LATEST NEWS   TNG Digital appoints Datuk Syed Zaid Albar chairman effective Oct 17 | Malaysia intends to reinforce ASEAN’s central role in guiding the implementation of RCEP during the upcoming 5th RCEP Leaders' Meeting - PM Anwar | Malaysia wants RCEP to serve not just the interests of large multinational corporations, but also to deliver concrete benefits to local SMEs, workers, and communities - PM Anwar | RCEP represents far more than an economic arrangement; it is a strategic affirmation that open regionalism remains our pathway to shared prosperity - PM Anwar | Four-year-old girl dies of heat stroke in Gua Musang - Police | 

India Must Deepen Engagement With ASEAN Amid Strained US Ties - Analyst

By N. Kuvineshwaren

NEW DELHI, Sept 26 (Bernama) -- India must seize the 47th ASEAN Summit in Kuala Lumpur next month as an opportunity to strengthen ties with Southeast Asian nations, particularly in trade and economy. 

India’s Research and Information System for Developing Countries (RIS) Distinguished Fellow, Rajeev Kher said this, arguing that India’s heavy reliance on the West has limited its ability to leverage opportunities with the region.

Rajeev pointed out the complementarity of Indian and ASEAN economies.

He said amid strained ties with the United States (US) brought about by US tariffs, it is timely for New Delhi to reset its cooperation with ASEAN. 

“The problem is that India has always been West-centric, West-oriented and when it has looked East, when it wants to review, it’s not happening,” he told visiting reporters from ASEAN at the RIS centre, here recently.

RIS is a think tank under India’s External Affairs Ministry specialising in policy research on international economic issues and development cooperation.

The 47th ASEAN Summit and related summits, scheduled to be held in Kuala Lumpur this October, is expected to be among the biggest gathering in recent years.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald J. Trump are among the world leaders expected to attend.

Rajeev, a former Commerce Secretary, added that New Delhi must broaden its trade outlook by factoring in ties with both ASEAN and China.

“You cannot look at ASEAN trade in isolation. ASEAN trade has to be looked at alongside India-China trade as well, because a lot of Chinese products flow into ASEAN not necessarily as circumvention, but as part of value-traded goods.

“So India must take a much larger view of its trade with Southeast Asia and China,” he said.

A total of 25 journalists from nine Southeast Asian countries, namely Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand, Timor-Leste, and Vietnam are currently on a familiarisation visit to India from Sept 23 to Oct 2, organised by the Indian External Affairs Ministry.

-- BERNAMA