|
|
|
Motto: "One Vision, One Identity, One Community""10
countries, 1 identity" |
|
Anthem: "The
ASEAN Way" |
|
|
|
Member states |
Brunei
Myanmar
Cambodia
Indonesia
Laos
Malaysia
Philippines
Singapore
Thailand
Vietnam |
|
Seat of Secretariat |
Jakarta |
|
Largest city |
Jakarta |
|
Government |
Regional organisation |
|
-
|
Secretary General |
Surin Pitsuwan |
|
Formation |
|
-
|
Bangkok Declaration |
8 August 1967
|
|
-
|
Charter |
16 December
2008 |
|
Area |
|
-
|
Total |
4,464,322 km2
2,772,344
sq mi |
|
Population |
|
-
|
2008 estimate |
577 million
|
|
-
|
Density |
129/km2
208/sq mi |
|
GDP (PPP) |
2007 estimate |
|
-
|
Total |
US$ 3,431.2
billion |
|
-
|
Per capita |
US$ 5,962
|
|
GDP (nominal) |
2008 estimate |
|
-
|
Total |
US$ 1,505.7
billion |
|
-
|
Per capita |
$2,609
|
|
Currency |
Brunei dollar
Cambodian riel
Indonesian rupiah
Lao kip
Malaysian ringgit
Myanma kyat
Philippine peso
Singaporean dollar
Thai baht
Vietnamese dong |
|
Time zone |
ASEAN
(UTC+9
to
+6:30) |
|
Internet TLD |
|
Website
www.asean.org |
|
1 |
If considered
as a single entity. |
|
2 |
Selected key basic ASEAN indicators |
|
3 |
Annual growth 1.6% |
The Association of Southeast
Asian Nations,[1]
commonly abbreviated ASEAN (generally pronounced
/
AH-see-ahn,[2]
occasionally
/AH-zee-ahn[3]
in
English, the
official language of the bloc),[4]
is a
geo-political and economic organisation of 10 countries
located in
Southeast Asia, which was formed on 8 August 1967 by
Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand.[5]
Since then, membership has expanded to include Brunei, Burma
(Myanmar), Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam. Its aims include
the acceleration of
economic growth,
social progress, cultural development among its members,
the protection of the peace and stability of the region,
and to provide opportunities for member countries to discuss
differences peacefully.[6]
In 2005, the bloc spanned
over an area of 4.46 million km2 with a combined
GDP (Nominal/PPP)
of about
USD$896.5 billion/$2,728 billion growing at an average
rate of around 5.6% per annum. Nominal GDP had grown to
USD $1.4 trillion in 2008.
History
ASEAN was preceded by an
organisation called the Association of Southeast Asia,
commonly called ASA, an alliance consisting of the
Philippines, Malaysia, and Thailand that was formed in 1961.
The bloc itself, however, was established on 8 August 1967,
when
foreign ministers of five countries – Indonesia, Malaysia,
the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand – met at the Thai
Department of Foreign Affairs building in
Bangkok and signed the ASEAN Declaration, more commonly
known as the
Bangkok Declaration. The five foreign ministers –
Adam Malik of Indonesia,
Narciso Ramos of the Philippines,
Abdul Razak of Malaysia,
S. Rajaratnam of Singapore, and
Thanat Khoman of Thailand – are considered as the organisation's
Founding Fathers.[7]
The motivations for the
birth of ASEAN were the desire for a stable external environment
(so that its members’ governing elite could concentrate
on
nation building), the common fear of
communism, reduced faith in or mistrust of external
powers in the 1960s, as well as the aspiration for national
economic development; not to mention Indonesia’s ambition
to become a regional
hegemon through regional cooperation and the hope on
the part of Malaysia and Singapore to constrain Indonesia
and bring it into a more cooperative framework. Unlike the
European Union, ASEAN was designed to serve
nationalism.[8]
In 1976, the
Melanesian state of Papua New Guinea was accorded observer
status.[9]
Throughout the 1970s, the organisation embarked on a program
of economic cooperation, following the Bali Summit of 1976.
