The mutuality of
Asia’s economic interests centring on deepening economic integration is a
potential foundation for building an Asian economic community that encompasses
the ASEAN 10 plus their six neighbours, Japan, South Korea, China, India,
Australia and New Zealand.
The group, with close to two-fifths of
world output, constitutes a growing slice of the global economy — and is a
major force of economic dynamism, with China’s growth expected to nudge 7 per
cent again this year, India’s on the rise again and Indonesia’s stabilising at
least, and possibly on the up once more. The ambitions for stronger economic
cooperation are defined within ASEAN by the goal of building the ASEAN Economic
Community (AEC) and, by the broader group, in the negotiation of a Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership. This year, 2015, is a key year in both
endeavours.
Yet, there’s a hole in the Asian doughnut,
a zone of less than fulsome cooperation over rights to the fisheries, resources
and territories across the seas that connect Asia’s growing economic powers.
There are the territorial issues between Japan and China (as well as
Taiwan) in the East China Sea and Japan and South Korea in the Sea of Japan (or
the East Sea). And there are the issues between China and five of the ASEAN
partners in the South China Sea. Resolving
maritime issues is bound up with progress on building an Asia Community.
Indonesia’s new president, Joko Widodo (Jokowi), has declared a new
maritime priority for the Indonesian state. The largest archipelagic state in
the world, Indonesia encompasses huge marine resources. The country has a total
land area of 1.9 million square kilometres and an additional 3.2 million
square kilometres of ocean lie within its borders. Unlike its ASEAN partners,
among them Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei, Indonesia ostensibly
has no direct maritime disputes with China, although Luhut Binsar Panjaitan,
Jokowi’s newly appointed chief of staff, was recently keen to make clear that
Natuna, an area supposedly rich in gas reserves and on the edge of China’s
famous nine-dash line, was clearly Indonesian territory.
Last month saw the Jokowi government assert Indonesia’s new maritime
priorities in a somewhat dramatic way — blowing up three Vietnamese boats found
illegally fishing in the Natuna Sea. Carefully filmed and given wide publicity,
this was meant to be a lesson, not specifically to the Vietnamese but to all
who daily trespass in Indonesian waters. The Australian navy should be warned
that its less than perfect navigational skills could be on notice!
According to President Jokowi some 5,400 foreign boats intrude into Indonesian
waters, ‘over 90 per cent of them illegally’.
Indonesia’s maritime priorities are an overdue and legitimate focus of
national policy. Its seaways have too long been a barrier to, rather than a
facilitator of, national integration. Its role as a maritime Asian nation needs
to be strengthened as an enhancement to regional stability. Its neighbours,
including Australia, Singapore, Malaysia as well as China and Japan have a constructive
interest in this development.
But the Indonesian domestic political theatre around getting tough on
illegal fishing in December and delivering ‘shock therapy’ (as Jokowi described
it) to the Vietnamese offenders play somewhat awkwardly into the bigger
regional drama surrounding the rights of access to the neighbouring South China
Seas.
There is every sign that the Jokowi administration views the China
relationship very positively and would not deliberately wish to knock it off
course. He returned home after the APEC summit in China last November
with very positive messages about its future. China is Indonesia’s
second largest trading partner, and the bilateral relationship was
upgraded into a comprehensive strategic partnership when President Xi visited
Indonesia just over a year ago. Indonesia has joined the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank (and offered to host it) and Jokowi in recent times noted the
close alignment between Indonesia’s and China’s overarching maritime concepts —
Indonesia’s Global Maritime Fulcrum and China’s Maritime Silk Road.
In this week’s lead essay, Sourabh Gupta reminds us that, on
an extremely well-informed reading of the issue, China’s
controversial nine-dash line in the South China Sea might be seen as
an indication of ‘the geographic limit of China’s historically formed and
accepted traditional fishing rights in the semi-enclosed waters of the South
China Sea, which are exercised today on a non-exclusive basis’. He argues
persuasively that a US State Department study incorrectly suggests that ‘China,
in acceding to UNCLOS’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) regime and its
exclusivity-based prerogatives, effectively conceded all prior usage-based
claims that it may have held in foreign EEZs, even in semi-enclosed seas’.
While the onus, Gupta maintains, is on China to suggest the basis on which
the nine-dash line might be interpreted to be in compliance with international
law, ‘so long as China limits these rights to traditional fishing activities —
not resource development or marine scientific research — and exercises them on
a non-exclusive basis, the nine-dash line as a perimeter of China’s exercise and
enforcement of such historic rights is not inconsistent with international
law…(and) can remain a permanent feature of the South China Sea’s political and
maritime landscape’.
Indonesia has played an extremely constructive role in ASEAN-China
diplomacy over the vexed territorial issues and access rights in the South
China Sea. It might not wish to compromise its role and broader regional
interests in building an effective Asian Community there by blowing up a few
Chinese fishing boats, even if they have strayed into what are unequivocally
Indonesian waters.
Peter Drysdale is Editor of the East Asia Forum.
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