Najib Razak signs defence deal during Beijing visit and writes editorial saying former colonlial should not lecture countries they once exploited

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

China and Malaysia have said their navies will cooperate more in the politically sensitive South China Sea in an agreement signed on Tuesday during a visit by Malaysia’s leader, Najib Razak.

The prime minister hopes to use his visit to Beijing this week to woo new investment and boost his image as he is shunned by western leaders over the 1MDB financial scandal, which has prompted a US government investigation, analysts say.

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He was given a warm welcome on Tuesday by his Chinese counterpart, Li Keqiang. After meeting at the Great Hall of the People, they oversaw the signing of agreements, including a memorandum of understanding on defence cooperation.

Vice-foreign minister Liu Zhenmin said: “We have not touched upon the details of our cooperation. Mostly we are focusing on naval cooperation.”

Because China and Malaysia are both South China Sea coastal nations, “we need to enhance our naval cooperation to ensure peace and stability in the South China Sea and enhance our mutual trust,” he said.

Razak said former colonial powers should not “lecture countries they once exploited on how to conduct their own internal affairs today”, a Chinese newspaper reported on Wednesday, in a veiled attack on the west.

Najib said in an editorial in the state-run China Daily that larger countries should treat smaller countries fairly.

Beijing asserts that virtually all the South China Sea is Chinese territory, but an international tribunal ruling in July invalidated those claims. China has ignored that ruling.



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Six other Asian governments also claim part of the South China Sea, and some observers see it as a potential flashpoint that could spark conflict one day.

Najib is the second leader of a nation with rival territorial claims in the South China Sea to visit Beijing in two weeks. The first, Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte, played down his country’s dispute with China.

The international tribunal case was initiated by Duterte’s predecessor, and Duterte has sought to cast himself as far more conciliatory, an approach that appears to have paid off. While Chinese coast guard ships continue to guard a tiny, uninhabited shoal that China in effect seized in 2012, Filipino fishermen have been allowed to fish there for the first time in four years.

Malaysia claims a swath of the South China Sea north of Borneo, along with islands and reefs, but has been relatively understated amid the feuding between fellow claimants China, Vietnam and the Philippines.

Last month, Najib said Malaysia would not compromise on its South China Sea claims, but wants them to be worked out through dialogue and peaceful negotiations.

Liu said Najib agreed with the Chinese premier “to further advance the proper settlement of the South China Sea issue on a bilateral channel and through dialogue”. Beijing always prefers negotiating disputes on a one-to-one basis with the countries concerned, so it can bring more pressure to bear.

Liu said the two sides also agreed to enhance cooperation in infrastructure, agriculture, trade, investment and law enforcement, and would work together to build an east coast railway link in Malaysia and an oil and gas pipeline in Sabah. All this cooperation “will bring our relations to a new high”, Liu said.

Najib meets President Xi Jinping on Thursday.

Najib has been implicated in a US government investigation into massive fraud at a Malaysian investment fund he founded, 1MDB. The Department of Justice said in a lawsuit seeking to seize assets in the US that at least $3.5bn was stolen from the fund and diverted through a web of shell companies and bank accounts in Singapore, Switzerland, Luxembourg and the US.

Malaysia’s attorney general has defended Najib, even as his popularity at home has plummeted in recent months.

James Chin, director of the Asia institute at Australia’s University of Tasmania, said Najib wanted to attract more Chinese money to make up for a drop in foreign direct investment from western countries spooked by the scandal. He said Najib also wanted to show that “there are still powerful countries around the world that are still willing to give him the five-star or red carpet treatment”.

“He’s showing the Malaysian domestic audience that a new upcoming power like China is still willing to host him, because it is quite obvious that he can’t get the same treatment in western capitals any more,” Chin said.

While Najib has more riding on the visit, the Chinese government is also eager to increase its clout with Malaysia as it looks to develop its “One Belt, One Road” initiative. Under Xi’s signature foreign economic expansion strategy, China aims to strengthen land and sea links and bilateral cooperation with the rest of Asia, Africa and Europe. One part of that is a planned high-speed railway from Singapore to south-west China which will pass through Malaysia.

“China for its part wants to be closer to Malaysia in economic and political terms because it’s trying to draw Malaysia into its sphere of influence,” Chin said.

Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report

