From Monsters and Critics.com
Asia-Pacific  News
Cambodia says it will not  extradite Thaksin to Thailand 
By DPA
Oct 23, 2009,  9:48 GMT

Phnom Penh - Cambodia ratcheted up the war of words  over Thailand's former 
prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra with an  announcement Friday that it 
would not permit Thaksin's extradition in the  event he comes to Cambodia.  
The Council of Ministers said in a statement that  Cambodia would not 
extradite Thaksin even if the Thai government requested  it.  
It said Cambodia would invoke Article 3 of the 1991  extradition agreement 
between the two nations, explaining that the article  permits one side to 
refuse an extradition request if it deems the offence  on which the request is 
based to be politically motivated.  
'Allowing H.E. Thaksin to stay in Cambodia is  reflecting the virtuous 
behaviour of Prime Minister Hun Sen, [who is]  Thaksin's long-time friend,' it 
said, adding that this 'virtuous attitude'  was not a matter of interfering 
in Thailand's internal politics.  
Government spokesman Phay Siphan told the German  Press Agency dpa that 
Thaksin was welcome to come to Cambodia, but said he  did not know whether he 
would in fact visit.  
'We stipulate that Cambodia has a right to offer  Thaksin to visit 
Cambodia, and we have no obligation to send him back to  Thailand,' he said on 
Friday.  
Phay Siphan would not be drawn on whether the  statement means Cambodia 
believes the case against Thaksin was politically  motivated, despite the clear 
implication to that effect in the statement.   
'Politically motivated or not politically motivated -  that's another 
issue,' he said.  
The words mark the latest round in an ongoing verbal  joust between 
Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen and his Thai counterpart  Abhisit Vejjajiva. 
Thailand was incensed earlier this week when Hun Sen  reportedly offered a home 
in Cambodia to Thaksin, who is living in  self-imposed exile to avoid a 
two-year jail term at home for abuse of  power.  
Late on Thursday Cambodia said Hun Sen had been  misquoted by the media, 
but by that time Thailand's Deputy Prime Minister  Suthep Thaugsuban had 
warned that Thaksin risked being extradited back to  Thailand if he took up Hun 
Sen's offer.  
The spat erupted in the run-up to the Association of  South-East Asian 
Nations (ASEAN) summit in Thailand, which began Friday.  Both Cambodia and 
Thailand are members of the ten-nation regional body.   
Hun Sen missed the opening ceremony as he had been  hosting South Korean 
President Lee Myung-bak on his official visit to  Cambodia. However, Phay 
Siphan said Hun Sen had left for the summit and  would attend.  
About 18,000 soldiers and police have been deployed  to protect the 16 
leaders attending from protestors loyal to the populist  Thaksin. A summit in 
April had to be cancelled when pro-Thaksin  demonstrators broke into the 
venue.  
Thaksin, overthrown in a bloodless military coup in  September 2006, is 
loathed by much of the Thai elite and middle class, but  his populist economic 
policies have given him a big following among the  poor. His critics have 
accused him of seeking to become an authoritarian  leader, a label often also 
applied to Hun Sen.  
Hun Sen praised Thaksin, a former telecommunications  tycoon, as a 'great 
friend' and a victim of unfair politics in comments at  a meeting with 
veteran Thai politician and former prime minister Chavalit  Yongchaiyuth, a 
senior 
member of Thaksin's Puea Thai Party.  
 

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