinking and genuine assessment are sorely lacking in this pillar. Predominantly associated with the king’s initiatives, royal development projects are viewed and promoted as his charity work which can escape criticism.  Transparency has not been prioritized due to the relentless trust Thais have for the king.  But a lack of transparency is inevitably a key source of corruption. While working to improve livelihoods of the rural people, local capacity-building and empowerment have not been made the central element of implementation.  Organizationally, implementation has been planned and carried out by very hierarchical semi-governmental agencies with top-down decision making. Human resource management is highly influenced by nepotism.  Generally speaking, the resulting workplace is full of people who unquestionably love the king, but are not necessarily results-driven.
In other words, key royal development foundations are not run by those with critical thinking and a forward-looking mindset.  Most are too rigid with their key task to preserve the status quo.  Most are trapped in their orthodox way of promoting the institution which does not seem to be working very successfully. Many Thais, especially the young ones, lack basic understanding about what they do.  The young generation has yet to become a driving force of the work.
It is not wrong to take advantage of the royal privilege.  As all men are in fact not created equal, the royal privilege can serve to help get things done, especially in the country where the king and his entourage have been given more influence than most elected governments.
So the question is not whether this hereditary influence should be utilized as a tool to achieve development goals, but rather how successfully it can be.
The restructuring of the royal development work in Thailand would inevitably expose the institution to criticism.  Transparency as well as results-orientation would be greatly needed.  Any components of the work hiding under the royal shadow would need to come out and prove their relevance.
To commit to the restructuring, the executives may find themselves in a dilemma.  A call for redefining royal development work would be high on the agenda.  First and foremost, how the work should be projected may need to be clarified.  So far its image has focused on one dimension which is the usual attribution of the work to the king’s immeasurable benevolence, feeding the notion of it as work for charity, rather development.  The projected impact has predominantly focused on the people’s utter gratefulness for the royal kindness, helping to raise the public’s consciousness of indebtedness to the king.  While this is believed to help maintain his popularity, the work cannot transcend the politics of monarchy to become a bona fide force for national development. In turn, this will increasingly prove to be a dysfunctional pillar of his reign.
What should be highlighted is that, while the institution and development have a symbiotic relationship, the more the latter depends on the former, the less successful it will be, and this will in turn gradually jeopardize the popularity of the former.
To establish itself as a driving force of national development is what the institution needs to strive for.  Just like the institution itself, its development work is in dire need of an overhaul.  All areas of focus will need to be able to respond to newly emerging issues of the day.  The royal concepts of development may also need to shift to a different tone that will catch the young generation’s attention as well as be in tune with the global discourse.
Mark Easton said the British Monarchy had its unique reason to exist as an integral part of the British society.  This is also true for the Thai Monarchy.  The institution has been the important part of Thai history and will always have a place in Thai society.  But the place today may not necessarily look like that of yesterday.  The institution has increasingly been challenged to rationalize its current place in society.  In this process, royal development work will be a vital tool used to help it find new, more solid and sustainable ground.

China Pushes on the South China Sea, ASEAN Unity Collapses

China Pushes on the South China Sea, ASEAN Unity Collapses:

by Ian Storey , Publication: China Brief Volume: 12 Issue: 15, dated August 3, 2012,Category: China Brief, Home Page, Featured, Foreign Policy, Military/Security, China and the Asia-Pacific, Southeast Asia.
For more than two decades Beijing has pursued a consistent policy in the South China Sea composed of two main elements: gradually strengthening the country’s territorial and jurisdictional claims while at the same time endeavoring to assure Southeast Asian countries of its peaceful intentions. Recent moves by China to bolster its maritime claims have brought the first element into sharp relief, while reassurances of benign intent have, however, been in short supply. Indeed, far from assuaging Southeast Asian concerns regarding its assertive behavior, China has fuelled them by brazenly exploiting divisions within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to further its own national interests.


