_http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2009111029417/National-news/thailand
s-thaksin-arrives-in-cambodia-on-controversial-visit/Print.html_ 
(http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2009111029417/National-news/thailands-thaksin-a
rrives-in-cambodia-on-controversial-visit/Print.html) 
 
Thailand's Thaksin arrives in Cambodia on controversial  visit

 
Tuesday, 10 November 2009 15:03 James O’Toole and Cheang Sokha 


 


Fugitive ex-premier's trip  likely to further deteriorate relations between 
Cambodia and  Thailand.

THAILAND's deposed Prime  Minister Thaksin Shinawatra arrived in Phnom Penh 
Tuesday at the invitation of  Cambodia's government in a move that is 
likely to escalate a diplomatic row that  has already seen the two countries 
recall their ambassadors and plunged  relations to their lowest point in six 
years.

Thaksin, who last week was  appointed both an economic adviser to the 
government and a personal adviser to  Prime Minister Hun Sen – further 
inflaming 
Thai anger – is expected to deliver a  lecture to hundreds of Cambodian 
economics experts on Thursday.

Foreign  Ministry spokesman Koy Kuong told the Post Tuesday he was unsure 
how long  Thaksin would remain in Cambodia.

The ex-premier, who was ousted in a  2006 coup, arrived at the military air 
base adjacent to Phnom Penh International  Airport in a small jet, and was 
briefly greeted by several Cambodian officials  on the tarmac before being 
whisked away in a motorcade.

Thaksin's visit  to Cambodia is the closest he has come to his country 
since living in self-exile  to avoid a prison term for abuse of power charges 
handed down in absentia in  2008. 

In a posting late Monday on his Web site, Thaksin claimed his trip  to 
Cambodia was not an act of provocation.

“As I travel to Cambodia to  discuss poverty and the world economic 
situation, I will try to preserve Thai  interests with our friends in Phnom 
Penh, 
despite the Thai government still  hounding me wherever I go,” he wrote.

“I will not go to Cambodia to help  Cambodia fight with Thailand, but to 
exchange views and experiences on  poverty-solving as well as new regional 
economics.”

Bangkok has vowed to  seek the fugitive billionaire’s extradition, with 
Thai Ministry of Foreign  Affairs deputy spokesman Thani Thongphakdi saying 
Monday that his government was  already in the process of preparing the 
extradition  documentation.

Cambodia, however, has maintained that Thaksin will not be  extradited 
because he was prosecuted for “political reasons,” with Prime  Minister Hun Sen 
comparing the ex-Thai leader to Myanmar opposition figure Aung  San Suu Kyi 
during the 15th ASEAN summit in the Thai resort town of Hua Hin last  month.

Cambodian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Koy Kuong  confirmed 
Tuesday that the government will “absolutely not” extradite  Thaksin.

Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a political analyst at Thailand’s  Chulalongkorn 
University, said Sunday that in the event of Thaksin’s arrival in  Cambodia, 
the government of Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva “will be  forced to 
step up the escalation spiral”.

He added,  however, that both sides must own up to their responsibility for 
the breakdown  in relations.

“Hun Sen has overstepped the line here – diplomatically,  legally, 
politically,” he said.

“At the same time, the Abhisit government  has to own up to its past deeds. 
Appointing [Thai Foreign Minister Kasit  Piromya] has been a liability, and 
now you can see the consequences. Allowing  Sam Rainsy to speak in Thailand 
has added fuel to the fire. Allowing the right  wing radical groups from 
the PAD [People's Alliance for Democracy] to protest at  the [Preah Vihear 
temple] site… has added fuel to the fire.”




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