Just New Warrior

MIRIAM: SENATE TO CONCUR WITH ASEAN CHARTER

Sen. Miriam Defensor Santiago, chair of the Senate foreign relations committee, said that she will submit by next month her committee report recommending Senate concurrence with the Asean charter, and expects Senate concurrence before the end of the year.

“If all ten member states ratify the charter by December, it will enter into force in 2009. Thus, Asean will ratify its constitution even ahead of the European Union, whose charter was rejected by two countries,” the senator said.

Of the ten Asean members, seven have already ratified the charter, while three countries including the Philippines are engaged in the process of ratification.

The ten Asean members are: Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.

“It was the Philippines that first proposed the Asean charter in the 1970s. To be consistent, the Senate should concur. The Asean charter is a treaty and is therefore binding,” she said.

Santiago said that although the Asean charter includes the principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of member states, it will speak out on humanitarian or self-defense events, such as the release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar.

“It was also the Philippines who took the initiative in providing for an Asean human rights body, now part of the charter. If Myanmar ratifies the charter, it will be obliged to comply with its provisions and all other Asean agreements,” she said.

Santiago said the Asean Human Rights Body will enable Asean to stop depending on foreign human rights monitors, and instead manifest to the world Southeast Asian regional perspectives on human rights.

“The charter also enshrines the so-called Asean Way of settling differences, meaning consultation and consensus. This is the basic decision-making principle in Asean,” she said.

“The main tangible result of the charter will be the creation of an Asean Economic Community. This means the creation of a single market and product base. In the Asean Economic Community, there will be free flow of goods, services, investments, and capital. It will also facilitate movement of business persons, professionals, talents, and labor,” Santiago said.

The charter provision for the creation of an Asean Economic Community is a direct result of the Asean Economic Community blueprint signed in Cebu last year, when President Arroyo presided at the Asean Summit.

“The emergence of China and India as economic powers has created new realities for Asean. The Asean Economic Community will keep the Philippines competitive alongside these two Asian giants. The Asean Economic Community will be established by 2015,” Santiago said.