This floundered in the mid-1980s and was only revived around
1991 due to a Thai proposal for a regional
free trade area. The bloc then grew when Brunei Darussalam
became the sixth member after it joined on 8 January 1984,
barely a week after the country became independent on 1
January.[10]
On 28 July 1995, Vietnam
became the seventh member. Laos and Burma (Myanmar) joined
two years later in 23 July 1997.[11]
Cambodia was to have joined together with Laos and Myanmar,
but was deferred due to the country's internal political
struggle. The country later joined on 30 April 1999, following
the stabilisation of its government.[11]
During the 1990s, the bloc
experienced an increase in both membership as well as in
the drive for further integration. In 1990, Malaysia proposed
the creation of an
East Asia Economic Caucus[12]
composing the then-members of ASEAN as well as the People's
Republic of China, Japan, and South Korea, with the intention
of counterbalancing the growing influence of the United
States in the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) as well as
in the Asian region as a whole.[13][14]
This proposal, however, failed since it faced heavy opposition
from Japan and the United States.[13][15]
Despite this failure, member states continued to work for
further integration. In 1992, the Common Effective Preferential
Tariff (CEPT) scheme was signed as a schedule for phasing
tariffs and as a goal to increase the region’s competitive
advantage as a production base geared for the world market.
This law would act as the framework for the
ASEAN Free Trade Area. After the
East Asian Financial Crisis of 1997, a revival of the
Malaysian proposal was established in
Chiang Mai, known as the
Chiang Mai Initiative, which calls for better integration
between the economies of ASEAN as well as the
ASEAN Plus Three countries (China,
Japan, and
South Korea).[16]
Aside from improving each
member state's economies, the bloc also focused on peace
and stability in the region. On 15 December 1995, the
Southeast Asian Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaty was
signed with the intention of turning Southeast Asia into
a
Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone. The treaty took effect on
28 March 1997 after all but one of the member states have
ratified it. It became fully effective on 21 June 2001,
after the Philippines ratified it, effectively banning all
nuclear weapons in the region.[17]
At the turn of the 21st
century, issues shifted to involve a more environmental
prospective. The organisation started to discuss environmental
agreements. These included the signing of the
ASEAN Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution in 2002
as an attempt to control haze pollution in Southeast Asia.[18]
Unfortunately, this was unsuccessful due to the outbreaks
of the
2005 Malaysian haze and the
2006 Southeast Asian haze. Other environmental treaties
introduced by the organisation include the
Cebu Declaration on East Asian Energy Security,[19]
the ASEAN-Wildlife Enforcement Network in 2005,[20]
and the
Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate,
both of which are responses to
Global Warming and the negative effects of
climate change.
Through the Bali Concord
II in 2003, ASEAN has subscribed to the notion of
democratic peace, which means all member countries believe
democratic processes will promote regional peace and stability.
Also, the non-democratic members all agreed that it was
something all member states should aspire to.[21]
The leaders of each country,
particularly
Mahathir Mohamad of Malaysia, also felt the need to
further integrate the region. Beginning in 1997, the bloc
began creating organisations within its framework with the
intention of achieving this goal.
ASEAN Plus Three was the first of these and was created
to improve existing ties with the People's Republic of China,
Japan, and South Korea. This was followed by the even larger
East Asia Summit, which included these countries as
well as India, Australia, and New Zealand. This new grouping
acted as a prerequisite for the planned
East Asia Community, which was supposedly patterned
after the now-defunct
European Community. The
ASEAN Eminent Persons Group was created to study the
possible successes and failures of this policy as well as
the possibility of drafting an
ASEAN Charter.
