Thursday, August 10, 2006

Thai and Cambodian premiers will jointly survey borders [even though none of the two are border experts!]

The Nation (Thailand)
Thu, August 10, 2006


The Thai and Cambodian prime ministers will board a helicopter on the weekend to jointly survey borders that have not been demarcated, caretaker Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said Thursday.

The helicopter will take off at Preah Vihear Temple in Si Sa Ket province on Sunday.

He was speaking during a oneday trip to Cambodia during which he met his Cambodian counterpart, Hun Sen.

Unsettled borders, both at land and sea, between both countries were high on Thaksin's agenda.

The two countries have been negotiating land border disputes for several years. Demarcation work has been marred by landmines planted along the border during Cambodia's civil wars.

But they have settled the sea border as they have agreed to establish a joint development area.

Describing Cambodia as being more open on talking about land demarcation, Thaksin said any buildings or construction that were situated less than one kilometre from the border line should be removed during the demarcation.

Thaksin said officials of both sides will try to hammer out an agreement on sharing offshore oil reserves along the border.

"Even if we cannot agree this time, I think we will be closer to an agreement," Thaksin told reporters.

Both countries ministers signed a Bt1.3 billion loan deal with Thailand's Exim Bank to finance the upgrading of a highway in northwest Cambodia running from Siem Reap through Anlong Veng to the Thai border.

Siem Reap is the gateway to the famed Angkor Wat temple complex, Cambodia's biggest tourist attraction. The government is hoping to lure tourists to Anlong Veng, the final holdout of the former Khmer Rouge regime.

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