_http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/mpapps/pagetools/print/news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-p
acific/8354489.stm?ad=1_ 
(http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/mpapps/pagetools/print/news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8354489.stm?ad=1)
 
 
 
 
Thailand-Cambodia dispute: Key  points 
 
A diplomatic row has broken out between Thailand and Cambodia over former  
Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's new job as an adviser to the 
government  in Phnom Penh.  
This dispute is only the latest of a series of spats between the two  
countries. The BBC looks at the main issues dividing them.  
THAKSIN'S NEW ROLE  
Cambodia has angered the Thai government by refusing to extradite Thaksin  
Shinawatra, who is in Cambodia after accepting a role as an economic adviser 
to  the government there.  
Cambodia said it rejected the extradition request because it viewed the  
charges against Mr Thaksin as being politically motivated.  
Mr Thaksin was Thailand's prime minister for more than five years, but was  
ousted in a military coup in September 2006, accused of corruption and 
abuse of  power.  
He has been sentenced to two years in jail in absentia by a Thai court over 
a  conflict of interest case.  

 
Thailand has withdrawn its ambassador from Phnom Penh in protest at  
Cambodia's protection of Mr Thaksin.  
The timing of the spat is particularly embarrassing for Thailand, as it 
comes  just before Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva is to chair a meeting 
between  regional leaders and US President Barack Obama, on the sidelines of 
the  Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit in Singapore.  
Some analysts say the Cambodian government of Prime Minister Hun Sen - a  
close friend of Mr Thaksin and his golf partner - would prefer to have Mr  
Thaksin back in power in Thailand and is trying to undermine the current Thai  
administration.  
PREAH VIHEAR TEMPLE  
The Preah Vihear temple has been at the centre of a border dispute between  
Thailand and Cambodia for more than a century.  
The temple was built mainly in the 11th and 12th centuries, when the Khmer  
empire was at its height. Its construction was ordered by the kings who  
commissioned Cambodia's most famous temple at Angkor.  
Maps drawn by Cambodia's French colonial rulers and Thailand (or Siam as it 
 was then known) showed the temple as belonging to Cambodia, but in later 
decades  Thailand said the maps were not official and were therefore invalid. 
 
In 1962 the International Court of Justice granted the temple to Cambodia,  
but Thailand claimed much of the surrounding land, leaving Cambodia's only  
access to the temple up a steep hillside.  

 
But the territorial row with Thailand lingered on, and in 2001 Thai troops  
blocked access for more than a year in a dispute about polluted water at 
the  site.  
Tensions increased in July 2008, after Cambodia's successful bid to have 
the  temple listed as a World Heritage site.  
In April this year, troops from both sides exchanged fire across the 
disputed  border. Thai authorities said at least two Thai soldiers died and 
seven 
were  wounded.  
MARITIME OIL AND GAS  
After Cambodia appointed Mr Thaksin as an economic adviser last week, the  
Thai cabinet decided to cancel a memorandum of understanding on joint oil 
and  gas exploration in the Gulf of Thailand. 
 
Both countries claim overlapping areas in the gulf, which are believed to 
be  rich in gas and oil.  
Thailand issued petroleum concessions in the area in the 1970s, although no 
 work was carried out because of the disputed claims. Cambodia in turn 
awarded  exploration deals in 1997 subject to the settling of the dispute.  
Cambodia claims Thailand cannot now unilaterally revoke the memorandum of  
understanding, saying it is against international law.  
OTHER ISSUES  
Simmering resentment between Cambodia and Thailand goes back centuries - to 
 well before the modern countries existed - when rival Siamese and Khmer 
kingdoms  fought each other for territory and power.  
European colonial expansion forced a sometimes arbitrary definition of  
borders, which in some areas continue to be disputed.  
While bilateral trade has flourished with massive Thai investment in  
Cambodia, the relationship has remained uneasy.  
Cambodian disenchantment with Thailand flared into violence in 2003 when a  
Thai actress - popular both at home and in Cambodia - allegedly said that 
the  900-year-old temple complex at Angkor belonged to Thailand and should be 
 returned.  
Suvanant Kongying denied making the remarks, but the Thai embassy in Phnom  
Penh was badly damaged by rioters.  
One person was killed and several injured in the riots and many Thai  
businesses were also destroyed.  
Cambodians see Angkor Wat as a vital part of their identity but over the  
centuries there have been times when the temple complex has been occupied by  
Thai forces. 
Story from BBC  NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/8354489.stm

Published:  2009/11/11 17:23:34 GMT

© BBC MMIX


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