OPENING REMARKS YB DATO’ SERI UTAMA HAJI MOHAMAD BIN HAJI HASAN, MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, MALAYSIA 26TH ASEAN PLUS THREE FOREIGN MINISTERS’ MEETING KUALA LUMPUR, 10 JULY 2025
OPENING REMARKS YB DATO’ SERI UTAMA HAJI MOHAMAD BIN HAJI HASAN, MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, MALAYSIA 26TH ASEAN PLUS THREE FOREIGN MINISTERS’ MEETING KUALA LUMPUR, 10 JULY 2025
OPENING REMARKS
YB DATO’ SERI UTAMA HAJI MOHAMAD BIN HAJI HASAN,
MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, MALAYSIA
26TH ASEAN PLUS THREE FOREIGN MINISTERS’ MEETING
KUALA LUMPUR, 10 JULY 2025
His Excellency Iwaya Takeshi
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Japan and Coordinator of the Plus Three Countries
His Excellency Wang Yi
Minister of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China
His Excellency Park Yoonjoo
First Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea
ASEAN Foreign Ministers,
Excellencies,
1. On behalf of the Government of Malaysia, I am honoured to welcome Your Excellencies to Kuala Lumpur, for the 26th ASEAN Plus Three Foreign Ministers’ Meeting. I extend a special welcome to His Excellency Iwaya Takeshi, who joins us at this Meeting for the first time.
2. Our meeting today reaffirms our collective commitment, to further deepen the ASEAN Plus Three cooperation, as a driving force for peace, stability, and prosperity in East Asia. Amid complex regional and global developments, the relevance of platforms that advocate dialogue and cooperation, such as this, has never been more evident.
3. The ASEAN Plus Three cooperation was established in 1997, to coordinate a regional response to the financial crisis at the time.
4. Over the years, the region has weathered a few other challenges. Through it all, we have stood firmly together, coordinated our response, endured and overcome.
5. Consequently, the ASEAN Plus Three has evolved into one of the region’s most enduring frameworks of cooperation. It is a hallmark of teamwork that is dependable and dynamic, and adapt at navigating complex regional realities.
6. It enables us to consult, coordinate, and cooperate not only in times of crisis, but also in our collective pursuit of sustained peace, inclusive growth, and shared resilience in East Asia.
7. Today, we are once again being tested. The region is facing a storm – what might be called the perfect storm. The challenges are multi-fold, ranging from intensifying great power rivalry, economic fragmentation, disruptions, and technological transboundary threats. Unilateralism and nationalism are on the rise, marginalising multilateralism that is essential for a stable world order.
8. Nevertheless, I am confident that with our collective steadfastness, and strong commitment to dialogue and cooperation, we will again prevail.
9. There have been some encouraging developments recently. These include the endorsement of the Rapid Financing Facility (RFF) under the Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralisation (CMIM), as well as the momentum from the Leaders’ statements on Electric Vehicle Ecosystem (2023), and on Strengthening Connectivity on Regional Supply Chains (2024).
10. These are not isolated achievements. They illustrate the APT’s capacity to generate value, respond with agility and lead with foresight.
11. Looking ahead, the ASEAN Plus Three must remain agile, well-coordinated, and forwardlooking, to ensure continued relevance and impact. This requires us to embrace frontier technologies.
12. ASEAN’s regional digital transformation is projected to drive, approximately USD 2 trillion in regional GDP. With the expertise of China, Japan, and the ROK in digital technologies, the opportunities and potential returns are massive.
13. Such initiatives support Malaysia’s objective, as Chair of ASEAN, to narrow development gaps, enabling equitable development, promoting sustainable growth, fostering peace through mutual trust and cooperation, improving living standards and human capital, as well as fostering social cohesion and participation, in an inclusive and sustainable manner.
14. We should keep in mind that collectively, the ASEAN Plus Three represents a combined population of 2.28 billion people, with a total nominal GDP of approximately USD 29.33 trillion, or 25.77% of global GDP.
15. This scale underscores the strategic weight and global relevance of our partnership, as well as the responsibility we bear in ensuring regional stability, inclusive growth, and sustainable development.
16. Let us, thus, work together to sustain the momentum, strengthen future-oriented cooperation, and deliver tangible benefits to our peoples and beyond the region.
Thank you.
LIST OF CONVENTIONS / TREATIES THAT HAVE BEEN TRANSLATED INTO BAHASA MELAYU
Ratified by Malaysia
| 1. | Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, CEDAW |
| 3. | Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, CRPD |
| 4. | Geneva Convention | ||||||||
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Yet to ratify
| 5. | Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities |
| 6. | Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, CEDAW |
| 7. | Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on a communications procedure |
| 8. | Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment – CAT | ||
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| 9. | International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights - ICCPR | ||||
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| 10. | International Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination - ICERD |
| 11. | International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights - ICESR | ||
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| 12. | International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance - ICPED |
| 13. | International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families - ICRMW |
| 14. | Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, 1951; | ||
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| 15. | Rome Statute |
Other documents
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