(Phnom Penh 4 November 2002)
We, the Heads of State/Government of Brunei
Darussalam, the Kingdom of Cambodia, the Republic of
Indonesia, the Lao Peoples Democratic Republic,
Malaysia, the Union of Myanmar, the Republic of the
Philippines, the Republic of Singapore, the Kingdom of
Thailand, and the Socialist Republic of Viet Nam and the
Peoples Republic of China, gathered in Phnom Penh,
Cambodia for the Sixth China-ASEAN
Summit,
Recalling the Joint Statement of the
Meeting of the Heads of the State/Government of the Member
States of ASEAN and of the Peoples Republic of China
in 1997, which contains the commitment to strengthening
dialogue and cooperation in all fields with the aim to
enhance mutual understanding, expand mutual benefit and
consolidate and substantiate the partnership of
good-neighborliness and mutual trust;
Deeply
concerned over the increasingly serious nature of
non-traditional security issues such as trafficking in
illegal drugs, people smuggling including trafficking in
women and children, sea privacy, terrorism, arms smuggling,
money laundering, international economic crime and cyber
crime, which have become important factors of uncertainty
affecting regional and international security and are posing
new challenges to regional and international peace and
stability;
Recognizing the complexity and
deep-rooted background of the non-traditional security
issues and the need to address them with an integrated
approach that combines political, economic, diplomatic,
legal, scientific and technological and other
means;
Believing that regional and
international cooperation needs to be strengthened to
address non-traditional security issues and that ASEAN and
China are close neighbors and share extensive common
interests in coping with these issues;
Noting
with satisfaction the cooperation conducted between ASEAN
and China and results achieved in non-traditional security
field, including The Plan of Action of ASEAN and China
Cooperative Operations in Response to Dangerous Drugs in
2000, the four-nation ministerial conference on drug control
cooperation held by China, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand in
2001 and the resultant Beijing Declaration and the bilateral
cooperation between ASEAN member states and
China;
Welcoming the Statement of the ASEAN
Ministerial Meeting on Transnational Crime (AMMTC) in 1997,
the 2001 ASEAN Declaration on Joint Action to Counter
Terrorism adopted by ASEAN Leaders, the Joint Communique of
Special ASEAN Ministerial Meeting on Terrorism, the
Agreement on Information Exchange and Establishment of
Communication Procedures by Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia
and the Philippines in 2002;
Confirming that
cooperation should be conducted on the basis of observing
the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence and other
universally recognized norms of international law, which are
embodied in the Charter of the United Nations and the Treaty
of Amity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia, and respecting
the legal systems of all countries;
Determined
to further strengthen and deepen cooperation in the field of
non-traditional security issues, we task our Ministers
concerned to follow-up on the implementation of this
Declaration by undertaking the following:
I.
Objectives
In light of the shared needs of all
sides, measures and modalities for cooperation in the field
of non-traditional security issues will be formulated to
enhance their capacity in dealing with non-traditional
security issues, promote their stability and development and
safeguard regional peace and security;
II.
Priority and Form of Cooperation
1. The
priorities at the current stage of cooperation are combating
trafficking in illegal drugs, people smuggling including
trafficking in women and children, sea privacy, terrorism,
arms smuggling, money laundering, international economic
crime and cyber crime;
2. On the basis of
deepening the existing multilateral and bilateral
cooperation,
(1) To strengthen information
exchange,
(2) To strengthen personnel exchange
and training and enhance capacity building,
(3)
To strengthen practical cooperation on non-traditional
security issues,
(4) To strengthen joint
research on non-traditional security issues,
and
(5) To explore other areas and modalities
of cooperation.
III. Participation and
Organization
1. ASEAN and China will use
existing mechanisms, as far as possible, such as the ASEAN
Ministerial Meeting on Transnational Crime and the Senior
Officials Meeting on Transnational Crime to pursue the
cooperation. Long-term and mid-term cooperation plans will
be formulated based on the purposes and principles of the
Joint Declaration to serve as guidance for
cooperation;
2. Ad-hoc working groups will be
established for cooperation in relevant fields to implement
the plans of action through the above mechanisms supported
by the competent authorities in ASEAN member countries and
China.
IV. Others
To implement
this Joint Declaration, action plans may be formulated in
accordance with the purposes and principles of the Joint
Declaration.
We, the Leaders of ASEAN member
countries and the Peoples Republic of China, pledge to
remain seized with the matter, and call on other regions and
countries to work with us in strengthening the cooperation
in the field of non-traditional security
issues.
Adopted this Fourth Day of November Two
Thousand and Two in Phnom Penh, the Kingdom of Cambodia.