Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Google says it will look into complaint from Cambodia that border map with Thailand is wrong

2/9/2010

(AP) — PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - Google Inc. says it will look into a complaint from Cambodia that a map of a disputed border with Thailand is wrong, though it stopped short of saying it would change the document.

The company is responding to a complaint last week from Cambodia about the Google Earth map that it called "devoid of truth and reality, professionally irresponsible, if not pretentious." Cambodia is calling on Google to replace the map with one that is internationally recognized.

The border area near the 11th century Preah Vihear temple just across the border in Cambodia has been the focus of a long-running dispute between Cambodia and Thailand. The World Court awarded the temple to Cambodia in 1962, but sovereignty over the surrounding land has never been clearly resolved.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good move.

Anonymous said...

This arrogant google bastard!

Anonymous said...

How about Prasat Ta Moan Thom?

Anonymous said...

And how, if it opposed by Thailand over the surrounding area?

Anonymous said...

Google is so irresponsible and it is promoting conflict around the world without knowing it!

Why Google changes Cambodian international map? Is it is because Thailand tell Google to change?

vichet said...

"The World Court awarded the temple to Cambodia in 1962, but sovereignty over the surrounding land has never been clearly resolved."
AP never read the ICJ verdict.

Anonymous said...

this google map was there forever, and recently Cambodia just found out??? someone in the government is not doing their job...

Anonymous said...

I live few miles from Google head quarter...

Anonymous said...

Google, please do the right thing.

You know how the pain feels like when the Chinese government inflicted it on you a couple weeks ago. It was not fun, was it? So don't inflict the unnecessary pain on us.

Anonymous said...

No "Overlapping" or "Disputed" 4.6 km2 Area...It's all within Cambodia!
ไม่มีพื้นที่ 'ทับซ้อน' หรือ 'โต้แย้ง' ๔.๖ ก.ม.๒...เป็นดินแดนในกัมพูชาตลอดมา!

The delineation of boundary between Cambodia and Thailand by the mixed French-Siamese commission was not a mere coincidence. It was done on the agreement that the French position in Indochina gave up Chanthaburi and Trat provinces; and Siam returned Siem Reap, Kampong Thom, and Battambang provinces, which it had conquered and occupied for over two centuries back to Cambodia. It's a misconception for Thais to think that the Franco-Siamese treaty of 1904-07 was an unfair treaty while France was a super power at the time. King Sisowath considered the treaty a major accomplishment during his reign by regaining Cambodia's most important historial land back. On the other hand, King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) of Siam believed it was to the best interests of Siam for gaining Chanthaburi and Trat provinces from the French possession and safeguarding their major core country from being a colony of the west. Chanthaburi and Trat provinces proved to be a great bargain for Thailand today with a vast area of the Gulf of Thailand, islands, and large oil and gas deposits beneath the sea floor. This land trade off also gave Bangkok a more proportional distance away from Cambodia, roughly 120 miles from the border. The Franco-Siamese treaty of 1904-07 showed Annex I map with a clear and finite boundary line between Thailand and Cambodia. There were no so-called "overlapping" or "disputed" 4.6 km2 between the two kingdoms. The Annex I map was subsequently being used by the Royal Government of Cambodia under the leadership of then King-Father Norodom Sihanouk in the World Court case regarding Preah Vihear in 1962, in which the court ruled by a vote of 9 to 3 that Preah Vihear Temple and the adjacent areas was in the territory of Cambodia.

---Khmer Surin
---ชาวแขมร์จังหวัดสุรินทร์