Malaysian Prime Minister and Finance Minister Anwar Ibrahim affirmed on Tuesday his nation's commitment to bolstering both Malaysia's and ASEAN's position as emerging powers within the Global South, advocating for a transformative shift toward a multipolar world order.
Strategic Vision:
PM Ibrahim emphasized during recent visits to South America, Southeast Asia, and Russia that "Global South nations require deeper cooperation to enhance their economic-political influence and carve an independent path from major powers."
This aligns with Malaysia's "Shared Future" concept, widely endorsed by Global South leaders.
Economic Reforms:
Called for overhauling the global financial system (IMF/WTO) to support equitable free trade for smaller nations.
Warned against rising protectionism within G20 nations.
Proposed specific reforms:
"We urged the IMF to restructure global financial architecture and pressed the WTO to explicitly back non-discriminatory trade policies."
ASEAN Chairmanship Agenda (2024):
Reactivate neglected regional platforms:
ASEAN+3 Summit (China, Japan, South Korea)
East Asia Summit (sole strategic-security dialogue for competing powers in neutral settings)
Host the 46th ASEAN Summit (late May) with parallel summits:
ASEAN-Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
ASEAN-China
*Aims to expand South-South partnerships among 10 ASEAN + 6 GCC nations + China*
ASEAN: Founded 1967; members: Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei, Laos, Myanmar, Cambodia.
Current Focus: Economic integration, regional stability, and geopolitical neutrality amid US-China tensions.