MANILA-An approaching storm, warnings of terror attacks, and planned anti-government demonstrations in Manila have forced the Philippines to postpone the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit of leaders in Cebu city scheduled for Dec. 11-14.
Earlier, the United States, Australia,
Japan and other countries have issued warnings about the possibility of a
terror attack during the summit. They urged their citizens to stay away
from Cebu city.
The Philippines however insisted the
postponement was due primarily to an approaching storm, not the warnings.
Sources at the Department of Foreign Affairs and police agencies told The
Manila Times a terrorist threat and scheduled massive protests were also
factors in the decision.
“The decision was based on this weather
disturbance and on this disturbance only," national organizing chief
Marciano Paynor told a press conference in Cebu City, where senior officials of
Asean states already started meeting.
He said ministerial meetings were
expected to go ahead but that summits of national leaders from the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) and the wider East Asia Summit would be put
off until January.
When the postponement was announced,
Malaysian Trade Minister Rafidah Aziz, Singaporean Foreign Minister George Yeo
and Thai Foreign Minister Nitya Pibulsonggram had already arrived in Cebu.
The annual summit of the 10-nation Asean
bloc, and the fledgling expanded regional grouping known as the East Asia
Summit, are major events on the Asian diplomatic calendar that draw leaders
from across the region.
The announcement caused confusion because
minutes before the press briefing, the weather agency, Pagasa, said Tropical
Storm Seniang was shaping up as a relative lightweight as storms go. The tone
of Pagasa forecaster Joel Desusa however changed after the postponment was
announced. He said that even if the storm was not very strong, it can still
cause serious damage similar to Typhoon Reming which caused a heavy toll on
lives and properties.
Filipino diplomats, speaking on condition
of anonymity, told The Times that governments of Asean member-states had
weighed in with concern, following consultations with intelligence agencies of
the United States, Britain, Australia and Japan, which had all warned of a
terrorist plot to attack the summit, scheduled from December 11 to 14.
The government also faced massive
political rallies in protest of Charter change next week, with major religious
groups like the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, the El Shaddai
and major protestant denominations announcing joint actions with militant
groups and the traditional political opposition.
Aside from ASEAN leaders, six other heads
of state, including Chinese President Hu Jintao, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe and Australian Prime Minister John
Howard, are to attend the largest international event to be hosted by
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s government.