China Hardens Its Stance

Commentaries in China’s state-run media analyzing the South China Sea issue have become markedly less conciliatory. Opinion pieces highlight several new themes in China’s official line. One theme is that China’s territory, sovereignty as well as its maritime rights and interests increasingly are being challenged by Southeast Asian nations and Japan in the South and East China Seas. China’s response, it is argued, should be to uphold its claims more vigorously, increase its military presence in contested waters, and, if necessary, be prepared to implement coercive measures against other countries. As one commentary notes “Cooperation must be in good faith, competition must be strong, and confrontation must be resolute” (Caixin, July 13).
Another theme is that, while China has shown restraint, countries such as the Philippines and Vietnam have been pursuing provocative and illegal actions in a bid to “plunder” maritime resources such as hydrocarbons and fisheries which China regards as its own (China Daily, July 30).
A third theme is that Manila and Hanoi continue to encourage U.S. “meddling” in the South China Sea and that the United States uses the dispute as a pretext to “pivot” its military forces toward Asia (Global Times, July 11). To reverse these negative trends, Chinese commentators have urged the government to adopt more resolute measures toward disputed territories and maritime boundaries. Nationalist sentiment, they argue, demands no less.
Recent measures undertaken by the Chinese authorities do indeed suggest a more hard-line position. Ominously, some of the initiatives have included a strong military element, presumably as a warning to the other claimants that China is ready to play hardball.
Perhaps the most noteworthy attempt by China to bolster its jurisdictional claims in the South China Sea was the raising of the administrative status of Sansha from county to prefecture level in June. Sansha originally was established in 2007 as an administrative mechanism to “govern” the Paracel Islands, Macclesfield Bank and the Spratly Islands. Sansha’s elevation was an immediate response to a law passed on June 21  by Vietnam’s national assembly, which reiterated Hanoi’s sovereignty claims to the Paracels and Spratlys. Both Vietnam and China protested the other’s move as a violation of their sovereignty (Bloomberg, June 21). Less than a month later, Sansha’s municipal authorities elected a mayor and three deputy mayors and China’s Central Military Commission authorized the establishment of a garrison for “managing the city’s national defense mobilization, military reserves and carrying out military operations (Xinhua, July 20).
Earlier, in late June, China’s Defense Ministry announced it had begun “combat ready” patrols in the Spratly Islands to “protect national sovereignty and [China’s] security development interests” (Reuters, June 28). Embarrassingly for the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy, however, on July 13, one of its frigates ran aground on Half Moon Shoal, 70 miles west of the Philippine island of Palawan and within the Philippines 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ). The frigate was refloated within 24 hours, suggesting that other PLA Navy vessels were nearby when the incident occurred. These developments provide further evidence of the growing militarization of the dispute.
China also has moved to undercut the claims and commercial activities of the Philippines and Vietnam in the South China Sea in other ways.
In June, the state-run China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) invited foreign energy companies to bid for exploration rights in nine blocks in the South China Sea. The blocks lie completely within Vietnam’s EEZ and overlap with those offered for development to foreign energy corporations by state-owned PetroVietnam. Accordingly, Hanoi vigorously protested CNOOC’s tender (Bloomberg, June 27). More importantly the blocks are located at the edge of China’s nine-dash line map and seem to support the argument that Beijing interprets the dashes as representing the outermost limits of its “historic rights” in the South China Sea. Under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), however, coastal states are not entitled to “historic rights” on the high seas. It is therefore unlikely that any of the major energy giants will bid for CNOOC’s blocks—although smaller companies may do so if only to curry favor with Beijing with a view to landing more lucrative contracts down the road. If, however, exploration does move forward in any of the nine blocks, a clash between Vietnamese and Chinese coast guard vessels will become a very real possibility.
On the issue of ownership of Scarborough Shoal, scene of a tense standoff between Chinese and Philippines fishery protection vessels in May-June, China position remains uncompromising. At the annual ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF) in Phnom Penh, Cambodia in July, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi restated China’s sovereignty claims to the shoal, rejected the notion that it was disputed and accused Manila of “making trouble” (Xinhua, July 13). According to the Philippine foreign ministry, Chinese trawlers―protected by Chinese paramilitary vessels—continue to fish in waters close to Scarborough Shoal in contravention of a bilateral accord whereby both sides agreed to withdraw their vessels [1].
Following the ARF, China kept up the pressure on the Philippines. In mid-July, it dispatched a flotilla of 30 fishing trawlers to the Spratlys escorted by the 3,000-ton fisheries administration vessel Yuzheng 310 (Xinhua, July 15). The trawlers collected coral and fished near Philippine-controlled Pag-asa Island and Chinese-controlled Mischief and Subi Reefs (Philippine Daily Inquirer, July 27). The Philippine authorities monitored the situation but took no action.
The Phnom Penh Debacle
