[Buddha-l] Thai-Cambodian war over Temple ownership
Dan Lusthaus
vasubandhu at earthlink.net
Wed Oct 15 13:45:59 MDT 2008
The fighting between Cambodian and Thai troops over the Temple area
continues:
Dan
from NYTimes
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/16/world/asia/16cambo.html?ref=world
2 Killed on Thai-Cambodian Border
By SETH MYDANS
Published: October 15, 2008
BANGKOK - Thai and Cambodian soldiers exchanged rocket and rifle fire for
about an hour on Wednesday in a confrontation at their border over a
disputed 900-year-old mountaintop temple, according to reports from the
area. At least two Cambodian soldiers were killed, the Cambodian foreign
minister said.
Thai soldiers on a military truck drove to the front line after clashes with
Cambodian troops in a disputed border area.
Several hundred soldiers from both sides have faced each other at the border
since July, when Unesco, the United Nations agency, approved Cambodia's
request to have the temple named a World Heritage Site.
Foreign Minister Hor Namhong of Cambodia said two Cambodian soldiers had
also been wounded. A spokesman for the Thai Foreign Ministry said seven Thai
paramilitary soldiers were wounded. Ten Thai soldiers surrendered to the
Cambodians, according to news reports in the capital, Phnom Penh.
The two nations have made claims for decades over the temple, Preah Vihear,
which stands at the lip of an escarpment on the border looking out over the
mountains of northern Cambodia.
In 1962, the International Court of Justice awarded the temple to Cambodia,
based on a map prepared at the start of the century by colonial French
rulers. Unesco placed the temple in Cambodia partly based on that map when
it awarded Preah Vihear world heritage status.
As a result of the rising tensions, Thai officials said they had prepared
aircraft to evacuate some 1,500 citizens living in Cambodia. Thai
authorities ordered a similar evacuation in 2003 when Cambodians rioted in
the capital in protest against Thailand, setting fire to Thai businesses and
to the Thai Embassy.
That earlier violence also involved claims to a temple, in that case the
crown jewel, Angkor Wat, which is well within the borders of Cambodia.
"Thai businessmen who have no need to be in Cambodia now, please rush back
to Thailand," Foreign Minister Sompong Amornwiwat said Wednesday.
Thai nationals were reported to have huddled in a hotel in Phnom Penh for
safety, uncertain if they should evacuate. Riot police were deployed outside
the Thai Embassy.
Prime Minister Hun Sen of Cambodia on Tuesday issued an ultimatum to about
80 Thai soldiers to withdraw from a portion of the temple area. His noon
deadline passed, with the Cambodian side saying the Thais had retreated and
the Thais saying there had been no troop movements.
"At any cost we will not allow Thai troops to invade this area," Mr. Hun Sen
said Tuesday. "I would like to be clear about this. It is a life-and-death
battle zone."
In an effort to ease tensions, the Thai and Cambodian regional military
commanders were scheduled to hold talks Thursday. The fighting on Wednesday
was not the first since the two sides have deployed soldiers at the temple.
Early this month, one Cambodian and two Thais were reported wounded in an
exchange of gunfire.
Three days later, two Thai soldiers lost legs when they stepped on some of
the many thousands of land mines strewn through the area.
Thailand's 300,000-strong military is far better equipped and trained than
the Cambodian army, with F-16 fighter jets and Blackhawk helicopters. But
Cambodian soldiers have been fighting in the area for decades and are
hardened by guerrilla warfare.
The disputed temple was in the hands of Khmer Rouge guerrillas until a
decade ago, when the movement collapsed, 19 years after the fall of the
Khmer Rouge regime in Phnom Penh. Many soldiers and commanders in the Royal
Cambodian Armed Forces are former members of the Khmer Rouge.
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