With
the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) looming in 2015, I thought it might be
prudent to learn something more about the ASEAN before that date. There on
the Bookazine shelves would appear to be the answer - a very slim volume
(just over 50 pages) to explain ASEAN. Almost the definitive ASEAN for
Dummies publication, or something similar. And the price was only B. 114.
What a bargain!
The book also proclaimed that this was the second edition, so there must
have been a sell-out first edition one presumes. This second edition is
also, rather strangely, only for Thailand (ISBN 978-616-215-022-7, Silkworm
Books, Chiang Mai).
The format is in Question and Answer style and covers the formation of the
Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), now of 10 members from the
original five signatories in 1967, which were Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore and Thailand.
These ASEAN nations laid down seven aims and purposes for themselves and
included economic growth, regional peace and stability, collaboration in
economic, social, cultural, technical, scientific and administrative; mutual
assistance in training and research; collaboration in agriculture, industry
and communications and improvement of living standards and cooperation with
regional and international organizations. All a very noble beginning.
The other nations joined later, with the final three being Laos and Myanmar
in 1997 and Cambodia in 1999.
Question Five asks what have been the most important accomplishments of
ASEAN, and proudly states that “No two ASEAN members have ever gone to war
with each other.” This has been done by the system of Dialogue Partnerships,
the ASEAN regional forum, the ASEAN Plus Three process and the East Asia
summit. Perhaps the authors had missed the Preah Vihear conflict between
Thailand and Cambodia which has been ongoing for 100 years and escalated in
2008 which resulted in several deaths in April last year?
In 1993, the ASEAN ministerial meeting issued a long communiqué on human
rights, which unfortunately is given lip service by many of the members.
Remember the Tak Bai Massacre and the Kru Se Mosque incident for example?
The much vaunted war against drugs must come in here as well. Lofty aims,
but working? Hmm. I wonder. However, they have signed a pact to be nuclear
arms free, so that is something I suppose.
ASEAN has done some good, however, with common concepts on tourism, other
than Thailand which has opposed a common visa for the region (like the
European Shengen visa).
The book poses the question, “What is ASEAN doing to combat international
terrorism and other transnational crime, including the drugs problem?” The
answer being that ASEAN members signed an anti-terrorism convention and have
written down a mechanism to counter the drug problem. With around 4,000
killed in the South of Thailand since 2004 and with many instances of
cross-border movement of terrorists, one has to question the ability of the
ASEAN convention. And drugs? The problem still exists, with the
manufacturing sites being within ASEAN countries themselves.
After wading through the rhetoric, it was impossible not to come to the
conclusion that one was reading about all the ceremony without much of the
substance.