In 2006, ASEAN was given
observer status at the United Nations General Assembly.[22]
As a response, the organisation awarded the status of "dialogue
partner" to the
United Nations.[23]
Furthermore, on 23 July that year,
José Ramos-Horta, then
Prime Minister of East Timor, signed a formal request
for membership and expected the accession process to last
at least five years before the then-observer state became
a full member.[24][25]
In 2007, ASEAN celebrated
its 40th anniversary since its inception, and 30 years of
diplomatic relations with the United States.[26]
On 26 August 2007, ASEAN stated that it aims to complete
all its
free trade agreements with China, Japan, South Korea,
India, Australia and New Zealand by 2013, in line with the
establishment of the
ASEAN Economic Community by 2015.[27][28]
In November 2007 the ASEAN members signed the ASEAN Charter,
a constitution governing relations among the ASEAN members
and establishing ASEAN itself as an international legal
entity.[citation
needed] During the same year, the
Cebu Declaration on East Asian Energy Security in
Cebu on 15 January 2007, by ASEAN and the other members
of the
EAS (Australia, People's Republic of China, India, Japan,
New Zealand, South Korea), which promotes
energy security by finding
energy alternatives to
conventional fuels.[citation
needed]
On
February 27, 2009 a Free Trade Agreement with
the ASEAN regional block of 10 countries and New Zealand
and its
close partner Australia was signed, it is estimated
that this FTA would boost aggregate GDP across the 12 countries
by more than US$48 billion over the period 2000-2020.[29][30]
In the 1960s, the push
for
decolonisation promoted the sovereignty of Indonesia
and Malaysia among others. Since nation building is often
messy and vulnerable to foreign intervention, the governing
elite wanted to be free to implement independent policies
with the knowledge that neighbors would refrain from interfering
in their domestic affairs. Territorially small members such
as Singapore and Brunei were consciously fearful of force
and coercive measures from much bigger neighbors like Indonesia
and Malaysia. As a result, non-interference, consensus,
non-use of force and non-confrontation became the key principles
of the organisation.
On the surface, the process
of consultations and consensus is supposed to be a democratic
approach to decision making, but the ASEAN process has been
managed through close interpersonal contacts among the top
leaders only, who often share a reluctance to institutionalise
and legalise co-operation which can undermine their regime's
control over the conduct of regional co-operation.
All of these features,
namely non-interference, informality, minimal institutionalisation,
consultation and consensus, non-use of force and non-confrontation
have constituted what is called the ASEAN Way.
Since the late 1990s, many
scholars have argued that the principle of non-interference
has blunted ASEAN efforts in handling the problem of Myanmar,
human rights abuses and
haze pollution in the region. Meanwhile, with the consensus-based
approach, every member in fact has a veto and decisions
are usually reduced to the
lowest common denominator. There has been a widespread
belief that ASEAN members should have a less rigid view
on these two cardinal principles when they wish to be seen
as a cohesive and relevant community.
Apart from consultations
and consensus, ASEAN’s agenda-setting and decision-making
processes can be usefully understood in terms of the so-called
Track I and Track II. Track I refers to the practice of
diplomacy among government channels. The participants stand
as representatives of their respective states and reflect
the official positions of their governments during negotiations
and discussions. All official decisions are made in Track
I. Track II on the other hand refers to diplomatic activities
that are unofficial and includes participants from both
government and non-government institutions such as the academic,
economic communities and
NGOs. This track enables governments to discuss controversial
issues and test new ideas without making official statements
or binding commitments, and, if necessary, backtrack on
positions.
Although Track II dialogues
are sometimes cited as examples of the involvement of
civil society in regional decision-making process by
governments and other second track actors, NGOs have rarely
got access to this track, meanwhile participants from the
academic community are a dozen think-tanks. However, these
think-tanks are, in most cases, very much linked to their
respective governments, and dependent on government funding
for their academic and policy-relevant activities. Their
recommendations, especially in
economic integration, are often closer to ASEAN’s decisions
than the rest of civil society’s positions.
The track that acts as
a forum for civil society in Southeast Asia is called Track
III, which is essentially people-to-people diplomacy undertaken
mainly by CSOs. Track III
networks claim to represent communities and people who
are largely marginalised from political power centers and
unable to achieve positive change without outside assistance.
