Cheang Sokha and David Boyle
Phnom Penh Post
Amidst the controversy over the South China Sea
that dominated last week’s ASEAN summit, Cambodia managed to at least
partially deflect negative attention by negotiating the redeployment of
troops from Preah Vihear.
In the most significant development on the disputed territory since the UN’s highest court
ordered Cambodia and Thailand to withdraw troops from a Provisional
Demiliatrised Zone last year, the government announced the mutual
redeployment on Friday.
Both countries are now set to withdraw
troops on July 18, exactly one year after the International Court of
Justice ordered them to do so “immediately”.
Prime Minister Hun
Sen announced on Friday that after meeting with his Thai counterpart,
Yingluck Shinawatra, an in-principle agreement had been struck to
redeploy troops from the 17.3-kilometre PDZ.
“I would like to
stress that this issue [shows] the willingness of both parties to create
a calm atmosphere that will benefit both sides,” he said. “The
redeployment of troop does not mean withdrawing troops from individual
country, but redeployment and replacement by police forces.”
The
Cambodian government explained that redeployment on Saturday, saying it
had agreed to move 485 troops from the PDZ and replace them with 255
police officers and 100 guards.
“This is the first step of
redeployment [of] armed group from the area around Preah Vihear temple,
which are Dragon Stair market, North Ancient Stair, East Ancient Stair
and Keo Sikha Kiri Svarak pagoda,” a government press released stated.
Defence
Minister Tea Banh told reporters outside the meeting in Siem Reap
province that “the troop redeployment can be made without the presence
of the Indonesian observers”, who are supposed to independently monitor
the process.
Yingluck Shinawatra said that no matter how much
trade prospered in the ASEAN, people need to be able to travel safely,
free of conflict.
“So it is important that we and ASEAN grow together and sustain peace,” she said.
In February and April last year, fatal clashes erupted between Cambodian and Thai troops over the temple, displacing thousands.
Thai
foreign affairs spokesman Thani Thongpakdee confirmed yesterday that
his country would also redeploy troops, but could not provide specific
numbers.
“My understanding is the defence minister will be
meeting with the armed forces early this week to work out the details of
the redeployment on the Thai troops,” he said.
Both countries
lay claim to a 4.6-square-kilometre patch of territory surrounding the
11th-century temple, which was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO in 2008.
The agreement comes after a week in which Cambodia, as hosts of the ASEAN Regional Forum,
has come under intense scrutiny for the failure of the 10 member states
to put out a joint communiqué, after finding themselves at loggerheads
over the South China Sea issue.
Cambodia has been accused of
actively obstructing efforts to negotiate the joint communiqué and a
binding Code of Conduct on how to resolve disputes in the oil-rich South
China Sea, benefiting the interests of its allies in Beijing.
Citing an anonymous diplomat, The New York Times reported on Thursday that Cambodian foreign minister Hor Namhong had walked out of last-minute negotiations to sign off on a watered down version of the communiqué.
“China bought the chair, simple as that,” the diplomat told the newspaper.
A
war of words erupted between Cambodia and the Philippines on Friday,
with the latter accusing the current ASEAN chair of obstructing their
efforts to include the Scarborough Shoal islands, which they have a
territorial dispute with China over, in the communiqué.
Cambodia
fired back at the Philippines, with Hor Namhong telling a press
conference on Friday that the joint communiqué had been taken “hostage”
by countries seeking to include a reference to the islands.
“Some
countries still kept insisting on putting in the Scarborough Shoal
issue, which is a bilateral dispute between the Philippines and China,”
he said, adding that as a matter of principle, Cambodia did not
intervene in bilateral disputes between member countries.
Though
the summit failed to yield a joint communiqué for the first time in its
45-year history, key elements of the CoC were negotiated, a more
binding progression of a Declaration of Conduct signed by ASEAN and China in 2002.
An
unofficial outline of the CoC suggests the 10 member countries agreed
that if mediation failed, disputes could be resolved through
international law.
That includes adhering to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, which does not, however, apply to sovereignty claims over Scarborough Shoal.
It also compels signatories to respect and adhere to the Treaty of Amenity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia which establishes an ASEAN High Council to mediate disputes and was ratified by China in 2003.
But
rather than a multilateral approach, China favours bilateral
negotiations with each individual claimant, which in ASEAN includes the
Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei.
Carlyle Thayer, an emeritus professor at the University of New South Wales,
said the Preah Vihear agreement would only partially heal the bad image
Cambodia had attracted from its conduct during the summit.
“The
subtext of that message is: We have a dispute, we settled it ourselves
and we didn’t need outsiders,” he said, but noted the agreement followed
a ruling of an international court.
But Thayer said that for at
least the next six months, the Philippines was unlikely to trust
Cambodia, which had threatened to walk out of meetings last week
practically every time they tried to assert their position on the South
China Sea.
To contact the reporters on this story: Cheang Sokha at sokha.cheang@phnompenhpost.com
David Boyle at david.boyle@phnompenhpost.com
With assistance from Vong Sokheng and Reuters
7 comments:
HunXen - "I wish I can screw her" hahaha
ah HUN SEN ah slap tayhoong ah kbatcheat ah slap ning thlak yonhosh
Thailand and Cambodia should be united against Dai Viet movement before it too late.....
Look@ a smile on his face telling you all that he wishes he can screw her in a love hut where is no running water in a dent forest where he grew up in Ho chi Minh trial .
Look at the smirk from the guy behind Hun... Your break from Bun piggy, boss, he said.
Hunzen can not sees who sit next to him,that was his blindedside,but Hunzen can smell and wants to take Siam pm to the forest where he grew up and screw her there.Look at his smile...mmmmm..gimme some of that things!!!!
Yingluck afraid to look at Hun xen coz HunXen,looks like porno king, look at Hun xen,mmmmm Yingluck you smelling Yummmy....wanna eat u,yummm.
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