Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats

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Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats
Formation10 December 1993 (1993-12-10)
TypeRegional organization
Legal statusActive
PurposeLiberalism
HeadquartersTaipei, Taiwan
Region served
Asia
Websitecald.org

The Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats (CALD) is a regional organization of liberal democratic political parties in Asia.

History and details

The council was created on 10 December 1993, in a meeting in Taipei, Taiwan.[1] There are nine member parties, an associate member, and one party with observer status. Currently, many democrats in Asia have a relationship with CALD. CALD has also opened its membership to like-minded individuals, and regularly engages with non-member political parties from Japan and South Korea with which it shares the same democratic values. The Democratic Party of Japan is one of the examples.

For the convenience of particular members, they also accept individual members, like the situation in Hong Kong. The Democratic Party of Hong Kong is represented in CALD by Martin Lee and Sin Chung Kai. The third individual member of the CALD was Indonesia's ex-President Abdurrahman Wahid (1940–2009). Aung San Suu Kyi and Corazon Aquino (19332009) are honorary members of CALD.

The CALD has been sanctioned by the People's Republic of China as a "diehard "Taiwan independence" separatist" organization for promoting Taiwanese independence.[2][3] The council has called the sanctions unfortunate and said they would not undermine the advocacy work it is engaged in.[4]

Full members

Country Name Government Political wing
CambodiaCambodia National Rescue Movementin exileCentre
IndonesiaIndonesian Democratic Party of Struggleconfidence and supply[5]Centre-left
IndonesiaNational Awakening Party[6]junior party in government coalitionCentre[7]
MalaysiaMalaysian People's Movement Partyextraparliamentary oppositionCentre
MongoliaCivil Will-Green Partyjunior party in government coalitionCentre
PhilippinesLiberal Partyin oppositionCentre to centre-left
SingaporeSingapore Democratic Partyextraparliamentary oppositionCentre to centre-left
TaiwanDemocratic Progressive Partyin governmentCentre to centre-left
ThailandDemocrat Partyin oppositionCentre to centre-right

Observer parties

Country Name Government Political wing
MyanmarNational League for Democracyunder military juntaCentre[8]
JapanConstitutional Democratic Party of Japan[9]in oppositionCentre to centre-left

References