Asia > South-Eastern Asia > Singapore > British PM heads to Southeast Asia with trade, IS on agenda

Singapore: British PM heads to Southeast Asia with trade, IS on agenda

2015/07/27

British Prime Minister David Cameron begins a visit to Southeast Asia on Monday, looking to seal US$1.2 billion in trade deals and push for better cooperation in the fight against the Islamic National group.

Cameron will arrive in Indonesia on the initial stop of a four-day trip, accompanied by 30 British business leaders and the trade minister, before heading to Singapore, Vietnam and Malaysia.

He will use meetings with President Joko Widodo of Indonesia and Prime Minister Najib Razak of Malaysia to discuss what he calls the "common enemy" of IS jihadists, who have seized vast swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria.

Hundreds of young Britons have joined IS in Syria and Iraq, sparking fears they could launch attacks on home soil upon their return. The threat from the jihadists is as well in focus next IS claimed an attack on a Tunisian beach hotel last month that left 30 Britons dead.

Indonesia, which has the world's major Muslim people and has long struggled with extremism, fears up to 500 of its citizens have been lured to the Middle East by IS, while nationals of Muslim-majority Malaysia have as well joined the jihadists.

In remarks before the trip -- his initial outside Europe since being re-elected in May -- Cameron said he would be talking to Southeast Asian leaders about "one of the biggest threats our world has faced".

"We will only defeat these brutal terrorists if we take action at home, overseas and online and if we unite with nations around the world against this common enemy," he said.

Britain would offer expertise on counter-terrorism, he added, and could as well learn from Indonesia and Malaysia about what they have done to tackle extremism and build tolerant societies.

With trade a major focus as Britain seeks to find new markets in fast-growing Asia, Cameron said that deals worth additional than £750 million ($1.2 billion) would be struck during the trip.

"Over the next 20 years, 90 % of world increase is expected approaching from outside Europe and Britain must be poised to take chance," he said.

"That's why I'm delighted to be taking British businesses to this vast and dynamic market, securing deals worth over £750 million and creating opportunities for hard-working people back at home."

Accompanying Cameron on the trip are senior figures from prominent British businesses inclunding engine maker Rolls-Royce and construction equipment maker JCB.

He will as well seek evolution on a free trade transaction between the European Union and the 10-member Association of Southeast Nations (ASEAN) during talks with the regional bloc's secretary general at its Jakarta headquarters.

In addition, Cameron will discuss action on climate change while in Indonesia ahead of a key summit in Paris later this year. Indonesia is one of the world's top greenhouse gas emitters, due in large part to rampant deforestation.

But there could be tension at the same time as Cameron meets Widodo Monday over the plight of a Briton on death row in Indonesia for drug smuggling.

Grandmother Lindsay Sandiford has said she fears her execution is imminent next a group of foreigners were put to death by firing squad in April, sparking international outrage.

The prime minister could run into controversy during his stop in Malaysia, with calls mounting for him to meet with the opposition inclunding the government at a time Najib is fighting off a crisis.

The Malaysian leader is facing outrage over allegations that hundreds of millions of dollars were siphoned off from a national-owned development company he launched and retains close links with.

The premier and the company, 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), have both vehemently denied any wrongdoing. The case is being investigated by Malaysian authorities and a parliamentary committee.

Cameron will depart Jakarta on Tuesday for Singapore.

Related Articles
  • Singapore launches new strategy for human resource industry

    2017/07/11 Singapore launched a new manpower plan for the human resource industry on Monday, to help strengthen the human resource profession and better support businesses to transform and grow, the Straits Times reported. The new strategy covers three areas, namely training and internship programmes for human resource professionals; mentorship programmes, free advisory services and an online resource portal for businesses and employers; and an outsourcing scheme for the human resource industry.
  • Singapore And Food Security

    2017/07/08 Food security can be enhanced by strategic initiatives. Land scarce nations can still do much for agriculture and farming with effective policy measures. Singapore has learned to address the multi-faceted challenges of food security with good planning, efficient utilisation of available resources and clear vision for the next. While a lot of analysts have raised concern about feeding the world’s estimated 9.7 billion people by 2050 due to the prospects of supply not conference request, others have refuted this claim on grounds that even today, additional food is produced than is actually consumed or needed. From presently on the problem of hunger is still found in a lot of parts of Asia and Africa. The persistence of hunger reflects the fact that food security is not only about having sufficient quantity of food available, but as well about having physical and economic access to it.
  • The next chapter for the Trans-Pacific Partnership

    2017/06/27 The next of trade and cross border commerce in Asia and the Pacific and the US role in Asia’s economy were put in doubt by Donald Trump’s withdrawal of the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) economic agreement. The TPP was the economic arm of President Obama’s pivot to Asia. It was as well supposed to set the rules and standards of trade in Asia and for the world. It is no amaze again, that some of the remaining 11 members of the TPP are trying to save the agreement even without US participation. A lot of political capital was expended in negotiating the TPP and nations are looking for ways to maintain the momentum of economic integration.
  • BestCities sees opportunity at 2017 Global Forum Tokyo

    2017/05/29 BestCities World Alliance is set to champion inclusivity and multi-culturalism within the business tourism industry in 2017 and beyond, following the announcement Building World Connections Across Cultures will be the core theme underlying this year’s BestCities World Forum, taking place in Tokyo 4-7 December 2017. Building on the 100% delegate success ratings in Dubai 2016, the second BestCities World Forum will be hosted in partnership with the Tokyo Convention & Visitors Bureau (TCVB). The impressive programme of education, insight and networking, is by presently shaping up to be this year’s must-attend event for senior international association conference planners, looking to increase the positive impact of their meetings.
  • Higher earning Why a university degree is worth more in some countries than others

    2016/12/11 A university education may expand your mind. It will as well fatten your wallet. Data from the OECD, a club of rich nations, show that graduates can expect far better lifetime earnings than those without a degree. The size of this premium varies. It is greatest in Ireland, which has a high GDP per chief and rising inequality. Since 2000 the unemployment rate for under-35s has swelled to 8% for those with degrees – but to additional than 20% for those without, and nearly 40% for secondary school drop-outs. The country’s wealth presently goes disproportionately to workers with letters next their names.