October 15, 2008
Richard Lloyd Parry, Asia Editor
Times Online (UK)

Thai and Cambodian soldiers exchanged rockets and gunfire across their 
border today in a deadly battle over a small and remote plot of jungle 
adjoining an ancient Hindu temple.

At least two Cambodian soldiers were reported to have been killed and 
five Thais and two Cambodians were injured in the afternoon battle at 
the mountain-top Preah Vihear temple, a 1,100-year old World Heritage 
Site and tourist attraction.

Thailand’s foreign minister urged his countrymen to flee Cambodia for 
fear of reprisals after an incident which will further enrage 
nationalists in both countries and makes a diplomatic solution to the 
border dispute more difficult than ever.

Each side accused the other of opening fire first, and gave a different 
account of the duration of the battle, which began in the middle of the 
afternoon. Journalists on the Cambodian side of the border reported 
seeing rocket-propelled grenades fired by the Thais. At least ten Thai 
soldiers stationed in a pagoda surrendered to the Cambodians.

“We are not the ones who ignited the violence,” the Thai prime minister 
Somchai Wongsawat said in the Thai capital, Bangkok. “The situation has 
returned to normal now . . . It is not serious and I am convinced there 
will be resolution.”

But there was no immediate sign of dialogue between the two sides. In 
Phnom Penh, the Cambodian prime minister, Hun Sen, held an emergency 
meeting with ministers and generals, the day after threatening a 
“life-and-death battle” if Thailand did not pull its forces back.

Earlier in the day, Thailand had put jet fighters on alert, and prepared 
for a potential evacuation of civilians from border areas by placing 
Hercules transporter planes on standby at an air force base in Bangkok.

The foreign minister, Sompong Amornvivat, urged Thais in Cambodia to 
return home immediately. “Thai businessmen who have no need to be in 
Cambodia now, please rush back to Thailand,” he said. We have our 
evacuation plan ready.”

The territorial dispute which led to today’s battle dates back fifty 
years, but it is only since the summer that it has developed into a 
political and military crisis. Perched on the top of a 1,600 foot cliff, 
Preah Vihear can be reached far more easily from Thailand than from 
Cambodia. But the territory was awarded to Cambodia in 1962 by the 
International Court of Justice after lengthy legal arguments about maps 
of produced during Cambodia’s French colonial period.

However, one adjacent packet of jungly land - 1.8 square miles in area - 
was never clearly allocated, and it is over this that the two countries 
fought.

The temple’s inaccessible position made it a natural fortress for 
successive armies which battled over Cambodia – it was the last hold-out 
of the forces of the Lon Nol regime, driven out by the genocidal Khmer 
Rouge in 1975. Even after their own defeat, Khmer Rouge forces occupied 
the temple until 1998, sowing the land around it with landmines.

Thai locals and tourists were allowed to visit the temple freely from 
Thailand without a visa, and the dispute was largely forgotten until 
July this month when the United Nations cultural organisation, Unesco, 
granted an application for Preah Vihear to be designate a World Heritage 
site.

When it turned out that the Thai government had supported the 
application, nationalists in Bangkok accused ministers of yielding 
sovereign territory in return for business concessions. Thailand’s 
constitutional court ruled that endorsing the Unesco application was 
illegal, and the former foreign minister resigned.

Since then, the Thai government has been under relentless pressure from 
nationalist demonstrators who want to force it from power. They have 
occupied the prime minister’s office and fought violent battles with the 
police.

To take a step back in the confrontation with its smaller neighbour, 
Cambodia, would invite further denunciation of the government, making it 
very difficult for Mr Somchai to be seen to compromise. But, apart from 
saving face, both countries could lose much in any extended military 
confrontation.

Cambodia is outgunned by Thailand, which has 300,000 troops equipped by 
the United States. The Royal Cambodian Armed Forces are barely a third 
as big and poorly equipped, but many of its men are experienced former 
fighters of the Khmer Rouge who could quickly bog the Thais down in a 
guerrilla war.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
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
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to