Malaysia鈥檚 Anwar says don鈥檛 single out China in sea tensions

There will always be border disputes in Asia, and China should not be singled out because of tensions in the South China Sea, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said Wednesday. (REUTERS)
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  • There will always be border disputes in Asia, and China should not be singled out because of tensions in the South China Sea, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said Wednesday

DAVOS: There will always be border disputes in Asia, and China should not be singled out because of tensions in the South China Sea, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said Wednesday.
Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Anwar said that Malaysia had border issues with Singapore and its other neighbors in Southeast Asia but they still managed to cultivate good relations.
While Malaysia also has maritime issues with China, it will push ahead with improving ties because it is an important country, he said.
鈥淲e have excellent relationship with Singapore. We still have border issues with them,鈥� Anwar said.
鈥淚 treat the Thais as my family members, the leaders, but still we have some border issues with them. So it is with Indonesia, with the Philippines.
鈥�(But) we don鈥檛 go to war, we don鈥檛 threaten. We do discuss. We get a bit... angry, but we do focus on the economic fundamentals and move on,鈥� he added.
鈥淲hy is it that we must then single out China as an issue?鈥� Anwar asked.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 my only contention. Do I have an issue about it? Yes, but do I have a problem? No. Do we have any undesired tensions? No,鈥� he said.
He said that while Malaysia has strong ties with the United States, China is an important neighbor that it must also engage with.
鈥淥f course, people highlight the issue of the South China Sea... But may I remind you that Malaysia is a maritime country,鈥� he said.
China has been 鈥渧ery reasonable鈥� in dealing with Malaysia, Anwar added.
鈥淭hey take us seriously, more seriously than many of the countries of our old allies and friends,鈥� he said, without mentioning any country.
China has ruffled diplomatic feathers in Southeast Asia because of its assertion that it owns most of the strategic waterway despite an international ruling that the claim has no legal basis.
This has pitted it against Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam, which have partial claims to the sea.
In recent years, China and the Philippines have seen an escalation of confrontations, including boat-ramming incidents and Chinese ships firing water cannons on Filipino vessels.
The clashes have sparked concern they could draw the United States, Manila鈥檚 long-time security ally, into armed conflict with China.