Malaysia 'wont criticise China over South China Sea dispute during Asean summit'
Draft statement shows Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak to avoid criticising China or taking sides on territories at Kuala Lumpur meeting

Malaysia is steering clear of criticising China's actions in the South China Sea at a meeting of Southeast Asian leaders next week, a draft statement shows, despite a push by the Philippines to denounce Beijing's reclamation work.
Philippines President Benigno Aquino has called on leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) to issue a collective statement condemning China's reclamation in the disputed waters at the end of their Kuala Lumpur meeting. The summit starts on Sunday.
China says Asean is not a party to the South China Sea dispute.
A draft copy of the concluding statement by Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak devotes two paragraphs to tensions in the energy-rich waters, but stops short of taking sides in the matter, a source said.
However, Malaysia's foreign minister has called for China to cooperate in speeding up talks on a set of rules in the disputed sea.
Anifah Aman, whose country hosts a regional summit next week, also cautioned rival claimants to the strategic seaway against taking actions that stoke tensions, according to an interview published Thursday in The Star newspaper.