This track tries to influence government policies indirectly
by
lobbying, generating pressure through the
media. Third-track actors also organise and/or attend
meetings as well as conferences to get access to Track I
officials.
While Track II meetings
and interactions with Track I actors have increased and
intensified, rarely has the rest of civil society had the
opportunity to interface with Track II. Those with Track
I have been even rarer. In other words, the participation
of the big majority of CSOs has been excluded from ASEAN’s
agenda-setting and decision-making.
Looking at the three tracks,
it is clear that until now, ASEAN has been run by government
officials who, as far as ASEAN matters are concerned, are
accountable only to their governments and not the people.
In a lecture on the occasion of ASEAN’s 38th anniversary,
the incumbent Indonesian President Dr.
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono admitted:
“All the decisions about
treaties and free trade areas, about declarations and plans
of action, are made by Heads of Government, ministers and
senior officials. And the fact that among the masses, there
is little knowledge, let alone appreciation, of the large
initiatives that ASEAN is taking on their behalf.”
The organisation holds
meetings, known as the
ASEAN Summit, where
heads of government of each member meet to discuss and
resolve regional issues, as well as to conduct other meetings
with other countries outside of the bloc with the intention
of promoting external relations.
The ASEAN Leaders' Formal
Summit was first held in Bali, Indonesia in 1976. Its third
meeting was held in
Manila in 1987 and during this meeting, it was decided
that the leaders would meet every five years.[31]
Consequently, the fourth meeting was held in Singapore in
1992 where the leaders again agreed to meet more frequently,
deciding to hold the summit every three years.[31]
In 2001, it was decided to meet annually to address urgent
issues affecting the region. Member nations were assigned
to be the summit host in alphabetical order except in the
case of Myanmar which dropped its 2006 hosting rights in
2004 due to pressure from the United States and the
European Union.[32]
By December 2008, the ASEAN
Charter came into force and with it, the ASEAN Summit will
be held twice in a year.
The formal summit meets
for three days. The usual itinerary is as follows:
- Leaders of member
states would hold an internal organisation meeting.
- Leaders of member
states would hold a conference together with foreign
ministers of the ASEAN Regional Forum.
- A meeting, known as
ASEAN Plus Three, is set for leaders of three Dialogue
Partners (People's Republic of China, Japan, South Korea)
- A separate meeting,
known as ASEAN-CER, is set for another set of leaders
of two Dialogue Partners (Australia, New Zealand).[citation
needed]
|
ASEAN Formal Summits |
| |
Date |
Country |
Host |
| 1st |
23–24 February, 1976 |
Indonesia |
Bali |
| 2nd |
4–5 August, 1977 |
Malaysia |
Kuala Lumpur |
| 3rd |
14–15 December, 1987 |
Philippines |
Manila |
| 4th |
27‒29 January, 1992 |
Singapore |
Singapore |
| 5th |
14‒15 December, 1995 |
Thailand |
Bangkok |
| 6th |
15‒16 December, 1998 |
Vietnam |
Hanoi |
| 7th |
5‒6 November, 2001 |
Brunei |
Bandar Seri Begawan |
| 8th |
4‒5 November, 2002 |
Cambodia |
Phnom Penh |
| 9th |
7‒8 October, 2003 |
Indonesia |
Bali |
| 10th |
29‒30 November, 2004 |
Laos |
Vientiane |
| 11th |
12‒14 December, 2005 |
Malaysia |
Kuala Lumpur |
| 12th |
11‒14 January, 20071 |
Philippines2 |
Cebu |
| 13th |
18‒22 November, 2007 |
Singapore |
Singapore |
| 14th3 |
27 February - 1 March, 2009
10-11 April 2009 |
Thailand |
Cha Am,
Hua Hin
Pattaya |
| 15th |
2009 |
Vietnam |
|
|
1 Postponed
from 10‒14 December, 2006 due to
Typhoon Seniang. |
|
2 hosted
the summit because Myanmar backed out due to enormous
pressure from US and EU |
3 This
summit consisted of two parts.
