http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/thai-resolve-tests-sbys-regional-clout/story-e6frg6so-1226051426421

Thai resolve tests SBY's regional clout 
Peter Alford, Jakarta correspondent 
From: The Australian 
May 07, 2011 12:00AM 

INDONESIA'S claims to regional leadership will be roughly tested at this 
weekend's ASEAN leaders' summit as Thailand continues to resist its attempts to 
mediate a volatile border dispute with Cambodia. 

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is controversially considering backing Burma 
to chair the group, and also losing his campaign to win a place at ASEAN's 
table this year for tiny neighbour East Timor.

Dr Yudhoyono and Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa have been striving to crown 
Indonesia's 2011 ASEAN chairmanship, and to underscore Jakarta's regional 
leadership, by admitting East Timor as the 11th member.

But another foundation member, Singapore, backed by the more recent joiners 
Vietnam and Burma, is reportedly poised to block East Timor.

Mr Natalegawa confirmed yesterday that Burma's new President Thein Sein was 
seeking Indonesia's support for the army-dominated regime government to take 
the ASEAN chair in 2014.

"I have a feeling that this is not a matter that will be decided here and now 
but perhaps there will be a process to ascertain the readiness of Myanmar to 
assume then chairmanship in 2014," he said.
Human Rights Watch's Asia deputy director Elaine Pearson said giving Burma the 
chairmanship after last year's "sham elections" and while the regime still 
imprisoned 2000 political prisoners would render ASEAN a laughing-stock in 
world forums.

Nine leaders gathered in Jakarta last night, without Singapore's Lee Hsien 
Loong, whose government is up for re-election today.

Thailand's Prime Minister, Abhisit Vejjajiva, flew in after obtaining a 
parliamentary dissolution from ailing King Bhumibol Adulyadej, clearing the way 
for an election next month. The election campaign, with nationalist fervour 
focused on the disputed Preah Vhihear temple complex, is likely to complicate 
attempts to settle the border dispute.

Mr Abhisit has refused a sideline meeting today with Cambodia's Hun Sen. The 
International Court of Justice in 1962 ruled the 10th-century temple, on an 
escarpment defining an eastern border, belonged to Cambodia, but the Thais 
continue to claim ownership. About 30 soldiers have died, and 150,000 villagers 
have been displaced, since the dispute erupted in clashes in February.

The fighting is an embarrassment to other ASEAN members, whose 2009 Political 
Security Community Blueprint pledges them to "rely exclusively on peaceful 
process in the settlement of intra-regional differences".

Cambodia's appeal for intervention to the UN Security Council, rather than 
ASEAN, was a slight, and even more so Thailand's reluctance to have Indonesia 
or other members involved.

After the February clashes, Mr Natalegawa brokered agreement with the other 
foreign ministers - including Thailand's Kasit Piromya and Cambodia's Hor 
Namhong - to station Indonesian civilian and military observers in the disputed 
areas, as first step towards a permanent ceasefire.

But Thai army chief Prayut Chan-o-cha and Defence Minister Prawit Wongsuwan, a 
retired general, rejected the presence of foreign observers at Preah Vihear.

They asserted they were only supporting long-standing government policy that 
the dispute should be resolved between the two countries, not multilaterally.

But the Thai military is suspected of once again contemplating an intervention 
in civilian politics.

After meeting his Thai and Cambodian counterparts yesterday, Mr Natalegawa said 
they agreed Indonesian observers should be sent, but did not expand.

Mr Hor Namhong rejected a pullout of Cambodian troops from Preah Vihear, 
Thailand's pre-condition for allowing observers. "We can never withdraw our 
troops from our own territory," he said.


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