In the past, after China has undertaken assertive actions in the South China Sea it has tried to calm Southeast Asia’s jangled nerves. At the series of ASEAN-led meetings in Phnom Penh in mid-July, however, Chinese officials offered virtually no reassurances to their Southeast Asian counterparts. Worse still, China seems to have utilized its influence with Cambodia to scupper attempts by ASEAN to address the problem, causing a breakdown in ASEAN unity.
In the final stages of the annual meeting of ASEAN foreign ministers (known as the ASEAN Ministerial Meeting or AMM), the Philippines and Vietnam wanted the final communiqué to reflect their serious concerns regarding the Scarborough Shoal incident and the CNOOC tender. They were supported by Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand who felt that ASEAN should speak with one voice. Cambodia—which holds the rotating chairmanship of ASEAN and has close political and economic ties with China— objected because, in the words of Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, “ASEAN cannot be used as a tribunal for bilateral disputes” (Straits Times, July 22). Attempts by Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa to reach a compromise on the wording were unsuccessful and for the first time in its 45-year history the AMM did not issue a final communiqué.
The fallout from the AMM was immediate and ugly. Natalegawa labelled ASEAN’s failure to reach agreement “irresponsible” and that the organization’s centrality in the building of the regional security architecture had been put at risk (Straits Times, July 16). Singapore’s Foreign Minister, K. Shanmugam described the fiasco as a “sever dent” in ASEAN’s credibility (Straits Times, July 14). Cambodia and the Philippines blamed the failure on each other. Cambodia was pilloried by the regional press for its lack of leadership and for putting its bilateral relationship with China before the overall interests of ASEAN. One analyst alleged  Cambodian officials had consulted with their Chinese counterparts during the final stages of talks to reach an agreement on the communiqué [2]. China’s Global Times characterized the outcome of the AMM as a victory for China, which does not think ASEAN is an appropriate venue to discuss the dispute, and a defeat for the Philippines and Vietnam (Global Times, July 16).
A few days after the AMM, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono dispatched his foreign minister to five Southeast Asian capitals in an effort to restore ASEAN unity. Natalegawa’s shuttle diplomacy resulted in an ASEAN foreign minister’s statement of July 20 on “ASEAN’s Six-Point Principles on the South China Sea” [3]. The six points, however, broke no new ground and merely reaffirmed ASEAN’s bottom line consensus on the South China Sea. In response to the joint statement, China’s Foreign Ministry said it would work with ASEAN to implement the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea (DoC) (Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, July 21).
One of the six points calls for the early conclusion of a code of conduct (CoC) for the South China Sea, but the Phnom Penh debacle has made that target highly doubtful.
Although China agreed to discuss a CoC with ASEAN in November 2011, Beijing always has been lukewarm about such an agreement, preferring instead to focus on implementing the DoC. Undeterred, earlier this year ASEAN began drawing up guiding principles for a code and in June agreed on a set of “proposed elements.” While much of the document is standard boiler plate, there are two aspects worthy of attention.
The first is that ASEAN calls for a “comprehensive and durable” settlement of the dispute, a phrase that seems to repudiate Deng Xiaoping’s proposal that the parties should shelve their sovereignty claims and jointly develop maritime resources. Clearly, the four ASEAN claimants have rejected Deng’s formula as it would be tantamount to recognizing China’s “indisputable sovereignty” over the South China Sea atolls.
The second interesting aspect concerns mechanisms for resolving disputes arising from violations or interpretations of the proposed code. The document suggests that disputing parties turn to the 1976 Treaty of Amity and Cooperation (TAC) or dispute resolution mechanisms in UNCLOS. Neither, however, would be of much utility. While the TAC does provide for a dispute resolution mechanism in the form of an ASEAN High Council, this clause has never been invoked due to the highly politicized nature of the High Council and the fact that it cannot issue binding rulings. Moreover, although China acceded to the TAC in 2003, Beijing almost certainly would oppose discussion of the South China Sea at the High Council because it would be outnumbered 10 to 1.
UNCLOS does provide for binding dispute resolution mechanisms, including the submission of disputes to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) or the International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea (ITLOS). China always has rejected a role for the ICJ in resolving the territorial disputes in the South China Sea and, in 2006, China exercised its right to opt out of ITLOS procedures concerning maritime boundary delimitation and military activities.
On July 9, Vice Foreign Minister Fu Ying had indicated to ASEAN foreign ministers that China was willing to start talks on a CoC in September. Two days later, however, as ASEAN wrangled over their final communiqué, Foreign Minister Yang seemed to rule this out when he stated discussions could only take place “when the time was ripe” (Straits Times, July 11). At present ASEAN and China are not scheduled to hold any meetings on the CoC, though officials currently are discussing joint cooperative projects under the DoC.
If and when the two sides do sit down to discuss the CoC, it is probable that Beijing will demand all reference to dispute resolution be removed on the grounds that the proposed code is designed to manage tensions only and that the dispute can only be resolved between China and each of the other claimants on a one-on-one basis. Taken together, these developments have dimmed seriously the prospect of China and ASEAN reaching agreement on a viable code of conduct for the South China Sea any time soon. As such, the status quo will continue for the foreseeable future.
Notes:

  1. “Why There was no ASEAN Joint Communique,” Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs, July 19, 2012 http://www.dfa.gov.ph/main/index.php/newsroom/dfa-releases/5950-why-there-was-no-asean-joint-communique-.

  2. Ernest Bower, “China reveals its hand on ASEAN in Phnom Penh,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, July 20 2012.

  3. “Statement of ASEAN Foreign Ministers on ASEAN’s Six-Point Principles on the South China Sea,” Cambodian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, July 20, 2012 http://www.mfaic.gov.kh/mofa/default.aspx?id=3206.

Spain charges two Russian terrorism suspects

Spain charges two Russian terrorism suspects: Two men suspected of plotting attack in Europe have been charged with belonging to an unnamed terrorist group.

Pipeline blast halts Iraqi oil flow to Turkey

Pipeline blast halts Iraqi oil flow to Turkey: Repairs to take up to 10 days after explosion in Mardin province believed to have been carried out by Kurdish fighters.

Soldiers killed in Chechnya bombing

Soldiers killed in Chechnya bombing: Interior ministry troops among the dead after suspected bombers strike outside Russian region's capital Grozny.

Violent clashes continue in Sudan's Darfur

Violent clashes continue in Sudan's Darfur: Peacekeepers say armed men looted market and set fire to police station during an attack in the North Darfur state.

Regional heads to confer on DR Congo conflict

Regional heads to confer on DR Congo conflict: Rwanda and DRC among 11 African states meeting in Uganda to discuss proposed neutral force to police unstable border.

Missouri mosque razed by second fire in weeks

Missouri mosque razed by second fire in weeks: Investigators look for evidence of arson after mosque in southern US city of Joplin is burned to the ground.

US says PM's exit shows Assad rule crumbling

US says PM's exit shows Assad rule crumbling: Washington says regime losing grip on power, as defecting PM accuses Assad of carrying out "genocide" on his own people.

NASA Sends First Images of Rover on Mars

NASA Sends First Images of Rover on Mars: The rover ushers in a new era of exploration that could turn up evidence that the Red Planet once had the ingredients for life.


Extreme Heat Is Covering More of the Earth, a Study Says

Extreme Heat Is Covering More of the Earth, a Study Says: Led by NASA’s James E. Hansen, the study said it was nearly certain that events like the 2011 Texas heat wave were caused by the human release of greenhouse gases.


Hospital Chain Inquiry Cited Unnecessary Cardiac Work

Hospital Chain Inquiry Cited Unnecessary Cardiac Work: HCA, the largest for-profit hospital chain in the country, uncovered evidence of unnecessary — even dangerous — cardiac treatments at some of its medical centers in Florida.


In Weak Economy, an Opening to Court Votes of Single Women

In Weak Economy, an Opening to Court Votes of Single Women: In an election focused on the economy, the votes from the legions of unmarried women who helped lift President Obama to victory in 2008 are now up for grabs.


