To ensure sustained development and growth for Asia, Asian
countries need to complement each others' efforts rather than
complicate them through confrontation, said Sri Lanka Prime
Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayake Sunday.
Addressing a plenary session of the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA)
Annual Conference 2006, Wickramanayake said while speaking of new
models and opportunities for Asia to drive development to higher
levels, a peaceful environment is needed and the Asian countries
must be conscious of the challenges to which they need to
respond.
The Asian region is not without disputes, he said, adding that
many territorial disputes, which are the unfortunate legacies of
history, can sometimes cloud even a bilateral vision of
development.
Addressing disputes through negotiations, rather than military
gestures, creates a more conducive atmosphere for economic
cooperation and the disputes need to be managed rather than
permitting them to escalate to a point where they poison the
opportunities for development, he said.
Terrorism, separatism and extremism are dangerous threats to
regional and global security and those evils need to be dealt with
firmly and decisively, he pointed.
Wickramanayake mentioned that under the chairmanship of China,
the nuclear issue of the Korean Peninsula is being sensitively,
patiently addressed through multi-party negotiations.
Considering the diversity of economic systems and its mix of
"developed" and "developing" states, Asia needs to strengthen its
complementarities and promote practical cooperation, and given
economic disparities between Asian nations, safeguards to protect
the interest of the more vulnerable states would also be required,
he said.
Wickramanayake noted that beyond national and bilateral efforts,
institutional and other mechanisms of sub-regional and regional
cooperation need to be made more effective.
Naming out major organizations such as ASEAN (Association of
Southeast Asian Nations) that Asian countries established, he said,
the mosaic of linkages, networks and institutional mechanisms need
to be coordinated in practical terms to move Asia to the next level
of economic growth and development.
Further more, a united Asia working in concert cannot be a
region in isolation, and "linkage with other continents needs to be
strengthened," he said.
The Prime Minister praised China's development as it put out the
concept of "Xiao Kang" and pursues a balanced development that
reduces disparities between rural and urban areas, and different
regions.
The BFA has, the Prime Minister said, from its inception, kept
Asia's windows open because speakers at this Forum come from many
continents, from developing as well as developed countries. "This,
apart from promoting economic exchanges, could help to foster an
inter-regional dialogue and reduce disparities."
(Xinhua News Agency April 23, 2006)