VIENTIANE (AFP) — Mekong region premiers meeting in Laos on Monday pledged to boost road, rail and power links between their six countries, saying closer integration will boost trade and development.
The prime ministers of China, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos vowed to "sustain and deepen our economic cooperation and integration efforts," at their Vientiane summit with the Asian Development Bank (ADB).
They also pledged, in an advance of a summit declaration, to jointly tackle challenges such as "the emergence of health risks, human and drug trafficking, and growing environmental threats, including those posed by climate change."
The summit brought together China's premier Wen Jiabao, Thailand's Samak Sundaravej, Vietnam's Nguyen Tan Dung, Cambodia's Hun Sen, Myanmar's Thein Sein, Laos' Bouasone Bouphavanh, as well as ADB president Haruhiko Kuroda.
The leaders of the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) -- an area long isolated and impoverished by revolution and war -- praised their "significant reduction in the incidence of poverty" since the group was founded in 1992.
The Mekong region was for decades a battlegound for post-colonial struggles and the Vietnam war that in the 1960s and 1970s spilled into Laos as well as Cambodia, which then fell under the bloody reign of the Khmer Rouge.
Peace has brought prosperity. Over recent years, average economic growth in the region -- home to more than 320 million people, according to the latest ADB data -- has topped six percent per year.
Exports from its members, excluding China, have grown from 37 billion dollars in 1992 to 179 billion dollars in 2006, said the ADB. Foreign direct investment has more than tripled to 7 billion dollars in 2005.
Several highways are nearly complete across the area united by Southeast Asia's largest river -- including roads linking China and Thailand, Myanmar and Vietnam, and Thailand and Vietnam -- the premiers said in their statement.
The group committed to extending transport links, including a rail line from Kunming in China's southern Yunnan province that would run south through Thailand and Malaysia to the commercial hub and port of Singapore.
The GMS also said its six members were "in the process of building new power generation and transmission facilities... and have laid down the foundations for a future subregional trade and power market."
Other areas of cooperation included a planned GMS Information Superhighway Network, promoting the Mekong region as a single tourism destination, and pilot projects to protect transnational "biodiversity corridors."
ADB vice president Lawrence Greenwood said the group was shifting its focus toward streamlining rules, building up institutions and training officials.
"The main emphasis of this meeting has been to take the next step from the building of infrastructure to support the integration of the Greater Mekong Subregion and move to more emphasis on the 'software'," he said.
This aimed "to make sure the infrastructure -- the roads, the power plants, the transmission lines that get built -- truly lead to generation of economic activity... to reduce poverty," he told AFP on the sidelines of the summit.
He said the 2008-2012 action plan of the summit included more than 200 projects, worth over 20 billion dollars in investments, in areas such as transport, tourism, power and the environment.
"The development of this subregion involves six countries, therefore it is a win-win development," said China's Prime Minister Wen on Sunday. "It is a cross-border development featuring mutual assistance."
Wen said "the development of our subregion is also a development balancing man and nature... We should promote economic growth and protect culture, pay attention to environmental protection and achieve sustainable development."
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