Showing posts with label Boycott of Thai products. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boycott of Thai products. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Appeal to Boycott Thai Trade Exhibition in Koh Pich

Appeal from Khmer Borann

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

I will tell my children, my wife my relatives not to visit Thai Trade Exhibition in Koh Pich. There is reason for the boycott. Thailand invaded Cambodia and wants to steal Khmer Preah Vihear Temple, so why we have to appriciate the Thai goods? Hun Sen said that trade is trade and nothing relates with the border conflict. But as a Khmer I think we should do something to protest the Thai aggression of Cambodia because trade and politics links together. If the Thai sell goods to Cambodia it means they can use the money to buy guns and artillery to kill Khmer solders and Khmer civilians and to destroy Prasat Preah Vihear.

If you love Cambodia, if you love Khmer and Prasat Preah Vihear, please do not go to see Thai Trade Exhibition which will take place in Feb. 17, 2011. Insted on that day you should go to do shoping at Khmer supermarkets or eating in Khmer restaurants in Phnom Penh. Going to see Thai Trade Exhibition means to help Thailand to invade Cambodia and steal Khmer Prasat Preah Vihear!

From Khmer Borann
Phnom Penh

Monday, November 09, 2009

Hun Sen threatens to boycott Thai goods

November 9, 2009
The Nation

Cambodia Prime Minister Hun Sen Sunday suggested that Thailand should not close the border between the two countries, warning that Cambodia will ban all Thai products from entering Cambodia if the border is closed.

Kyodo News quoted Hun Sen as saying that Thailand exported $2 billion worth of products to Cambodia in 2008, while Cambodian exports to Thailand totaled $90 million.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Cambodia says Thai expatriates safe during elections

Jul 25, 2008
DPA

Phnom Penh - Cambodia imposed extra security and will make it a priority to ensure all Thai expatriates and their businesses are safe during weekend elections, government spokesman Khieu Kanharith said Friday.

Tensions are high between the two neighbours after the border temple of Preah Vihear was listed as Cambodia's second World Heritage site earlier this month.

Thailand mobilized troops on the border into what it claims is disputed territory and Cambodia claims is sovereign soil shortly thereafter. Cambodia responded in a military standoff that has dominated the news on both sides and stirred up nationalistic fervour.

'This is a political problem, so civilians should not be involved or suffer,' Kanharith said by telephone. 'We have security in place and Thailand has also advised its citizens through the embassy.'

Kanharith also urged Cambodians not to join a boycott of Thai-made products, saying it was counter-productive.

The boycott campaign has been spread by text messaging and anonymous advertisements in leading Khmer-language newspapers urging true Cambodian patriots to leave Thai products on the shelves.

In 2003 an angry Cambodian mob torched the Thai embassy and a number of Thai businesses over a false rumour a Thai actress had claimed Cambodia's other World Heritage site, the Angkor Wat temple complex, was Thai.

Kanharith said he was confident that would not happen again when Cambodians went to the polls in a national election Sunday.

On Thursday, the Thai embassy in Cambodia advised its nationals on evacuation strategies in case the situation worsened.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Call for boycott of Thai products

Thursday, July 24, 2008
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

Following a quiet period, the call to boycott Thai products is starting again. This time, the messages are distributed through SMS mobile phones, and through anonymous distribution of leaflets. The Rasmei Kampuchea reported that on 22 July, leaflets were dropped at two Phnom Penh markets: Phsar Thmei and Phsar Chhbar Ampov. The content of the leaflets calls on Cambodians to stop using, importing, selling or buying all Thai products. No groups have claimed the responsibility for these distributions. Numerous Thai products are sold in Cambodia, and numerous Cambodians are living overseas. If Cambodians boycott Thai products as called, large number of Thai companies will lose their business in Cambodia. The majority of goods used in Cambodia, including food, construction materials, etc… are imported from Thailand.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Thai-Cambodian conflict enters 2nd week [-Leaflets distributed in PPenh calling for the boycott of Thai goods and services]

By KER MUNTHIT

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Thailand accused Cambodia of eyeing even more of its land and leaflets appeared in the Cambodian capital calling for a boycott of Thai goods, as a military standoff over disputed border territory entered a second week Wednesday.

On Tuesday, Cambodia asked the U.N. Security Council to intervene in the dispute over the 1.8 square miles of land near the ancient temple of Preah Vihear, warning that the two sides were at "an imminent state of war."

Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong said he had no choice but to appeal to the United Nations after discussions with Thailand on Monday failed to produce a breakthrough in the crisis.

He made a similar request to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, but the region's key bloc urged the two countries to continue bilateral negotiations.

In a countermove Wednesday, Thailand's Ambassador to the United Nations Don Pramudwinai said Cambodia was bringing the quarrel before the Security Council because "the Cambodian target is not only Preah Vihear but the entire common border."

Don told Bangkok's Business Radio that Cambodia was trying to force Thailand to accept a French colonial map as the document that demarcates the border, stretches of which are disputed.

The French map generally favors Cambodia, and Thailand rejects it saying it was drawn up by a colonial power to its own advantage. Thailand relies on a different map drawn up later with American technical assistance.

The fight over the land near Preah Vihear escalated this month when UNESCO approved Cambodia's application to have the complex named a World Heritage Site.

Thailand sent troops to the border July 15 after anti-government demonstrators attacked Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej's government for supporting Cambodia's application to UNESCO. They claim the temple's new status will undermine Thailand's claim to land around the temple. Cambodia responded with its own deployment.

Both sides have pledged not to use force, although some 4,000 troops are now amassed in the area.

The dispute has shaken Thailand's domestic political scene.

The National Counter Corruption Commission has begun to investigate Samak and his entire Cabinet over accusations that the government violated Thailand's Constitution by not consulting Parliament before supporting Cambodia's application.

The investigation could lead to the impeachment of all members of the government, although the process would be a long one, commission spokesman Klanarong Jantik said Wednesday.

Cambodian police were meanwhile investigating leaflets distributed in Phnom Penh that call for a boycott of Thai products and services.

"While the government is trying to solve the dispute with Thailand, we do not want to see any discrimination against Thai products, and people should not be aroused by such incitement," police chief Brig. Gen. Touch Naroth said.

The atmosphere remained calm among Cambodian and Thai troops at the hilltop Preah Vihear temple Wednesday, despite the intense diplomatic rhetoric by the respective governments.

Troops from both sides "continued interacting cordially," said Cambodian Brig. Gen. Chea Keo without elaborating.

Associated Press writers Ambika Ahuja and Sutin Wannabovorn in Bangkok, Thailand, and Sopheng Cheang in Cambodia, and Sumeth Panpetch along the Thai-Cambodian border contributed to this report.

A call to boycott Thai products

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Dear friends and colleagues,

I am writing to ask you all if you are informed of what have been happening with Preah Vihea temples.

I think it is about time for us to organize and take action against the encroachment of the Thai government into our motherland. The Thai government is too arrogant and they decided not to honor or to respect the 1962 ruling of the international court. If the Thai government deserves any respect from us, they must honor this ruling. The Preah Vihea temples belong to Khmers; no negotiation is needed.

As one of the hundreds of thousands of Khmer-Americans, I am asking you to joint me in boycotting the following:
  1. stop buying Thai Made products, clothes, rice, fish, ....
  2. stop eating Thai food
  3. stop flying Thai airways
  4. stop taking vacation in Thailand
These are only a few things we can do to help Khmers who live along the border.

If you want to find out more please go to K-I Media website and stay informed. We must come together to make a uniform statement.

Thank you,

C. K.