hina’s new envoy to ASEAN has arrived in Jakarta facing growing pressure from the increasingly vigilant bloc as its top diplomats put more emphasis on compliance to international law in ongoing negotiations for a final and binding code of conduct (COC) on the South China Sea.
Ambassador Deng Xijun arrived in the Indonesian capital over the weekend and submitted his credentials to ASEAN Secretary-General Lim Jock Hoi on Monday, marking the formal start of his duties in Southeast Asia.
Speaking to reporters after his meeting with Lim, Ambassador Deng said there had been positive developments in the COC talks, with the completion of the first reading of the draft last year.
“So I think with our joint effort we will reach a consensus at an early date according to the three-year mission,” he told reporters at the ASEAN Secretariat compound, in reference to China’s promise to finalize the COC in three years.
The COC is meant as a set of legally binding rules to prevent hostilities along one of the world’s busiest maritime trade routes.
The envoy’s arrival in the ASEAN capital on Friday coincided with a regional reaffirmation on the need to respect international law, a facetious snub at Beijing’s illegal expansion in the region.
Southeast Asian foreign ministers had convened since Thursday in the coastal city of Nha Trang in southern Vietnam – which overlooks the South China Sea – for candid discussions on national and regional concerns including overlapping territorial and exclusive claims in the body of water.
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