Wednesday, July 23, 2008

"The real soldiers wear flip-flops ... The men with boots can run away. The men with flip-flops stand and fight.": Khmer Captain Thor Bun Hong

A Rumble in the Jungle?

Tuesday, Jul. 22, 2008
By Kevin Doyle
Time Magazine (USA)


There's a lot of talk about mortality in the Hindu temple at Preah Vihear right now. "I won't leave the temple," vows Hang Soth, the Cambodian government official responsible for maintaining the World Heritage site. He has been holed up in his office for more than a month. "This is a life-and-death place for me. If I die here, I die with honor." The reason for Hang Soth's dark mood is evident everywhere you look around the 11th century temple complex. A Cambodian-army heavy machine gun stands near the entrance; three times in the past week, it has been prepared for firing and then stood down. All around the complex, an estimated 3,000 Cambodian and Thai troops face one another in a hair-trigger standoff that began on June 15, when Thai troops entered a contested border area. Cambodia claims the crucial piece land that provides access to the temple site; Thailand disagrees. And diplomatic efforts to resolve the situation have yet to bear fruit.

The Thai military acted after Cambodia succeeded in getting Preah Vihear listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site despite Thailand's insistence that the Khmer temple be jointly managed by both countries. Over the years, the area around Preah Vihear has come under the sway of both nations as well as of Cambodia's former colonial overlord, France. But in 1962, in a decision that still rankles the Thais, the International Court of Justice ruled that the temple belongs to Cambodia. Still, that judgment did not quite settle the issue of who owns the 1.8 sq. mi. of land surrounding the site. It is on this land that Thai troops have moved in and bunkered down near the pagoda. Although Thailand does not officially dispute Cambodia's ownership of the temple itself, it has now taken charge of the land used to access Preah Vihear.

Talks on July 21 between Cambodia's Minister of Defense, Tea Banh, and Thailand's Supreme Commander General, Boonsrang Niumpradit, failed to resolve the standoff. That was no surprise to the Cambodian officials gathered at Preah Vihear to organize what they characterize as a to-the-death defense of Cambodia's most sacred national symbol after Angkor Wat. (Cambodian nationalism has been inflamed by political rhetoric ahead of this month's general election.)

More than 200 Cambodian women and children are camped under sheets of plastic at a wooden pavilion inside the temple complex, having been forced to move from the ramshackle market area at the locked entrance gates to the temple from the Thai side. Coils of razor wire now bar those gates, through which hundreds of visitors usually pass daily to climb to the top of Preah Vihear and take in its stunning mountaintop view over the plains of northern Cambodia. "I am very afraid," says 8-year-old Ol Srey Mao as she hides behind her grandmother's sarong. At least she has an escape route planned. "If the Thai troops come, I will run up there," she says, pointing to the temple's ornately sculpted stone entrance.

In the air-conditioned halls of power in Bangkok, few are expecting war at Preah Vihear. On the Thai side, the dispute has been turned into an issue by an opposition alliance that is berating the government for initially failing to challenge Cambodia's bid for World Heritage status for the site. Hundreds of Thais have gathered on the border to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej and to vow to protect the land that they believe belongs to Thailand. But cooler heads may prevail. Thailand has written to the United Nations emphasizing that the "prime ministers of Thailand and Cambodia have already pledged utmost restraint and expressed their conviction in resolving the issue."

But such reassuring words mean little to the terrified Cambodians at Preah Vihear. "If bombs are dropped in the temple, there is nothing we can do," says Van Kim Yan, a 57-year-old grandmother. The Cambodian government says its troops are under orders to fire only if fired upon. At first glance, its soldiers don't look too impressive, though. Most are wearing flip-flops and mismatched uniforms and each is armed with little more than a rusty AK-47 rifle or a rocket launcher whose shoulder strap is an old rope. Over the past week, they have ridden on motorbikes or walked up the steep 3-mi. mountain road to the temple. Don't be fooled, says Captain Thor Bun Hong: some of these men are actually fearsome former Khmer Rouge guerrillas who once controlled this entire area. "The real soldiers wear flip-flops," he boasts. "The men with boots can run away. The men with flip-flops stand and fight."

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Khmer defenders of the motherland are Greattttttttttttt. Cambodia take Thailand to court for the frontier line, just do it the way King Father did in 1959. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

The Khmer empire built the temple all over the place, the Khmers were Hindu and the Temple was Hindu, whereas the Thais were not Hindu, then Bhuddist. The Thais were migrated from Black river at north Vietnam, and Vietnamese were from Red river. The Thais were never be Hindu or Buddhists, they did after they stole all from Khmers. Changing history does not help when the whole world are educated and they already knew.
These Thais are greedy and dishonest people, they have no shame.

Anonymous said...

don't worry buddy eight of my friends head back to our homeland.they gonna show what american marines is all about.yo thai get your sorry ass back home before your end up in body bag.
"haknaman"

Anonymous said...

The Khmer empire built the temple all over the place, the Khmers were Hindu then Buddhists,and the Temple was Hindu, whereas the Thais were not Hindu nor Bhuddist.

The Thais were migrated from Black river at north Vietnam, and Vietnamese were from Red river.

The Thais were never be Hindu or Buddhists, they did after they stole all from Khmers. Changing history does not help when the whole world are educated and they already knew.

These Thais are greedy and dishonest people, they have no shame. That land 4.6km is part of the preah Vihear, belongs to Khmers.

God Damn Thais.

Anonymous said...

mr. Thor Bun Hong
you are free to fool yourself and all of the khmer soldiers and citizens anyway you like.

if you ain't ashamed of what you said, who will?

Anonymous said...

Yes, ah siam above or a fake siam whatever, Khmer daeng fry human liver. Some will be packed and sent to your whores in bankok to eat.

these Kher roge mean it. Don't underestimate them. They have put their skill to use for 13 years. Our ancestors spirits guarding the temple will amke sure that you fall sick on top on the Khmer rouge's frying pan.

Khmer surin

Anonymous said...

12:46, we don't care about the Thai. We are talking about Khmer that are living all over Thailand, Lao, and Burma. How come everything belong to you and not them? Who made you boss of the Khmer Empire?

Anonymous said...

1:59PM,

If you want to know whether Mr.Thor Bun Hong fool you or not , you should try.

You will feel amazed when you see your thief Siam soldiers run for life.

Hahahhaahhaaahh....

From
Khmer Soldiers