Jakarta Globe – AFP, Aug 12, 2014
Tokyo. Indonesia’s President-Elect Joko Widodo said his country was ready to act as an intermediary to calm rising tensions over territorial disputes in the South China Sea, according to an interview published on Tuesday.
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US and Philippine navy personnel launch an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) onto
the air off the Philippine Naval Station in western Manila on June 28, 2013. (EPA
Photo/Dennis M. Sabangan)
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Tokyo. Indonesia’s President-Elect Joko Widodo said his country was ready to act as an intermediary to calm rising tensions over territorial disputes in the South China Sea, according to an interview published on Tuesday.
The Jakarta
governor, who won a resounding electoral victory last month, told Japan’s Asahi
newspaper that he would work toward finding diplomatic — not military —
solutions to the simmering conflicts.
Beijing
claims almost all of the South China Sea, putting it at odds with countries
including the Philippines and Vietnam, and there have been several tense
encounters in the area over recent months.
“We’re
hoping for diplomatic solutions and, if necessary, Indonesia stands ready to
play an intermediary role,” Joko said, according to the Asahi interview, which
was published in Japanese.
“I refuse
to accept a military solution,” he added.
Indonesia
does not have any disputes with China over the South China Sea, and has
traditionally held a mediating role in rows over the waters.
Joko also
said he would help speed up the drafting of a code of conduct between China and
the 10 member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
His
comments come as Beijing accused Washington of deliberately stoking tensions in
the South China Sea, and rejected Washington’s proposal for a freeze on
provocative actions in the region.
The remarks
by Foreign Minister Wang Yi came at an Asean Regional Forum at the weekend
overshadowed by disputes in the strategically significant waters.
Asean
members have shown varying degrees of alarm to China’s growing assertiveness in
the region.
Tensions
escalated after China positioned an oil rig in an area also claimed by Vietnam,
with each country accusing the other of ramming its ships.
Agence France-Presse
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