The first part was moved from 12‒17 December, 2008
due to the
2008 Thai political crisis.
The second part was aborted on April 11 due to protesters
entering the summit venue. |
During the fifth Summit
in Bangkok, the leaders decided to meet "informally" between
each formal summit:[31]
Participants of
the East Asia Summit:
ASEAN
ASEAN Plus Three
Additional members
Observer
The
East Asia Summit (EAS) is a pan-Asian forum held annually
by the leaders of 16 countries in East Asia and the region,
with ASEAN in a leadership position. The summit has discussed
issues including trade, energy and security and the summit
has a role in
regional community building.
The members of the summit
are all 10 members of ASEAN together with China, Japan,
South Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand who combined
represent almost half of the world's population. Russia
has applied for membership of the summit and in 2005 was
a guest for the
First EAS at the invitation of the host -
Malaysia.[33]
The first summit was held
in Kuala Lumpur on 14 December 2005 and subsequent meetings
have been held after the annual ASEAN Leaders’ Meeting.
Commemorative Summit
A commemorative summit
is a summit hosted by a non-ASEAN country to mark a milestone
anniversary of the establishment of relations between ASEAN
and the host country. The host country invites the heads
of government of ASEAN member countries to discuss future
cooperation and partnership.
The ASEAN Regional Forum
(ARF) is a formal, official, multilateral dialogue in Asia
Pacific region. As of July 2007, it is consisted of 27 participants.
ARF objectives are to foster dialogue and consultation,
and promote confidence-building and preventive diplomacy
in the region.[35]
The ARF met for the first time in 1994. The current participants
in the ARF are as follows: all the ASEAN members,
Australia,
Bangladesh,
Canada, the
People's Republic of China, the
European Union,
India,
Japan,
North Korea,
South Korea,
Mongolia,
New Zealand,
Pakistan,
Papua New Guinea,
Russia,
Timor-Leste,
United States and
Sri Lanka.[36]
The Republic of China (also known as Taiwan) has been excluded
since the establishment of the ARF, and issues regarding
the Taiwan Strait is neither discussed at the ARF meetings
nor stated in the ARF Chairman's Statements.
Other meetings
Aside from the ones above,
other regular[37]
meetings are also held.[38]
These include the annual ASEAN Ministerial Meeting[39]
as well as other smaller committees, such as the
Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center.[40]
Meetings mostly focus on specific topics, such as
defense[37]
or the
environment,[37][41]
and are attended by
Ministers, instead of heads of government.
Plus Three
The
ASEAN Plus Three is a meeting between ASEAN, China,
Japan, and South Korea, and is primarily held during each
ASEAN Summit.
Asia-Europe Meeting
The
Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) is an informal dialogue process
initiated in 1996 with the intention of strengthening cooperation
between the countries of Europe and Asia, especially members
of the
European Union and ASEAN in particular.[42]
ASEAN, represented by its Secretariat, is one of the 45
ASEM partners. It also appoints a representative to sit
on the governing board of
Asia-Europe Foundation (ASEF), a socio-cultural organisation
associated with the Meeting.
ASEAN-Russia Summit
The ASEAN-Russia Summit
is an annual meeting between leaders of member states and
the
President of Russia.
