10 UN RESOLUTIONS, (1979-1988) VOTED BY 116 UN MEMBER COUNTRIES ,CALL VIETNAM 
TO CEASE HER OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA & REMOVE ALL HER TROOPS FROM THE COUNTRY 
ARE NOT RESPECTED.   
America calls Vietnam to restore Cambodia Independence .President Reagan's 
address to the 43d Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, 
New York . September 26, 1988. "Mr. Secretary-General, there are new hopes for 
Cambodia, a nation whose freedom and independence we seek just as avidly as we 
sought thefreedom and independence of Afghanistan. We urge the rapid removal of 
all Vietnamese troops ...." 
To all Vietnamese invaders and illegal Vietnamese settlers , go home and 
respect the UN charter . BURY

Date: Thu, 11 Sep 2008 20:40:37 -0700From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]: Bangkok is burning.

I surely do not miss those days it was Cambodia that they were talking about.   
It looks like the Thai do not learn anything from Cambodia.  They want the 
taste of Khmer slash and burn politics.

Philip Bowring: Farcical, maybe, but serious too






  
  Text Size



HONG KONG: In Thailand, the prime minister, Samak Sundaravej, is dismissed by a 
court for accepting some tiny expenses for appearing in a TV cooking show he 
had long hosted. In Malaysia, the prime minister has to send 40 members of 
Parliament to learn about agriculture in Taiwan to keep them from defecting to 
the opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, who has vowed to gain a majority by 
Tuesday.
Political farce in two otherwise prospering Southeast Asian states is an 
outward sign of disturbing trends in both countries that have implications for 
regional stability.
In Thailand it has long been assumed that the monarchy is on hand in times of 
crisis to calm things down, using its status to impose some sort of order 
between contending politicians, ambitious generals and other power seekers.
But now the monarchy is increasingly seen as part of the problem rather than 
the source of a solution. Law courts that were once seen as being easily 
influenced by the government of the day now appear to have become a political 
force, responding to the monarchist, anti-democratic forces that are strong 
among the Thai military and senior bureaucracy, and in recent times have 
appeared aligned with the privy council headed by the retired general and 
former prime minister, 88-year-old Prem Tinsulanond. On this occasion they 
declined to restore order and remove a rabble of mostly anti-democratic, 
anti-government demonstrators from official buildings. Then the courts cooked 
up an excuse to remove Samak.
This is all supposed to be in the name of rule of law, but looks more like a 
silent coup. The military coup in 2006 that pushed Prime Minister Thaksin 
Shinawatra into exile solved nothing, leaving popular support for him and his 
allies almost as strong as ever. Removing Samak may provide an excuse for the 
demonstrators to disperse, but it too solves nothing. Moreover, it may well 
have eroded the reputation of the monarchy, which, back in the days of 
strongman rule in the 1950s and 60s, was largely ceremonial. The 80-year-old 
King Bhumipol may be revered, but such respect will not carry through to his 
successor. The monarchy will revert to a ceremonial role with scant ability to 
arbitrate between contending military, populist and other forces.


Today in Opinion


In search of Governor Palin


Killing the messengers in Putin's Russia


Bush's token withdrawal of troops from Iraq

  
Thailand's ultra-nationalist, anti-government forces have already tried to 
foment a crisis with Cambodia over a disputed temple, and the ongoing deadlock 
in Bangkok has meant that the problems in the southern provinces, with their 
Malay-Muslim majorities, have festered, with almost daily reports of killings 
of military and government personnel.
Thaksin's strong-arm policies were a disaster, but there is little chance that 
a centralizing regime influenced by the military and the monarchy would 
tolerate the degree of autonomy needed to solve the problem. Thailand is a 
country where some northern non-Thai hill tribes are still not accorded 
citizenship.
The problems in southern Thailand can all too easily link to the power struggle 
in Malaysia. Although Abdullah Badawi's government is moderate on racial 
issues, simmering tensions can bring to the fore more extreme elements claiming 
to defend Malay dominance and keep the other races  subservient.
Anwar's opposition coalition of Malay-Muslim purists, pluralist Malays and 
secular-minded non-Malays is itself too unstable to offer much solace for those 
hoping for a stable Malaysia where racial equality prevails.
Even Anwar's Sept. 16 deadline is a date with uneasy significance. It was on 
that day in 1963 that the British-administered states in North Borneo, Sarawak 
and Sabah, and Singapore (briefly) joined Malaysia. The two have remained very 
different. Mixing between races and religions is more evident than elsewhere in 
Malaysia and the politics of both states have always been fluid. Their 
parliamentarians are allied to the government, but are viewed as susceptible to 
defection. There is also resentment at what they see as Kuala Lumpur's 
domination, curtailment of rights promised in 1963 and excessive taxation of 
their natural resource-based economies.
There is no hint of separatist movements there, or of a re-launch by Indonesia 
of its claims on the territories. But Sabah lies next to the Philippine islands 
of Mindanao and Sulu and migration from this troubled region has created 
political issues in Sabah that have national reverberations.
This is not to suggest that Southeast Asia as a whole is facing turmoil. 
Indonesia, Vietnam and Cambodia - in their own different ways - have exceeded 
most expectations in combining stability and increasing prosperity. But as the 
two leading middle-sized, middle-income states, Thailand and Malaysia are 
casting a shadow over the region.
ยป Save up to 72% on morning home delivery of the IHT 

 

Terms of Use
 


Back to top
Home  >  
Opinion_________________________________________________________________
Stay up to date on your PC, the Web, and your mobile phone with Windows Live.
http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/msnnkwxp1020093185mrt/direct/01/
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

<<inline: dot_h.gif>>

<<inline: btn_textsize_sm.gif>>

<<inline: btn_textsize_lg.gif>>

<<inline: icon_at_textsize.gif>>

<<inline: dots_at_narrow.gif>>

<<inline: at_narrow_bot.gif>>

<<inline: dot_h.gif>>

<<inline: btn_mapclose.gif>>

<<inline: poweredby.png>>

Reply via email to