The 13th annual meeting of the Asia-Pacific Parliamentary Forum (APPF)
started its agenda here on Tuesday by a special session on tsunami disaster,
calling for continued international efforts in rescue, relief and reconstruction
in affected countries.
"This unprecedented natural disaster (tsunamis stroke Southeast Asian and
East Asian countries on Dec. 26, 2004), needs unprecedented global response and
a more predictable and reliable approach in assisting national governments to
cope with such disaster, with the United Nations in the leading role,"
Presidentof the Senate of Thailand, Suchon Cheleekure, said at the session.
Thailand stands ready to put up its own efforts if necessary and with the
international community to set up a regional early warning system in the Indian
Ocean and the Southeast Asian region,he noted.
At the session, Speaker of the Indonesian House of Representatives Agung
Laksono informed delegates about the resultsof the Special ASEAN Leaders'
Meeting on Aftermath of the Earthquake and Tsunami held in Indonesia on Jan. 6,
2005, which focused on three major areas of concern, namely emergency relief,
rehabilitation and reconstruction, and prevention and mitigation.
"In order to prevent catastrophe and mitigate the consequencesit brings
about, the leaders underline the importance of ASEAN (the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations) regional mechanisms ondisaster prevention, the
establishment of a region-wide early warning system across the Indian Ocean and
Southeast Asia, the promotion of public education and awareness of disaster
preventionand mitigation, and the development of human and institutional
capacity in operating the system," he stressed.
The special session is to adopt a resolution on cooperation to overcome the
earthquake and tsunami disaster. It will be followed by a plenary session on
political and security issues, including international terrorism, the Korean
Peninsula, the Middle East peace process.
At the 13th APPF meeting, which will last to Thursday, over 100 delegates
from 23 countries are to center their discussions mainlyon tsunamis, political
and security issues, economic and trade issues, Asia-Pacific cooperation in
addressing regional issues of general interest, and future works of the APPF
which was established in 1993.