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Sea row dominates Southeast Asian summit Posted: 11 May 2014 03:31 AM PDT Naypyidaw (Myanmar) (AFP) - Surging maritime tensions dominated a meeting of Southeast Asian leaders Sunday with Vietnam expected to call on its regional neighbours for support in its deepening territorial dispute with China. The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is convening just days after both Vietnam and the Philippines locked horns with China in contested waters, stoking international alarm. The summit, hosted for the first time by Myanmar in its showpiece capital Naypyidaw, is set to be dominated by discussion of the South China Sea, which is crisscrossed by key shipping lanes and thought to contain vast energy reserves. In prepared remarks for the summit seen by AFP, Vietnam Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung urged his ASEAN counterparts to protest what he termed China's "serious violation" in the sea. Tensions flared after a controversial decision by Beijing to relocate a deep-water oil rig into territory also claimed by Hanoi in early May. The move sparked a series of incidents in the disputed waters, with Vietnam on Wednesday accusing its neighbour of attacks on its ships. "This extremely dangerous action has been and is directly threatening peace, stability and maritime security and safety," Dung said, according to the prepared remarks. On Saturday, ASEAN foreign ministers expressed "serious concerns over the on-going developments" in a joint statement ahead of the summit, as the bloc sought to present a unified front in dealing with the region's massive neighbour. The stand-off has stoked bitter anti-China sentiment in Vietnam, with about 1,000 people joining one of the country's largest ever rallies against Beijing in Hanoi on Sunday. Protests also broke out in two other major Vietnamese cities. China and Vietnam, who fought a brief border war in 1979, frequently trade diplomatic barbs over oil exploration, fishing rights and the Spratly and Paracel Islands. Vietnam's communist regime, which is wary of public gatherings that could threaten its authoritarian rule, has alternated between tolerating anti-China rallies and violently breaking them up. - Exercise 'utmost restraint' - UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called on both countries to "exercise the utmost restraint" in the sea, United Nations deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said Friday. Observers have said Beijing's decision to move the rig could have been a tit-for-tat response to a visit to the region by US President Barack Obama, who reaffirmed support for Asian allies the Philippines and Japan, which is locked in its own maritime territorial dispute with China. Beijing claims sovereign rights to almost the whole of the South China Sea. The Philippines and Vietnam are China's most vocal critics within Southeast Asia. But the South China Sea is also claimed in part by ASEAN members Brunei and Malaysia as well as Taiwan. Manila, which has asked a UN tribunal to rule on China's claims over most of the sea, also said on Wednesday it had detained a Chinese fishing boat in disputed territory. Philippine President Benigno Aquino Saturday urged fellow Southeast Asian leaders to face up to the threat posed by China's increasing assertiveness in the sea, stressing that it affected regional security. Beijing prefers to negotiate directly with its smaller, weaker neighbours on a bilateral basis, a policy that is rejected by rival claimants. The other ASEAN members are Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore and Thailand. Myanmar's chairmanship is the first time it has taken the helm of ASEAN, despite having been a member for 17 years, as concerns about the rights record of the former junta kept the country on the sidelines. But reforms under a quasi-civilian regime that came to power in 2011 have burnished the country's international standing and seen the removal of most Western sanctions. ASEAN suffered a serious knock to its credibility in 2012 during Cambodia's chairmanship of the group when foreign ministers failed to issue a joint communique at their annual meeting for the first time in the bloc's history because of deep divisions on the South China Sea issue. The Philippines at that time blamed Cambodia, a key Chinese ally, for the fiasco. Thailand's contribution to the summit will be overshadowed by the removal of Thai premier Yingluck Shinawatra from office for abuse of power in a recent court ruling that drew both pro- and anti government protesters onto the streets. |
Samsung chief has emergency heart operation Posted: 10 May 2014 10:24 PM PDT SEOUL, May 11, 2014 (AFP) - The head of Samsung Group, South Korea's largest business empire, underwent an emergency operation Sunday after developing symptoms of heart failure, hospital officials said. Lee Kun-Hee, 72, was admitted to a hospital near his home in Seoul Saturday night due to a respiratory problem. He showed symptoms of heart failure and received emergency treatment before being moved early Sunday to Samsung Medical Centre where his problem was diagnosed as "acute cardiac infarction", the hospital said in a statement. "He is now recuperating in a stable condition after going through an operation," it said. Lee underwent lung surgery in the late 1990s and has been suffering from respiratory complications since then. Lee is South Korea's richest man with a net worth estimated by Forbes magazine at around $10.8 billion and has a son and two daughters. His son, Jay Y. Lee, serves as Samsung Electronics' vice chairman. The founding family controls Samsung through a complex web of share cross-holdings in group subsidiaries. The senior Lee stepped down as group chairman in 2008 and now serves as chairman of Samsung Electronics, but he remains the de facto head of the entire business empire. Under his stewardship, the conglomerate has flourished and become the world's top chipmaker and mobile phone maker. He is largely credited with turning Samsung - founded by his father in 1938 - into a global brand. Samsung has rapidly expanded its presence in the global smartphone market, dethroning Apple as the world's top smartphone maker amid worldwide patent battles between the tech giants over technology and design. |
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