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Amir Hamzah: ASEAN's neutrality works
Amir Hamzah: ASEAN's neutrality works

The Sun

time26-04-2025

  • Business
  • The Sun

Amir Hamzah: ASEAN's neutrality works

KUALA LUMPUR: ASEAN has consistently maintained a neutral stance in its relations with both the United States (US) and China, and this remains central to the region's diplomatic approach, said Finance Minister II Datuk Seri Amir Hamzah Azizan. 'So, while the US position and the Chinese position may have very different stances along the way, what ASEAN has been good at over all these years is to maintain some sense of neutrality -- some sense of being able to trade with each other, to trade with both sides without getting into very difficult 'gaps or mess' along the way,' he said at the ASEAN Leadership Forum in Washington, DC, on Friday. 'And I think that's what we will continue to want to do, because a much more harmonious, much more open mechanism allows for a better outcome than a fractured mechanism. 'This has been proven in the past, and ASEAN want to continue to work towards that in the future,' he added during a one-hour session at the Centre For Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) forum. He said this approach allows the bloc's 10 member states, including Malaysia which is currently the ASEAN Chair, to foster constructive ties with both global powers while safeguarding regional stability and unity. On whether individual member states engaging with the US separately contradicts ASEAN's message of a unified approach, Amir Hamzah said the different levels of development of the member states need to be taken into account. ASEAN, as a bloc, is quite sizeable with a combined with gross domestic product of close to US$3.8 trillion (US$1=RM4.37), making it the fifth-largest economic bloc globally. '(However,) Singapore is probably very high up the value chain, and other members may not be so high up, and the nature of their exports and imports is also very different (from each other) and the skill sets that exist in the countries are very different,' he said. As a bloc, there are common areas and potentials where ASEAN can work together, he explained. 'So there is no misalignment in that instance, and we will continue to push to enable greater inter-ASEAN trade and predictability, and deployment of joint projects in infrastructure and so on that are beneficial for the ASEAN economy overall,' Amir Hamzah said. According to him, the shift in the global trading environment needed a response. 'So the first response that ASEAN said was actually, 'Don't fight it', because when you actually dig in positions, you don't create an environment where conversations can actually occur. Hence the non-retaliatory mechanism that we talked about,' he said, referring to ASEAN's immediate response to US reciprocal tariffs. Although the tariffs are currently on a pause, ASEAN's Indochinese member states were the hardest hit, with Cambodia facing combined baseline and retaliatory duties totalling 49 per cent, followed by Laos (48 per cent), Vietnam (46 per cent), and Myanmar (44 per cent). Thailand was subjected to a tariff rate of 36 per cent, Indonesia 32 per cent, Malaysia and Brunei both 24 per cent, and the Philippines 17 per cent, while Singapore faced a baseline tariff of 10 per cent. Amir Hamzah said ASEAN continues to uphold its commitment to multilateral and rule-based mechanism. 'We want a rule-based mechanism to continue to exist. And I think each member state has a grip on those high level principles. 'But we are also practical in understanding that there may be differences between each state, and there may be differences in prioritisation that each state may want. Hence, bilaterals will continue to exist.' Amir Hamzah said there's no blame regarding members pursuing what makes sense for their national interests. 'But we must (also) have the ability to talk to each other, whereby we don't, in the (bilateral) discussions, make things worse for other ASEAN members. 'Hence, there are regular ongoing communications between ASEAN members to make sure we don't pin other members into corners. I think that's the best outcome, giving flexibility that addresses the gaps in development growth while allowing members to exercise their sovereign rights to move on,' he added. The minister said such diversity doesn't weaken the bloc; instead, it underscores the need for bilateral relationships to carry on alongside regional efforts.

