
JAKARTA
INDONESIA and Malaysia
yester-day agreed to reject spying and encourage fellow countries in
the region to do so, following the wire-tapping allegedly done by
Austra-lia against Indonesia which has worsened bilateral ties.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono met with Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Tun Abdul Razak at
the State Pa-lace, agreeing to raise the issue at ASEAN summit in
Myanmar next year.
“We agreed to urge ASEAN countries to unite in saying no to spying activities,” Yudhoyono said in a joint statement after the meeting.
“Mutual trust and mutual
respect are important in international relationship. We hope that during
the ASEAN summit, a deal can be reached among ASEAN countries to reject
spying activities,” he said.
Similarly, Najib said that Mal-aysia supported Indonesia’s stance against wiretapping and its proposal.
“I agreed with the president to give more attention to the spying
issue during the next ASEAN summit.
Malaysia will strongly support the
proposal by Indonesia for an agreement on the issue,” he said.
The wiretapping carried out by Australia on President Yudhoyono and his inner circle has angered Indonesia which retaliated with suspension of all military cooperation and joint effort in combating people smuggling, a politically sensitive issue in Australia.
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