HANOI - Asia-Pacific nations are set to approve a series of measures to fight
terrorism in a region that boasts some of the world's highest growth rates,
Vietnam's deputy foreign minister said on Monday.
 Vietnamese police
officers patrol outside the venue for the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) meeting in Hanoi November 14,
2006. [Reuters]
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Achieving a consensus among the 21 nations of the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation forum on the measure was not easy, said Deputy Foreign Minister Le
Cong Phung, who chaired a conference of senior officials preparing for this
week's APEC meetings in Hanoi.
Senior officials approved the report of an APEC Special Task Force on
Counter-Terrorism, Phung said in a statement at the end of their two-day
conference.
South Korea's Park Sang-ki will be the new chairman of the special task force
for the next two years.
"This is a very important result, showing clearly the hosting role of
Vietnam, because this is a sensitive area. Many issues of 2006 could only be
agreed upon at the last minute," Phung said.
A review of security and anti-terrorism measures since the September 11, 2001
hijacked plane attacks in the United States said terrorism remains a threat.
"Terrorism is now accepted as a direct challenge to APEC's vision of free,
open and prosperous trade and an affront to the fundamental values that APEC
member economies share," a report circulated among senior officials said.
"It is a threat to the region's economic stability, peace and security."
Among the proposals APEC leaders will be asked to approve include:
- mitigate threat of bioterrorism and collaborate to combat the terrorist
threat of deliberate contamination of food supplies
- protect border operations by streamlining communications in the event of an
attack
- upgrading aviation security
- counter-terrorism financing workshops
- business continuity plans after an attack
The initiatives will put to APEC's meeting of foreign ministers on Thursday
and the leaders' summit on Sunday.
It signals a significant move away from the group's founding goal of
bolstering trade and investment around the Pacific rim.
Security officials fear a major terrorist attack would strike a severe blow
to APEC economies that account for nearly half of global trade, 40 percent of
the world's population and 56 percent of the world's gross domestic product.