. Earth Science News .
India ready to help protect Malacca Strait

by Bernice Han
Singapore (AFP) Jun 3, 2006
== ATTENTION -quotes on China /// India is ready to do its part to ensure peace and stability in East Asia including helping protect the busy Strait of Malacca, Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee said Saturday.

He told a high-level regional security conference in Singapore that India would increasingly become a key driver of Asian prosperity alongside other big countries like China, Japan and Indonesia.

"India's role is crucial for ensuring and maintaining long-term peace, stable balance of power, economic growth and security in Asia," Mukherjee told the annual gathering of officials and experts known as the Shangri-La Dialogue.

The East Asia Summit (EAS) that took place for the first time last year in Malaysia's capital Kuala Lumpur can accelerate regional cooperation, Mukherjee said.

"As a member of the EAS, India fully supports and looks forward to constructive cooperation with others in the group to create the framework for greater regional integration and cooperation," he said.

Mukherjee said his country was ready to help strengthen security in the Malacca Strait, one of the world's most important waterways with 50,000 ships carrying about one-third of the globe's trade passing through it each year.

Security in the straits is important for India as more than 50 percent of its maritime trade passes through it, the minister said.

"There is a need to increase and strengthen regional cooperation to enhance maritime security,' Mukherjee said.

"We believe that through the coordination of our individual efforts, the security of the sea lanes will be enhanced," he said.

India's participation in ensuring safe passage in the Malacca Strait will however be subject to approval of the nations located along the waterway, Mukherjee said.

"Subject to the desire of the littoral states, as a major state-user, India would be willing to assist the project in whatever capacity is deemed suitable," he said, referring to the initiative involving Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia to monitor the strait.

India is already playing a key regional role with growing trade ties in Southeast Asia and China, as well as rising investments in India from Japan and South Korea, Mukherjee said.

On ties with China, Mukherjee said relations "have reached a certain degree of maturity where we are determined to build upon our existing commonalities and identify newer areas of mutually beneficial cooperation.

"At the same time, we are striving to address our differences in a proactive and purposive manner, without allowing them to affect the comprehensive development of our relationship," he said.

Related Links

Pirates Plunder Russian Tanker
Conakry, Guinea (UPI) May 24, 2006
On May 21 six heavily armed pirates from two high-speed cutters boarded and robbed a Russian Primorye Sea Shipping Company tanker in the Atlantic Ocean, 34 miles off the coast of Guinea's Conakry port in West Africa.







  • Sinking Levees
  • Future Hurricane Disasters May Become More Costly
  • Indonesia to make community grants for quake reconstruction
  • Tough start for Indonesia's quake babies

  • Climate change could fuel fiercer hurricane cycles: researchers
  • Climate change: Arctic went from greenhouse to icehouse
  • Sea-Surface Warming Linked to Worse Tropical Storms Activity
  • Cutting Energy Waste Crucial To Forestalling Climate Change

  • Ancient City Reveals Life In Desert 2,200 Years Ago
  • Commercial Remote Sensing Satellite Market Stabilizing
  • Digital Globe and Getty Images To Supply Satellite Images To News Media
  • Intermap Technologies Receives Radar Mapping Contract

  • Turning Corn Fiber Into Ethanol
  • China looks to harness wind power
  • New US fuel standards give hope to diesel industry
  • Ultrasonics Boosts Release Rates Of Corn Sugars For Ethanol Production

  • UN Reports AIDS Progress, But
  • Deaths Mount In Indonesia
  • Malaria, Potato Famine Pathogen Share Surprising Trait
  • Microbe Labs Proposed For California

  • Fourth Slovenian bear released in Pyrenees
  • Electric Fish May Be A Species Diverging
  • Hebrew University Researchers Uncover Eight Previously Unknown Species
  • It Takes Energy To Make A Species

  • Air pollution rife in India's villages: report
  • Pollution turning China's Yangtze river "cancerous"
  • 'Mercury Sponge' Technology Goes From Lab To Market
  • Managing Indian E-Waste

  • Does Hepatitis B Affect Human Gender Ratios
  • Ancient Etruscans Unlikely Ancestors Of Modern Tuscans
  • MIT Poet Develops 'Seeing Machine'
  • Robotic Joystick Reveals How Brain Controls Movement

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement