A Change of Guard

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Thursday 11 February 2010

Bilateral approach may not work for border dispute: PM

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Photo by: Heng Chivoan
A soldier guards the area near Preah Vihear temple Saturday morning. As he concluded his visit to the border, Prime Minister Hun Sen questioned whether issues with Thailand could be resolved bilaterally.

CAMBODIA may be forced to take its ongoing border dispute with Thailand to an international forum if a solution is not brokered soon, Prime Minister Hun Sen said Tuesday, calling Thailand’s occupation of territory adjacent to Preah Vihear temple unacceptable.

“If it is necessary, Cambodia will raise these issues to the UN security council and at the International Court of Justice,” Hun Sen said.

The countries have been addressing the issue bilaterally under the auspices of the Joint Border Commission (JBC), though Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Koy Kuong said Wednesday that this mechanism may prove inadequate to solve the problems near Preah Vihear and elsewhere.

“Yesterday, Samdech Hun Sen showed clearly that Cambodia can choose a third-party approach,” Koy Kuong said. “The bilateral approach we still apply, but if it doesn’t work, we can choose another approach.”

Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs deputy spokesman Thani Thongphakdi said Thailand believes that disputes over the countries’ shared border are “a bilateral issue that should be solved bilaterally”.

“If the Cambodian government wishes to bring this issue to the world court or the United Nations security council, we’ll have to look at the details of what that may be,” he said.

Koy Kuong noted with frustration that the bilateral JBC negotiations have been stalled for months because the Thai parliament has yet to approve the latest round of negotiations, and he said that Bangkok has “no real willingness to solve the problem”.

“We can wait, but our patience is limited,” he said.

On Wednesday, Hun Sen ended his five-day border trip by inaugurating a new building of the Cambodian Red Cross in Preah Vihear province before returning to Phnom Penh.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bilateral talks are too late, let the war begin. Why? 'cause it shouldn't take more than 24 months to negotiate the issue. Every times bilateral come up soldiers begin turning their barrel toward each other.
I bet my life, I don't see peace between the two countries, until the war is over. It is not avoidable they way I see, and I take the "UNDER DOG"

Anonymous said...

More than one and a half year already, the bilateral talks produced no results. This time Mr. Hun Sen should be true to his words and take the border problems with Thailand to the UN and world court.

Only third party can help Cambodia to get a satisfactory result and force Thailand to abide by international laws. Siamese kings signed treaty with Cambodia in 1907, so the new Thai generations must respect the previous kings and international laws by abiding with the agreements that their kings signed with Cambodia at that time.