Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Peace elusive as Thai-Cambodia border battles rage

Monday, Apr. 25, 2011
MARTIN PETTY
PHANOM DONG RAK, THAILAND— Reuters

Hopes for peace between Thailand and Cambodia faded on Tuesday after fierce border battles raged for a fourth day, despite growing international calls for dialogue and an immediate ceasefire.

Explosions rang out across the frontier for more than three hours late on Monday as the two sides traded mortar and artillery fire close to two disputed 12th-century Hindu temples, intensifying the bloodiest conflict between the neighbours in nearly two decades.

It ended a full-day break in hostilities and followed the cancellation of a visit to both countries by a top Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) envoy who had brokered a UN-backed ceasefire deal in February after deadly clashes near another temple 150 kilometres away.


Three Thai soldiers were wounded and a small skirmish took place about four hours after shelling subsided, Thai television reported. There were no known Cambodian casualties.

Although on the surface, the conflict appears to be a dispute over sovereignty and territory, many experts are skeptical and believe the fighting is being fuelled by political interests in Bangkok or Phnom Penh, or possibly both.

The two governments have been locked in diplomatic rows for two years and could be seeking to discredit each other and appeal to nationalists at home as Thailand prepares for a general election, expected by July. A change in government could be in Cambodia’s interests.

Thailand reiterated calls for a bilateral solution to halt the bloodshed that has killed at least 12 soldiers on both sides but Thai Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya acknowledged the window for dialogue was shrinking.

“We were hoping it would end in peaceful talks with the safety of civilians the heart,” Mr. Kasit told reporters. “It’s now beyond talks as friendly neighbours. In any case, we have to inform ASEAN countries that Cambodia is the aggressor.”

Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan called for immediate dialogue late on Monday and said the reputation of the grouping was at stake if hostilities continued unabated.

The conflict and rhetoric from both sides has been a setback for ASEAN, a 10-member bloc modelled on the European Union that plans to become a regional community by 2015.

At the centre of the latest dispute are the Ta Moan and Ta Krabey Hindu temples in a heavily mined jungle area claimed by both sides. Thailand says the ancient ruins are in its Surin province, but Cambodia insists they fall in its territory.

Fighting has been heaviest around Ta Moan, a complex that contains three temples nestled in a mountain pass. Both sides are also positioned around Ta Krabey, where fighting first erupted on Friday and reignited late on Monday. Thailand accuses Cambodia of building military bases there.

In Phanom Dong Rak, about 30 km from the fighting, truckloads of evacuees arrived in makeshift camps after troops were deployed to clear villages in the line of fire.

Thailand’s Foreign Ministry said more than 30,000 villagers in two border provinces had been evacuated, while Cambodia said 22,000 people had been moved to safety, accusing Thailand of attacking villages 20 km into its territory.

Analysts also say the Thai military could be flexing its muscles to preserve its sizeable stake in Thailand’s political apparatus and satisfy conservative elites at odds with the country’s powerful opposition forces.

“The army has nothing to lose in a border clash. They show their relevance and show who is wielding the power,” said Karn Yuenyong, head of the Siam Intelligence Unit think-tank.

“The border and sovereignty issues matter to a group of conservative elites and this is one way the Thai army exerts its loyalty.”

Monday’s clashes followed a day of posturing by both sides, each accusing the other of aggressive acts and attempted incursions into disputed territory around the temples.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

B-52 of US army killed al least 500000 ( haft millions khmer life )innocent Cambodian people at that time.

Ask your parents if you don't believe about B-52 bomb Cambodia at that time.

One B-52 airplane can carry 32 000kgs of bomb, drop more than 15 000 tons of conventional bombs on Cambodia from 1965–73.

ASK your parents for more detail about B-52

Anonymous said...

Some Khmer nationalists gone to over to overseas scare to Cambodia. Some are are banned from coming back.

Dictator Hun Sen murdered most of the Khmer nationalists for the last 30 since he has been in power.

Plus in the Pol era Hun Sen and his comrades murdered another two millions.

Basically no strong Khmer nationalists left to defend Cambodia.

A strong mouth Hun Sen and his illegal viets are of no hope to defend Cambodia.

Hun Sen and his cronies are so scared that they turned to Indonesia for help, but it ignores his begging and gave Hun Sen $2.00 to buy a toothbrush to clean his bad breath.

Anonymous said...

Thai F16 speed is 2414 km per hour. From Thai air base to Hun Sen base only take 15 minutes of fly to bomb Hun Sen base.

Thai has 65 of F16 air craft + 12 modern Sewden aircrafts that even better than F16 + 1100 long range self propeller 155mm Howitzer + over 1000 combat tanks + over 400 helicopters + more than 10 millions bomb shells + more......

Hun Sen curruption regime will be soon vanish from Cambodia.

Hun Sen regime is so currupted that is why Cambodia Royal Army has no weapons or shells fight back Thai

It is all about Hun Sen so currupted regime to kill themself