Economic Community
ASEAN has emphasised regional
cooperation in the “three pillars” of security, sociocultural
and economic integration.[43]
The regional grouping has made the most progress in economic
integration, aiming to create an ASEAN Economic Community
(AEC) by 2015.[44]
The AEC would have a combined population of over 560 million
and total trade exceeding US$ 1,400 billion.[43]
Free Trade Area
The foundation of the AEC
is the
ASEAN Free Trade Area (AFTA), a common external preferential
tariff scheme to promote the free flow of goods within ASEAN.[44]
The
ASEAN Free Trade Area (AFTA) is an agreement by the
member nations of ASEAN concerning local manufacturing in
all ASEAN countries. The AFTA agreement was signed on 28
January 1992 in Singapore.[45]
When the AFTA agreement was originally signed, ASEAN had
six members, namely, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Singapore and Thailand. Vietnam joined in 1995, Laos and
Myanmar in 1997, and Cambodia in 1999. The latecomers have
not fully met the AFTA's obligations, but they are officially
considered part of the AFTA as they were required to sign
the agreement upon entry into ASEAN, and were given longer
time frames in which to meet AFTA's tariff reduction obligations.[46]
Comprehensive
Investment Area
The ASEAN Comprehensive
Investment Area (ACIA) will encourage the free flow of investment
within ASEAN. The main principles of the ACIA are as follows[47]
- All industries are
to be opened up for investment, with exclusions to be
phased out according to schedules
- National treatment
is granted immediately to ASEAN investors with few exclusions
- Elimination of investment
impediments
- Streamlining of investment
process and procedures
- Enhancing transparency
- Undertaking investment
facilitation measures
Full realisation of the
ACIA with the removal of temporary exclusion lists in manufacturing
agriculture, fisheries, forestry and mining is scheduled
by 2010 for most ASEAN members and by 2015 for the CLMV
(Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Vietnam) countries.[47]
Trade
in Services
An ASEAN Framework Agreement
on Trade in Services was adopted at the ASEAN Summit in
Bangkok in December 1995.[48]
Under AFAS, ASEAN Member States enter into successive rounds
of negotiations to liberalise trade in services with the
aim of submitting increasingly higher levels of commitments.
The negotiations result in commitments that are set forth
in schedules of specific commitments annexed to the Framework
Agreement. These schedules are often referred to as packages
of services commitments. At present, ASEAN has concluded
seven packages of commitments under AFAS.[49]
Single
Aviation Market
The ASEAN Single Aviation
Market (SAM), proposed by the ASEAN Air Transport Working
Group, supported by the ASEAN Senior Transport Officials
Meeting, and endorsed by the ASEAN Transport Ministers,
will introduce an open-sky arrangement to the region by
2015.[50]
The ASEAN SAM will be expected to fully liberalise air travel
between its member states, allowing ASEAN to directly benefit
from the growth in air travel around the world, and also
freeing up tourism, trade, investment and services flows
between member states.[50][51]
Beginning 1 December 2008, restrictions on the third and
fourth
freedoms of the air between capital cities of member
states for air passengers services will be removed,[52]
while from 1 January 2009, there will be full liberalisation
of air freight services in the region, while[50][51]
By 1 January 2011, there will be liberalisation of fifth
freedom traffic rights between all capital cities.[53]
Free
Trade Agreements With Other Countries
ASEAN has concluded free
trade agreements with China, Korea, Japan, Australia and
New Zealand.[54]
In addition, it is currently negotiating free trade agreement
with
India (conclusion expected in April 2009)[55]
and with the European Union.[56]
Taiwan has also expressed interest in an agreement with
ASEAN but needs to overcome diplomatic objections from China.[57]
Charter
Main article:
ASEAN Charter
On 15 December 2008 the
members of ASEAN met in the
Indonesian capital of
Jakarta to launch a charter, signed in November 2007,
with the aim of moving closer to "an EU-style community".[58]
The charter turns ASEAN into a legal entity and aims to
create a single free-trade area for the region encompassing
500 million people.
President of Indonesia
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono stated that "This is a momentous
development when ASEAN is consolidating, integrating and
transforming itself into a community. It is achieved while
ASEAN seeks a more vigorous role in Asian and global affairs
at a time when the international system is experiencing
a seismic shift," he added, referring to climate change
and economic upheaval. Southeast Asia is no longer the bitterly
divided, war-torn region it was in the 1960s and 1970s."
The charter's aims included:
- "Respect for the independence,
sovereignty and territorial integrity of member states".
- "Peaceful settlement
of disputes".
- "Non-interference
in member states internal affairs".
