Sunday, 01 July 2012
By
MCOT
BANGKOK, June 29, 2012 -- Thailand and Cambodia
agreed at the second meeting of their Joint Working Group (JWG) in Phnom
Penh to jointly remove and disarm landmines around Preah Vihear Temple
before deciding about international observers, according to Thai Defence
Minister Sukumpol Suwanatat.
The committee met Wednesday and Thursday to carry out the
Interantional Court of Justice order for provisional measures.
Thailand’s Gen Worapong Sanganetra, Joint Chief of Staff of Royal Thai
Army was the lead Thai delegate while Cambodia’s team was led by Gen
Neang Phat, Secretary of State of the Ministry of National Defense.
Minister Sukumpol said that Thai and Cambodian representatives agreed
to remove the landmines around Preah Vihear, but the meeting did not
discuss observers as the landmines should first be cleared for the
safety of observers.
According to the end of meeting statement, both sides reaffirmed
their commitment to implementing the World Court’s order, to maintain
and promote long-standing peaceful co-existence between the peoples of
the two countries and to prevent harmful activities which may adversely
affect the Provisional Demilitarised Zone (PDZ) determined by the
court’s order for provisional measures.
Thailand and Cambodia also agreed to task the Thailand Mine Action
Centre (TMAC) and the Cambodian Mine Action Centre (CMAC) to plan the
joint-demining to provide safety to the Joint Observers Team (JOT) and
to facilitate the process of redeployment. The meeting will be held in
the third week of July in Bangkok.
The redeployment should take place within 30 days, observed by the
Joint Observers Team (JOT) after the CMAC and TMAC demining is complete
in the required areas starting from the priority points A,B,C,and D of
the demilitarised zone determined by the court, the statement said.
The third meeting of the committee is to be held in Thailand at a mutually agreed date.
Meanwhile, Army Chief Gen Prayuth Chan-ocha praised Cambodia for good
cooperation in working together. He said Thailand and Cambodia are
neighbours and share the border so that they should remain peaceful.
The JWG was established last December to work towards a complete
troop pullout from the provisional zone around the temple to comply with
last July’s court order.
According to the ruling, Thailand and Cambodia must immediately
withdraw their military personnel from the PDZ and allow ASEAN observers
access to monitor the ceasefire.
The Cambodian government in April asked the court to interpret its
1962 verdict on the ownership of Preah Vihear and the disputed
surrounding area.
Cambodia also asked the court for an injunction ordering Thailand to
withdraw its troops from the disputed area around Preah Vihear after
relations between the two countries soured in the wake of Cambodia's bid
to have the temple listed as a World Heritage Site.
The court ruled in 1962 that the historic temple was on Cambodian
soil, but its ruling was not clear about ownership of the surrounding
4.6 square kilometre area. Thai and Cambodian troops have clashed
repeatedly as each side attempted to assert sovereignty over the
disputed adjacent areas.
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