ASEAN's neutrality works
ASEAN's neutrality works

The Sun

time26-04-2025

  • Business
  • The Sun

ASEAN's neutrality works

KUALA LUMPUR: ASEAN has consistently maintained a neutral stance in its relations with both the United States (US) and China, and this remains central to the region's diplomatic approach, said Finance Minister II Datuk Seri Amir Hamzah Azizan. 'So, while the US position and the Chinese position may have very different stances along the way, what ASEAN has been good at over all these years is to maintain some sense of neutrality -- some sense of being able to trade with each other, to trade with both sides without getting into very difficult 'gaps or mess' along the way,' he said at the ASEAN Leadership Forum in Washington, DC, on Friday. 'And I think that's what we will continue to want to do, because a much more harmonious, much more open mechanism allows for a better outcome than a fractured mechanism. 'This has been proven in the past, and ASEAN want to continue to work towards that in the future,' he added during a one-hour session at the Centre For Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) forum. He said this approach allows the bloc's 10 member states, including Malaysia which is currently the ASEAN Chair, to foster constructive ties with both global powers while safeguarding regional stability and unity. On whether individual member states engaging with the US separately contradicts ASEAN's message of a unified approach, Amir Hamzah said the different levels of development of the member states need to be taken into account. ASEAN, as a bloc, is quite sizeable with a combined with gross domestic product of close to US$3.8 trillion (US$1=RM4.37), making it the fifth-largest economic bloc globally. '(However,) Singapore is probably very high up the value chain, and other members may not be so high up, and the nature of their exports and imports is also very different (from each other) and the skill sets that exist in the countries are very different,' he said. As a bloc, there are common areas and potentials where ASEAN can work together, he explained. 'So there is no misalignment in that instance, and we will continue to push to enable greater inter-ASEAN trade and predictability, and deployment of joint projects in infrastructure and so on that are beneficial for the ASEAN economy overall,' Amir Hamzah said. According to him, the shift in the global trading environment needed a response. 'So the first response that ASEAN said was actually, 'Don't fight it', because when you actually dig in positions, you don't create an environment where conversations can actually occur. Hence the non-retaliatory mechanism that we talked about,' he said, referring to ASEAN's immediate response to US reciprocal tariffs. Although the tariffs are currently on a pause, ASEAN's Indochinese member states were the hardest hit, with Cambodia facing combined baseline and retaliatory duties totalling 49 per cent, followed by Laos (48 per cent), Vietnam (46 per cent), and Myanmar (44 per cent). Thailand was subjected to a tariff rate of 36 per cent, Indonesia 32 per cent, Malaysia and Brunei both 24 per cent, and the Philippines 17 per cent, while Singapore faced a baseline tariff of 10 per cent. Amir Hamzah said ASEAN continues to uphold its commitment to multilateral and rule-based mechanism. 'We want a rule-based mechanism to continue to exist. And I think each member state has a grip on those high level principles. 'But we are also practical in understanding that there may be differences between each state, and there may be differences in prioritisation that each state may want. Hence, bilaterals will continue to exist.' Amir Hamzah said there's no blame regarding members pursuing what makes sense for their national interests. 'But we must (also) have the ability to talk to each other, whereby we don't, in the (bilateral) discussions, make things worse for other ASEAN members. 'Hence, there are regular ongoing communications between ASEAN members to make sure we don't pin other members into corners. I think that's the best outcome, giving flexibility that addresses the gaps in development growth while allowing members to exercise their sovereign rights to move on,' he added. The minister said such diversity doesn't weaken the bloc; instead, it underscores the need for bilateral relationships to carry on alongside regional efforts.

Bank Negara has no say in 1MDB's US$1bil fund split, court told
Bank Negara has no say in 1MDB's US$1bil fund split, court told

New Straits Times

time21-04-2025

  • Business
  • New Straits Times

Bank Negara has no say in 1MDB's US$1bil fund split, court told

PUTRAJAYA: Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) had no authority to question 1Malaysia Development Bhd's (1MDB) sudden decision to split a US$1 billion (RM4.37 billion) remittance for a joint venture (JVA) with PetroSaudi International Ltd (PSI), the High Court heard today. Former Deutsche Bank Malaysia Bhd (DBMB) chief executive officer Raymond Yeoh Chen Seong testified that the central bank had effectively distanced itself from the controversial transfer when asked to clarify a last-minute change in recipient accounts. "I personally called BNM's former Foreign Exchange Administration Department officer, Wan Hanisah Wan Ibrahim, to explain the new remittance instructions. "Wan Hanisah said it was not for BNM to comment, and that it was a business decision by 1MDB," he said. Yeoh was testifying as a defence witness in Datuk Seri Najib Razak's corruption trial involving the alleged misappropriation of billions in 1MDB funds. It was heard during the trial that the US$1 billion transaction was intended as a joint venture between 1MDB and the Saudi-based PSI in 2009. The funds were initially meant to be remitted into a BSI Bank account under the JV company. However, on the eve of the transfer, 1MDB Treasury executive Stephenny Chow instructed the bank to split the funds into two tranches - US$700 million to RBS Coutts Bank Ltd and US$300 million to J.P. Morgan SA. The change deviated from both 1MDB's board resolution and BNM's original approval. Yeoh said DBMB conducted compliance checks on the new recipients, which Chow identified as 1MDB PetroSaudi Ltd and PetroSaudi International Ltd. Under the JVA signed on Sept 28, 2009, 1MDB injected US$1 billion for a 40 per cent stake in the company, while PetroSaudi Holdings (Cayman) contributed its so-called assets worth US$2.7 billion for a 60 per cent stake. In a previous hearing, police investigating officer R. Rajagopal testified that the US$700 million remittance was authorised by former 1MDB executive director of business development Tang Keng Chee, who was also known to be an associate of Low Taek Jho. Tang is believed to have disappeared after being found to have committed an offence under Section 23 of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Act 2009, and Section 28 of the same Act, in 2018. Najib faces four charges of using his position to obtain RM2.3 billion in bribes from 1MDB funds, and 21 charges of money laundering involving the same amount. The trial before presiding judge Datuk Collin Lawrence Sequerah continues.

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