19 Killed at Central Nigeria Church

19 Killed at Central Nigeria Church: Gunmen fired on a worship service in a church in central Nigeria, killing at least 19 people — including the pastor — and wounding others in a nation often divided by religion, the military said Tuesday.


New Delhi Journal: India Stray Dogs Are a Menace

New Delhi Journal: India Stray Dogs Are a Menace: Free-roaming dogs in India, many of which are rabid, number in the tens of millions and bite millions of people annually, including vast numbers of children.


In Iraq, scenes of hope and fear seven months after U.S. troops’ departure

In Iraq, scenes of hope and fear seven months after U.S. troops’ departure:
Past the Army checkpoints, the razor wire, sandbags, blast walls, machine-gun towers, camouflage netting and war-smashed buildings, the sleek white Hummer 2 stretch limo rolled through Baghdad like a little slice of Vegas.
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Syrian rebel says captured Iranians are pro-government fighters, not pilgrims

Syrian rebel says captured Iranians are pro-government fighters, not pilgrims:
ANTAKYA, Turkey — Rebel fighters said Sunday that 48 Iranians captured in the Syrian capital were not the pilgrims their government asserts but instead were affiliated with Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard Corps, on a mission in Damascus to help the Syrian government crush the rebellion.
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Refugee from Facebook questions the social media life

Refugee from Facebook questions the social media life:
MARFA, Tex. — Not long after Katherine Losse left her Silicon Valley career and moved to this West Texas town for its artsy vibe and crisp desert air, she decided to make friends the old-fashioned way, in person. So she went to her Facebook page and, with a series of keystrokes, shut it off.
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Militants in Egypt kill 15 security troops in Sinai attack

Militants in Egypt kill 15 security troops in Sinai attack:
CAIRO — Armed militants killed at least 15 Egyptian security troops Sunday at a checkpoint near the Israeli border and commandeered armored vehicles they later used to storm into the neighboring country, security officials said. The second phase of the attack failed after the Israeli military launched an airstrike on the militants at a border crossing, authorities said.
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Alaskan Arctic villages hit hard by climate change

Alaskan Arctic villages hit hard by climate change:
Fermented whale’s tail doesn’t taste the same when the ice cellars flood.
Whaling crews in this Arctic coast village store six feet of tail — skin, blubber and bone — underground from spring until fall. The tail freezes slowly while fermenting and taking on the flavor of the earth.
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Attack in Sinai poses challenge to Egypt’s Islamist president

Attack in Sinai poses challenge to Egypt’s Islamist president:
CAIRO — The Egyptian government on Monday vowed to act swiftly to restore security in north Sinai as a brazen attack near the Israeli border that killed 16 Egyptian security personnel dealt the country’s new president a vexing first crisis.
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Lack of power symbolizes India’s inequalities

Lack of power symbolizes India’s inequalities:
KATAIYAN, India — Night falls quickly in this Indian village, and soon the darkness is absolute. By 7:30, men, women and children lie down on jute-stringed cots outside their houses. The only sounds come from frogs, crickets and the flapping of hand-fans.
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Syrian rebels buoyed as prime minister becomes defector

Syrian rebels buoyed as prime minister becomes defector:
BEIRUT — Syria’s prime minister defected to Jordan on Monday, according to rebels who claim they helped him escape, becoming the most senior official to quit the embattled government of President Bashar al-Assad.
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Gunman in Wisconsin was deeply involved in white-supremacist music scene

Gunman in Wisconsin was deeply involved in white-supremacist music scene:
OAK CREEK, Wis. — The gunman who killed worshipers at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin on Sunday had become deeply embedded in the white-supremacist music scene and was well known to anti-hate watchdog groups, one of which said it had been tracking the 40-year-old for more than a decade.
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Egypt’s Mohamed Morsi opens presidential palace to citizen complaints

Egypt’s Mohamed Morsi opens presidential palace to citizen complaints:
CAIRO — Under Hosni Mubarak, Egypt’s presidential palace inspired awe and fear, much like the autocratic leader who lived large inside.
But under President Mohamed Morsi, the old barricades have fallen. Nearly every day, Egyptians from all walks of life throng the main entrance of the imperial white building to make their feelings known.
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Katrina vanden Heuvel: Romney’s incredible extremes

