-----Original Message-----
From: PrettyMa <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, Jan 14, 2010 8:21 pm
Subject: [SAMRAINSYPARTY-For] Govt rejects Paris group's border claims



Thursday, January 14, 2010

Govt rejects Paris group’s border claims 




Sean Pengse, CBC President


Wednesday, 13 January 2010
Meas Sokchea
The Phnom Penh Post


THE Council of Ministers on Tuesday moved to rebuke claims that markers on the 
Cambodia-Vietnam border were planted illegally.

The statement comes amid fresh debate two weeks before opposition leader Sam 
Rainsy is to face criminal charges for moving posts at the border.

In an interview with Voice of America last week, outspoken border activist Sean 
Pengse said the controversial border markers were planted illegally, because a 
1985 treaty used as a basis for the border delineation was cancelled.

The government failed to consult with landowners who lost parts of their land 
to the divisive border, the Paris-based president of Cambodia’s Border 
Committee (CBC) claimed.

“It is illegal under national and international law. Only absolutely communist 
countries do things like this,” Sean Pengse told VOA Khmer, and also slammed 
the National Assembly, calling its lifting of opposition leader Sam Rainsy’s 
parliamentary immunity “undemocratic”.

The Council of Ministers, however, dismissed Sean Pengse’s concerns in a 
statement Tuesday.

“It is not true that the border markers were planted illegally because 
landowners were not informed. Border land is not recognised as privately owned 
land,” the statement read.

Land titles in the area were never issued, the statement continued, because the 
precise border was never clear.

A Sam Rainsy Party spokesman, however, rejected criticisms of Sean Pengse, 
calling the former minister of mines under the Lon Nol government a “border 
expert” who had the Kingdom’s best interests in mind.

“Sean Pengse has no political interests. He does not want to be a government 
minister,” SRP spokesman Yim Sovann said.

The public spat comes ahead of a January 27 court date in which SRP leader Sam 
Rainsy and five Svay Rieng province villagers have been called to face charges 
relating to the uprooting of border markers in October.


 
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