- "Right to live without
external interference".[59]
However, the
ongoing global financial crisis was stated as being
a threat to the goals envisioned by the charter,[60]
and also set forth the idea of a proposed human rights body
to be discussed at a future summit in February 2009. This
proposition caused controversy, as the body would not have
the power to impose sanctions or punish countries who violate
citizens' rights and would therefore be limited in effectiveness.[61]
Cultural activities
Logo of the S.E.A.
Write Award
The organisation hosts
cultural activities in an attempt to further integrate the
region. These include sports and educational activities
as well as writing awards. Examples of these include the
ASEAN University Network, the
ASEAN Center for Biodiversity, the
ASEAN Outstanding Scientist and Technologist Award,
and the Singapore-sponsored
ASEAN Scholarship.
S.E.A.
Write Award
The
S.E.A. Write Award is a
literary award given to Southeast Asian poets and writers
annually since 1979. The award is either given for a specific
work or as a recognition of an author's lifetime achievement.
Works that are honored vary and have included
poetry,
short stories,
novels,
plays,
folklore as well as
scholarly and
religious works. Ceremonies are held in Bangkok and
are presided by a member of the
Thai royal family.
ASAIHL
ASAIHL or the
Association of Southeast Asian Institutions of Higher Learning
is a non-governmental organisation founded in 1956 that
strives to strengthen higher learning institutions, espescially
in
teaching,
research, and
public service, with the intention of cultivating a
sense of regional identity and interdependence.
Heritage
Parks
ASEAN Heritage Parks[62]
is a list of
nature parks launched 1984 and relaunched in 2004. It
aims to protect the region's natural treasures. There are
now 35 such protected areas, including the
Tubbataha Reef Marine Park and the
Kinabalu National Park.[63]
List
Scholarship
The
ASEAN Scholarship is a scholarship program offered by
Singapore to the 9 other
member states for secondary school, junior college,
and university education. It covers accommodation, food,
medical benefits & accident insurance, school fees, and
examination fees.[64]
University
Network
The
ASEAN University Network (AUN) is a consortium of
Southeast Asian universities. It was originally founded
in November 1995 by 11 universities within the
member states.[65]
Currently AUN comprises 21 Participating Universities.[66]
Official
song
Sports
Southeast
Asian Games
The
Southeast Asian Games, commonly known as the SEA Games,
is a biennial multi-sport event involving participants from
the current 11 countries of Southeast Asia. The games is
under regulation of the Southeast Asian Games Federation
with supervision by the
International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the
Olympic Council of Asia.
ASEAN
Para Games
Logo of the ASEAN
Para Games
The
ASEAN Para Games is a biennial multi-sport event held
after every Southeast Asian Games for athletes with physical
disabilities. The games are participated by the 11 countries
located in Southeast Asia. The Games, patterned after the
Paralympic Games, are played by physically-challenged
athletes with
mobility disabilities,
visual disabilities, who are
amputees and those with
cerebral palsy.
FESPIC
Games/ Asian Para Games
The
FESPIC Games, also known as the Far East and South Pacific
Games for the persons with disability, was the biggest multi-sports
games in Asia and South Pacific region. The FESPIC Games
were held nine times and bowed out, a success[67]
in December 2006 in the 9th FESPIC Games in Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia. The Games re-emerges as the
2010 Asian Para Games in
Guangzhou,
China. The 2010 Asian Para Games will debut shortly
after the conclusion of the
16th Asian Games, using the same facilities and venue
made
disability-accessible. The inaugural Asian Para Games,
the parallel event for athletes with physical disabilities,
is a
multi-sport event held every four years after every
Asian Games.
Football
Championship
The
ASEAN Football Championship is a biennial
soccer competition organised by the
ASEAN Football Federation, accredited by
FIFA and contested by the national teams of Southeast
Asia nations. It was inaugurated in 1996 as Tiger Cup, but
after
Asia Pacific Breweries terminated the sponsorship deal,
"Tiger" was renamed "ASEAN".
See also
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External links
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