Thursday, April 28, 2011

Fighting intensifies on Thai Cambodian border

April 27, 2011
ABC Radio Australia

The border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia is getting worse.

Fourteen people have died in six days of fighting and there’s no end in sight to the conflict. Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen has called for a truce but has no plans to meet with his Thai counterpart until May. Both sides accuse the other of aggression in the long running dispute.

Reporter: Karon Snowdon
Speaker: Panitan Wattanayagorn, Thai government spokesman; Phay Siphan, Cambodian government spokesman

Click here to listen to the audio program (Windows Media)

SNOWDON: In the latest violence, one civilian and a total of 13 troops from both sides have been killed with 60 soldiers wounded. Thirty thousand villages have been evacuated, according to reports. Defence ministers were to meet on Wednesday but even that is disputed.

Cambodia says the Thai Defence Minister asked for the meeting, Thailand’s government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn says the meeting is desirable but not possible on the day.

WATTANAYAGORN: We accepted the invitation in principle but our Defence Minister is scheduled to go to the People’s Republic of China many weeks ago and he can’t change his schedule and he’s on his way now. We hope that in the near future we can reschedule this meeting with the Defence Minister of Cambodia.

SNOWDON: How urgent is that meeting do you think?

WATTANAYAGORN: The meeting is urgent of course. We would like to meet our Cambodian counterpart as soon as possible.

SNOWDON: The two South East Asian neighbours have been in conflict over the precise position of their border for years. It usually implicates the ancient Prear Vihear temple complex which sits on the border and which the International Court of Justice recognised as within Cambodia in 1962. The latest artillery battles centred around two other temples to the west.
Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen has called for an immediate truce and says he hopes to meet with his Thai counterpart at an ASEAN summit in Jakarta on May the 7th and 8th.

Government spokesman Phay Siphan says Cambodia has been invaded.

SIPHAN: We don’t have any mechanism to talk because this is an invasion by Thai people I mean by Thai soldiers. If Thai soldiers want a ceasefire they shouldn’t invade Cambodia. Because we are inside Cambodia, we have a right to self defence and to protect of our territory.

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