The Phuket News Novosti Phuket Khao Phuket

Login | Create Account | Search


Malaysia’s Anwar slams tariffs as regional meet starts

Malaysia’s Anwar slams tariffs as regional meet starts

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim slammed trade tariffs today (July 9) as regional foreign ministers gathered in Kuala Lumpur for a three-day meet, which also included talks with the United States, China and Russia.

politicseconomics
By AFP

Wednesday 9 July 2025 02:22 PM


Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim delivers his keynote address during the opening ceremony of the 58th ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ meeting and related meetings at the Convention Centre in Kuala Lumpur today (July 9). Photo: AFP

Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim delivers his keynote address during the opening ceremony of the 58th ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ meeting and related meetings at the Convention Centre in Kuala Lumpur today (July 9). Photo: AFP

US President Donald Trump’s latest tariff moves will be high on the agenda at a meeting of top diplomats of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in the Malaysian capital ending on Friday.

“Across the world tools once used to generate growth are now wielded to pressure, isolate and contain,” Anwar said as the conference started.

“Tariffs, export restrictions and investment barriers have now become the sharpened instruments of geopolitical rivalry,” Anwar said, without specifically naming the United States.

His remarks came as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio flew to Malaysia for his first visit to Asia as Washington’s top diplomat.

Rubio is expected in the Malaysian capital early tomorrow for two days of meetings.

This included a post-ministerial conference and attending a meeting by East Asian foreign ministers - which will also see key US-Asia trading partners such as Japan and South Korea participating, as well as China.

US officials ahead of the trip said Washington was “prioritising” its commitment to East Asia and Southeast Asia, but Rubio’s visit comes as many countries fear the imposition of punitive tariffs.

Sweeping levies Trump announced in April were mostly suspended, as Washington engages in negotiations with friends and foes alike.

On Monday, Trump said he would impose 25% tariffs on Japan and South Korea and 12 others, including Southeast Asian nations Malaysia (25%) and Laos (40%), as of Aug 1.

Export-dependent Vietnam, which like Malaysia and Laos is an ASEAN member, is one of the few countries to already reach a tentative agreement with Washington.

Also high on the agenda of the foreign minister’s meeting will be the hotly contested South China Sea, which China claims almost entirely and is a potential flashpoint between Beijing and Washington.

Optimistic’

Malaysia’s trade minister Zafrul Aziz said today that ASEAN countries would continue bilateral negotiations with Washington ahead of the August tariff deadline.

Zafrul said they remained “optimistic” that a deal could still be reached.

Anwar meanwhile urged countries of the 10-nation bloc - which is also dealing with several internal spats - to show unity “speak with coherence, act with foresight”.

But ASEAN is grappling with the ongoing civil war in Myanmar which has seen more than 6,000 people killed and millions of others displaced.

In the latest clashes, heavy fighting has forced nearly 4,000 people to flee into India in the last four days, Indian officials reported on Monday.

“Regrettably, peace remains elusive as the suffering deepens,” Anwar said.

Meanwhile a border spat between Thailand and Cambodia continued to simmer.

The Southeast Asian neighbours have been at loggerheads since a Cambodian soldier was killed in late May as troops exchanged fire in a disputed border region.

Malaysia is this year’s rotating chair of ASEAN - long derided by critics as a toothless talking shop.

“Our cohesion must not end at declarations,” Anwar said.

“It must be built into our institutions, our strategies and our economic decisions.”