Singapore
Government Press Release
Media
Relations Division, Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts
MITA
Building, 140 Hill Street, 2nd Storey, Singapore 179369
Tel:
6837-9666
SPEECH BY
MR GEORGE YEO, MINISTER FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS, AT THE ASIA-MIDDLE EAST DIALOGUE DINNER
ON 21 JUNE 2005 AT 9.00 PM
1.�������� Last night when we had cocktails at the
Asian Civilizations Museum, we saw a display of artifacts
from the 9th century wreck of a ship bearing a cargo of gold and silver
ornaments and ceramics from Tang Dynasty China to the Middle East.� The ship itself was Middle Eastern in
construction using wood from India.� The
motifs on many of the objects were Islamic, Buddhist and Central Asian.� That was an important age of
globalisation.� There was great
prosperity.� Tang China was a
cosmopolitan empire.� At least three
Prime Ministers were non-Han.� One of the
greatest Tang generals was a Korean.� A Japanese was the Tang commander in Vietnam.� In Central Asia, the Middle East and North
Africa, the Abbasid Empire held sway.�
While the overland silk route was mostly dominated by Buddhists, the
Maritime Silk Route was increasingly carried out by Muslim traders who had
their own communities in southern Chinese port cities.� Europe at that time was still in the early
medieval ages.
2.�������� Next week in Singapore, we will be
launching the 600th anniversary celebration of the first of the seven� great Ming
Dynasty voyages from China to Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean reaching all
the way to the eastern coast of Africa.�
It marked the beginning of another great age of globalisation.� Although Ming China withdrew into itself within
a few decades, other parts of the world were on the move.� In Southeast Asia, Malacca was on the
ascendant. In the Middle East, the Ottomans were soon to capture
Constantinople.� In Persia, the Safavids established themselves as a separate Shiite
Islamic polity.� In India, the Great Mughal Empire ushered in a new golden age. �More significantly, after reconquering
the Iberian peninsula for Christendom, the Spanish and
Portuguese took to the ocean in search of gold and glory.� They were quickly followed into Asia by the
Dutch and the English.
3.�������� We are now in another age of globalisation
which links the Middle East and Asia together again.� We are rediscovering each other.� When the European powers lorded over us, our
primary links were to them.� When their
empires were dismantled after the Second World War, many Asian countries
withdrew inwards to recover their own sense of self like China, India, Vietnam
and Indonesia. In the Middle East, the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire at
the end of the First World War into new nation-states created a whole� array of
problems which both sides exploited during the Cold War.
4.�������� With the end of the Cold War and the
globalisation of trade and investment, the prospects for peace and development
have improved significantly.� This new
encounter of the Middle East, South Asia, Southeast Asia and East Asia is
opening up exciting new opportunities.�
Once again, traders, scholars, religious leaders and adventurers are
travelling from east to west and from west to east.� Our goal in AMED is to facilitate this flow.
5.�������� There are many aspects to this
east-west flow.� We need physical
connectivity of all kinds - air and sea connections, road and rail links,
telecommunication networks.� We also need
political, economic, cultural and people-to-people links.� Governments play an important role in opening
up borders, reducing the friction to commerce and establishing common
standards.� Once the wheels of commerce
are able to turn freely, great benefits will redound to our peoples.� Underlying all this, we need more cultural
understanding of one another including our understanding of each other's
religious beliefs.� It is harmful for us
to view each other only through the prisms of the Western media.� For example, while the historical
relationship of the Islamic and Christian worlds has been difficult down the
centuries, the historical relationships between the Middle East and India,
Southeast Asia and China have been far more positive.� We should put on our own lenses and have more
direct interactions among ourselves.
6.�������� Singapore by itself is a barren rock of
an island.� Singapore is only Singapore
because of the trade flow between east and west.� If you view Singapore under a microscope, you
will see reflections of many parts of Asia and the Middle East within a tiny
area.� Tomorrow night, you will be hosted
to a reception in a part of Singapore which has strong links to other parts of
Southeast Asia and the Middle East.� The
Sultan Mosque nearby has an old charter that requires its board of trustees to
be Malay, Javanese, Buginese, North Indian, South
Indian and Arab. There is no Singaporean race; there are only Chinese, Malays,
Indians, Arabs, Eurasians and others.�
The rituals we practise, the food we eat, the
religions we hold dear, they have all come from afar.
7.�������� In a divided world, Singapore's diversity
is a great weakness.� In a globalised world, our diversity is a
strength to be celebrated.� This
is the reason why we support AMED and celebrate the revival of an old
relationship between the Middle East and Asia.
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