Katrina vanden Heuvel: Romney’s incredible extremes:
Mitt Romney’s tax and spending plans are so irresponsible, so cruel, so extreme that they are literally incredible. Voters may find it hard to believe anyone would support such things, so they are likely to discount even factual descriptions as partisan distortion.
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Iran pledges support for Syria as battle rages for Aleppo

Iran pledges support for Syria as battle rages for Aleppo:
BEIRUT — Iran pledged support for Syria’s beleaguered government Tuesday as forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad battled rebels for control of Aleppo, unleashing intense bombardments from the air and ground that forced thousands of civilian inhabitants to flee the country’s largest city.
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Deadly Flooding Strikes the Philippines - WSJ.com

Deadly Flooding Strikes the Philippines - WSJ.com

Aug 6, 2012

Fish Kills Rise as Drought Intensifies

Fish Kills Rise as Drought Intensifies: Thousands of fish are dying in the Midwest as the hot, arid summer dries up rivers and causes water temperatures to climb in some spots to nearly 100 degrees.

Indonesian Economy Expands

Indonesian Economy Expands: Indonesia's economy expanded a higher-than-expected 6.4% in the second quarter as robust domestic demand offset a decline in the international appetite for its exports.

Syrian TV: Prime Minister Fired

Syrian TV: Prime Minister Fired: Syria's state-run TV says the country's prime minister has been fired less than two months after taking up his post.

India's Sikhs Grieve After Shooting

India's Sikhs Grieve After Shooting: Sikhs in India reacted with outrage and grief to Sunday's shooting at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin, with many expressing concern that the incident is evidence of growing intolerance against the religious community in the U.S.

Aug 5, 2012

China Detains 2,000 for Fake Drugs

China Detains 2,000 for Fake Drugs: Chinese police said they seized more than $182 million worth of counterfeit pharmaceuticals and detained nearly 2,000 people in the latest attempt to clean up a food and drug market that has been flooded with fakes.

Turkish Offensive Kills 115 Kurdish Rebels

Turkish Offensive Kills 115 Kurdish Rebels: Turkey's security forces have killed as many as 115 Kurdish rebels during a major security offensive over the past two weeks, the country's interior minister said.

Zambia Investigates Mining Death

Zambia Investigates Mining Death: A team of Zambian investigators visited Chinese-owned Collum Coal Mine, a day after a Chinese manager was killed and others critically injured during a protest over low wages.

Seven Killed at Sikh Temple in Wisconsin

Seven Killed at Sikh Temple in Wisconsin: Police in Wisconsin said seven people were killed at a Sikh temple near Milwaukee, including the suspected gunman.

Militants Kill 15 Egyptian Border Guards

Militants Kill 15 Egyptian Border Guards: Masked gunmen killed 15 Egyptian guards at a security checkpoint along the border with Gaza and Israel, attacking with automatic rifles and weapons mounted on their vehicles.

Aug 4, 2012

LIPI among world’s top-100 best research institutions

LIPI among world’s top-100 best research institutions: (Courtesy of LIPI)The Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI) is among the top-100 of the world’s best research institutions and is the only such institute in Southeast Asia to make such a ...

Tweets shape national debate in Thailand

Tweets shape national debate in Thailand: Twitter is fast becoming a key conduit for political debate in Thailand with more people finding it liberating as they can engage in real-time dialogues with politicians and prominent tweeters. ...

Poet turns down Bakrie Award

Poet turns down Bakrie Award: Indonesian poet Seno Gumira Ajidarma followed in the steps of several intellectuals by refusing to the 2012 Achmad Bakrie Award, which comes with Rp 250 million (US$26,250) of prize money.Seno stated ...

Beggars endure raids, find new ways to earn money

Beggars endure raids, find new ways to earn money: Something is missing from the city streets during the fasting month of Ramadhan this year.Seasonal beggars that usually flock to the city’s intersections are rarely seen due to the efforts of the ...

Philippine Catholics rally against family planning

Philippine Catholics rally against family planning: Philippine Roman Catholic Church leaders led a rally Saturday against a proposed law that would provide government funding for contraceptives and introduce reproductive health and sexuality classes ...