Showing posts with label fighting at Veal Entry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fighting at Veal Entry. Show all posts

Friday, April 03, 2009

Cambodia says 4 Thai troops killed in border clash

Friday, April 03, 2009
By SOPHENG CHEANG

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Thai and Cambodian soldiers traded fire with machine guns and rocket launchers along a disputed border, killing as many as four people Friday in an escalation of tensions in a long-standing feud over an 11th century temple.

Cambodian government spokesman Khieu Kanharith said four Thai soldiers were killed and 10 captured during the two clashes. Thailand's Foreign Ministry insisted only one Thai soldier was killed, seven were injured and none was taken prisoner, while two Thai army officers, who refused to be named, said two soldiers were killed and 10 injured.

The clashes occurred several hours apart near the same border location.

"The fighting has stopped. Commanders from both sides are talking," Maj. Nou Sarath, a Cambodian soldier at the border, told The Associated Press.

The fighting is the latest flare-up near the cliff-top Preah Vihear temple, which is on the Cambodian side of an ill-defined border that has been a source of conflict for decades. Two clashes last year sparked brief concerns of war.

In the first round of fighting Friday, Cambodia fired on some 60 Thai soldiers after they entered Cambodian territory, sparking a battle that lasted about 10 minutes, said Yim Kheang, a Cambodian soldier at the border. Officials from both sides said there were no injuries.

Thai Foreign Ministry spokesman Tharit Charungvat said the clash started when Thai soldiers arrived to investigate the site where one of their colleagues had his leg blown off by a land mine on Thursday. As they approached the area, Cambodian soldiers opened fire, he said.

Thailand and Cambodia have long had competing claims to land surrounding the temple, which the World Court awarded to Cambodia in 1962. Tensions flared last July after UNESCO, the U.N. cultural agency, approved Cambodia's bid to have the temple named a World Heritage Site. Both sides deployed troops.

Thai Defense Minister Prawit Wongsuwan downplayed Friday morning's clash.

"It was an accident, a misunderstanding among officials on the ground, which is common when you are closely positioned," he told reporters in Bangkok.

In the second clash, Cambodians insisted that Thai soldiers shot rocket-propelled grenades into their territory. Tharit denied the allegation. A Cambodian market near the border was set fire by a Thai rocket but the market was empty so there were no casualties, Cambodian soldiers said.

"The Cambodians started firing rocket-propelled grenades and rifles at us," Tharit said. "That led to several casualties on our side."

On Thursday, a Thai soldier in the area lost his leg after stepping on a land mine, but Thai and Cambodian military officials disagreed over which side of the border he was on at the time.

Cambodia and Thailand share a 500-mile (800-kilometer) land border, much of which has never been clearly demarcated because the countries refer to different maps.

Tharit called on both sides to "exercise utmost restraint and not use any force."

"We ask them to go back to the negotiating table," he said, referring to border negotiations that are to resume at the end of the month.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Intri Bak Slaap - Broken wing Eagle - Poem in Khmer By Sam Vichea and Yim Guechsè, Cartoon by Sacrava

Click on the poem to zoom in

Dedicated to the memory of Khmer Soldiers who shed their blood along the border to stop foreign invasion!


Poem in Khmer by Sam Vichea (on the web at http://kamnapkumnou.blogspot.com)
and Yim Guechsè (on the web at http://kamnapyimguechse.blogspot.com)
Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at http://sacrava.blogspot.com)

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Thailand has been taught a good lesson

Opinion by Khmerization
17th October 2008

“The Thai need to be taught a good lesson. Without any kinds of reactions, actions or resistance, the Thai would just step on our heads. Thai troops have encroached on Cambodian territories in many areas since July. If these sorts of actions were taken by the Cambodian leadership and the military in July, the Thai would not have occupied the Preah Vihear until today.”


The fighting between Cambodian and Thai troops in the vicinity of Preah Vihear temple on Wednesday the 15th of October has taught Thailand one lesson, that Cambodia’s patience has its limits and that Thailand’s bullying and standover tactic can result in deadly consequences.

The fighting, which surely provoked by Thailand’s continued encroachments on Cambodian sovereignty and territorial integrity, have left 3 Cambodian soldiers dead and two wounded and, if the Cambodian claims are to be believed, at least between 5 to 12 Thai soldiers were killed, 5 wounded and 13 captured.

In any wars, it is the fighters on the ground who will bear the greatest brunt and their bereaved families who will be scarred for years to come. Their deaths are always regrettable but, in this case, they died as heroes because they were fighting to defend their nation against foreign aggressors.

Coming back to the fighting, although I regretted that it has happened, I also applaud the actions of the Cambodian fighters who have put their life on the lines to defend the Cambodian nation. They have sacrificed their life protecting their country against foreign invaders. The Thai need to be taught a good lesson. Without any kinds of reactions, actions or resistance, the Thai would just step on our heads. Thai troops have encroached on Cambodian territories in many areas since July. If these sorts of actions were taken by the Cambodian leadership and the military in July, the Thai would not have occupied the Preah Vihear until today. And one would wonder why, after the area has been re-occupied by Cambodian troops after the Wednesday fighting, that the Thai are allowed to re-occupied it again is beyond comprehension. Is it because the Cambodian leaders have been intimidated by the superiority of Thai military and therefore are terrified of them?

After those clashes on Wednesday I bet that the Thai would not dare to mess around with Cambodia any longer as they have done in the past. They have looked down on the Cambodian troops, they have psychologically, and even physically, intimidated them. There is a saying that a dog, when cornered, will bite back. This was the case with the Cambodian soldiers on Wednesday. They have been provoked, intimidated with artilleries and aircrafts reconnaissance and even with troops numbers. And because of their military superiority, the Thai have provoked a fight by crossing the borderlines into Cambodian territories. The Cambodian soldiers have been provoked, cornered and so they were left with no choice but to fight back.

I am not an advocate of wars in order to resolve conflict. I am for peaceful resolution. But I would advocate that in the future, if Thai troops continue to cross into Cambodian territories, these sorts of encroachments must be vehemently met with armed resistance. Defending one’s own nation is a noble cause and therefore using armed resistance to deter foreign invasion is acceptable. And the Thai must be taught a good lesson for their bad boy and bullish behaviours.
The clashes on Wednesday was a victory for Cambodia. Even though the clashes might be considered as a Pyrrhic victory for Cambodia due to three deaths, but Cambodia has achieved its aim, and that is to deter future Thai encroachments. Mission accomplished!//

Friday, October 17, 2008

Donations to the dead soldiers families

If You Would Like to Help the 2 Families of Fallen Heroes

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Your donation will be taken direct to the families by CTN (Khmer TV) and air on CTN.

Please make your check or money order payable to:

CRC (Cambodian Reconciliation Committee, Inc.)

P.O. Box 1682

Fresno, CA 93717


or Email Mr. Sopheaktra Nou at
president@crcfresno.org

Website: http://www.crcfresno.org

THANK YOU