AFP: Indonesian President Joko Widodo wants Australia to become a full member of ASEAN, signalling yesterday he is keen on Canberra playing a bigger regional role in trade and defence matters.



His comments come with Australia hosting a special summit of Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) leaders in Sydney, as China increasingly flexes its muscle and the threat of violent extremism grows.



“I think it’s a good idea,” Widodo told the Sydney Morning Herald, referring to Australia joining ASEAN the first time an Indonesian president has endorsed the concept.



“Because our region will be better, (for) stability, economic stability, and also political stability. Sure, it will be better.”



Australia has been a dialogue partner of ASEAN, which groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, since 1974.



They began biennial leaders’ summits in 2016, with the first in Vientiane.



In a report last month, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute argued that Canberra should aim for ASEAN membership by 2024 - its 50th anniversary of being a partner and use the Sydney summit as a launch pad.



“As the geo-strategic and geo-economic pressures build in Asia, ASEAN, as a middle-power grouping, needs the extra middle-power heft offered by Australia and New Zealand,” it said.



“The Sydney summit is the moment to launch the long conversation about Australia joining ASEAN.”



Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said he was “very warmed” by Widodo’s comments, but stressed “ASEAN matters are matters for ASEAN”.

“We have the greatest respect for ASEAN, the way it reaches its own conclusions,” he said ahead of a bilateral meeting with Cambodian leader Hun Sen.

“We are a dialogue partner with ASEAN and we respect that centrality of ASEAN and its significance and fundamental importance, central importance, in our region.”

Speaking at a press conference alongside Turnbull, Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said he was keen to “deepen ties between Australia and Southeast Asia more broadly”. “Australia believes its future lies in Asia, took steps to become ASEAN’s first dialogue partner in 1974, and Singapore has taken steps to help keep the region open,” said Lee, the 2018 ASEAN host.



“As ASEAN chair, Singapore will continue to encourage Australia’s engagement with ASEAN, and we will discuss taking the partnership forward.”