Asean mulls 'new political channels' to address maritime disputes | The Jakarta Post
ASEAN lawmakers are considering setting up an advisory group  of high-level parliamentarians to create "new political channels" to  address disputes in the South China Sea.
The proposed body, which  would advise ASEAN, is included in a draft political resolution being  discussed at the annual meeting of the ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary  Assembly (AIPA) in Indonesia this week.
The meeting got underway  on the island of Lombok on Sunday and is scheduled to last until  Saturday. It follows the failure of ASEAN foreign ministers to adopt a  joint statement at their annual meeting in Phnom Penh in July in the  absence of a regional consensus on the South China Sea.
China has  territorial claims in the South China Sea that compete or overlap with  those of ASEAN members Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.
The  "Resolution on the Situation in the South China Sea" is among 11  resolutions expected to be adopted by the ASEAN lawmakers meeting this  week.
According to the draft, AIPA lawmakers are "deeply  concerned" about the "escalation of conflict among the claimant states  arising from the overlapping jurisdictional and territorial claims in  the South China Sea."
It resolves "to consider to establish an  AIPA Eminent Persons Group composed of high-level representatives from  AIPA Member Parliaments to create new political channels for negotiation  and to provide advice to ASEAN in its efforts to find a durable  solution of disputes in the South China Sea."
It also requests all  member parliaments to "develop preventive diplomacy through dialogues  and political negotiation to avoid the disputes escalating into  conflicts among the parties concerned."
At the same time, it  encourages ASEAN members and China "to expedite the negotiation and  conclusion of a regional code of conduct."
It also urges "all  claimant states to clarify their claims and to reiterate their full  commitment to peacecul solution of disputes in the South China Sea in  accordance with universally recognised principles of international law  including the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea."
The  draft resolution does not mention the failure of foreign ministers to  issue their customary joint communique in July. But it notes "with  appreciation" the Six-Point Principles on the South China Sea that were  adopted and released after the meeting in Phnom Penh.
Senior ASEAN  foreign ministry officials are expected to discuss the South China Sea  issue at a retreat in Thailand next month ahead an East Asian Summit  chaired by Prime Minister Hun Sen in Phnom Penh in November.
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