Anti-government protests in Bangkok have caused the Thai military to postpone 
talks to discuss withdrawing troops from a disputed border area near an ancient 
temple, a Cambodian general said Thursday.
Twenty soldiers from Cambodia and Thailand remain stationed at a small pagoda 
on a patch of disputed land near Cambodia's Preah Vihear temple, while 40 from 
both sides remain nearby.
Up to 1,000 Cambodian and Thai troops pulled back from the area in mid-August, 
suggesting that an end to the sometimes tense six-week military stand-off could 
be near.
But Cambodian and Thai military officials scheduled to meet Friday to discuss a 
further pullback of troops postponed their talks at the request of Thai 
officials, Cambodian General Neang Phat, a secretary of state at the defence 
ministry, told AFP Thursday.
The request was made Wednesday afternoon, just hours after a 30-member Thai 
delegation arrived in Siem Reap to prepare for the talks, he said.
"They requested the meeting be postponed and they returned to Thailand," 
General Neang Phat said.
"They did not give any reasons. But we can know that it is because of their 
internal problems," he added.
A Thai foreign ministry official later confirmed the postponement but said both 
sides forced the delay.
"The meeting was postponed because both sides are not yet ready due to their 
internal processes," he said.
"A new meeting date will be rescheduled as soon as possible and the meeting 
will still be held in Cambodia as agreed," he said.
Thousands of Thai protesters seized a television station and occupied the the 
main government compound in Bangkok this week in an attempt to force the 
resignation of Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej.
Cambodian General Neang Phat said it was not clear when Thai and Cambodian 
military officials would resume the meeting to discuss troop withdrawals.
After talks last week between Thai Foreign Minister Tej Bunnag and his 
Cambodian counterpart Hor Namhong, the two sides said a border committee would 
meet in October to step up efforts to draw the boundary around the temple.
Cambodia had asked the UN Security Council to consider the standoff that 
erupted in July, but Hor Namhong said that request would likely be withdrawn.
Relations between the neighbours flared up last month after Preah Vihear was 
awarded world heritage status by the UN cultural body UNESCO, angering 
nationalists in Thailand who still claim ownership of the ancient Khmer temple..
On July 15, Cambodia arrested three Thai protesters for illegally crossing the 
border to try to reach the temple, sparking the deployment of troops from both 
sides on the tiny patch of disputed land near Preah Vihear.
The International Court of Justice ruled in 1962 that the Preah Vihear temple 
belongs to Cambodia, but surrounding land remains in dispute. 


      
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