ASEAN ministers urge halt to Middle East war as crisis rattles energy and trade


Malaysia Deputy Minister of Investment, Trade and Industry Sim Tze Tzin, Myanmar Union Minister Wah Wah Maung, Philippines DTI Undersecretary Allan Batarra Gepty, Thailand Deputy Permanent Secretary Ekachat Seetavorarat, Timor Leste Vice Minister of Commerce Augusto Trindade, Vietnam Deputy Director General, Trade, Chi Viet Nguyen, AEM Chairperson and Philippines DTI Secretary Maria Cristina Aldeguer Roque, Singapore Deputy Prime Minister Kim Yong Gan, Brunei Darussalam Minister of Finance and Economy May Fa'ezah Ahmad Ariffin, Cambodia Secretary of State Rithi Pich, Indonesia Vice Minister of Trade Dyah Roro Esti Widya Putri, Lao Vice Minister Manothong Vongsay, and ASEAN Secretary General Kim Hourn Kao link arms during a group photo at the 32nd ASEAN Economic Ministers' Retreat in Manila, Philippines, March 13, 2026. Aaron Favila/POOL via REUTERS

MANILA, March 13 (Reuters) - ASEAN foreign and economic ministers on Friday called for an ⁠immediate halt to the war in the Middle East, and said the ‌effects of surging oil prices and disrupted trade are already hitting Southeast Asia's economies.

Several members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations have begun rolling out measures to counter the economic impact, with governments moving ​quickly to conserve energy, stabilise domestic markets and protect ⁠vulnerable sectors such as tourism.

"We expressed ⁠serious concern over the situation in the Middle East and its impacts in the region, ⁠and ‌emphasised the importance of the immediate cessation of hostilities," Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Ma. Theresa Lazaro told a press conference after a special meeting on ⁠the crisis, adding that ASEAN called on all parties to ​exercise the utmost self-restraint.

The ‌Philippines, which is chairing ASEAN this year, convened the special meeting as concerns ⁠over the Iran ​conflict deepened.The ministers called for global energy supply chains to be kept open and to activate regional mechanisms to mitigate the economic fallout.

Crude oil is trading near $100 a barrel on worries about ⁠supplies, which have been heightened by the vow ​from Iran’s new supreme leader to keep the Strait of Hormuz, the route for a fifth of global oil supply, closed.

"The escalating conflict has generated broader economic repercussions beyond the region, ⁠particularly through heightened volatility in global energy markets and disruption of key maritime and supply chain routes," the economic ministers of the 11-member bloc said in a statement after a separate meeting.

Lazaro said the Philippines, which is heavily dependent on imported fuel from ​the Middle East,was considering buying oil from Russia, but she ⁠did not elaborate.

The economic ministers warned that the region’s exposure to global oil and LNG ​supply routes made it especially vulnerable to further shocks, ‌adding that reinforcing supply chain resilience, accelerating renewable ​energy transitions and deepening regional cooperation would be essential to preserving economic stability.

(Reporting by Mikhail Flores, Nestor Corrales and Karen Lema; Editing by John Mair)

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