Border meet held ahead of large protest
Cambodian and Vietnamese officials yesterday met at the Council
of Ministers to discuss rising border tensions, as villagers in Tbong
Khmum province again reported Vietnamese authorities had destroyed crops
in the disputed area.
Concluding tomorrow, the talks, involving 25 officials from both
sides, are led by Cambodia’s senior minister in charge of border
affairs, Va Kim Hong, and his Vietnamese counterpart, Foreign Affairs
Deputy Minister Ho Xuam Son.
The talks were prompted by alleged Vietnamese encroachment in Kandal
and Ratanakkiri provinces and a violent clash between an opposition-led
group and Vietnamese authorities in Svay Rieng on June 28.
The latest case of border tensions, meanwhile, was yesterday reported in Tbong Khmum province’s Memot district.
It is the same area where villagers say their crops were sprayed with
poison by Vietnamese authorities in April, a complaint that has been
forwarded to a global chemical weapons watchdog.
Speaking yesterday, Phy Sreyna, a farmer in Choam commune, said three
Vietnamese soldiers armed with rifles and batons uprooted her crops on
Saturday morning.
Sreyna said she complained and, after district officials inspected the site, local authorities encouraged her to re-plant.
Vietnamese officials, also at the inspection, put Sreyna in touch
with their boss, who agreed her land was in Cambodia, but warned her
that half of her pond was in Vietnam.
Ou Oeun, acting Choam commune chief, said the Vietnamese had recently
started destroying crops, laying claim to the commune’s pond.
“People have planted on this land for generations. It is not Vietnam’s land,” Oeun said.
In this backdrop of rising tensions, opposition lawmakers Um Sam An
and Real Camerin yesterday continued preparations to lead 1,000 people
to another disputed zone in Svay Rieng’s Kampong Ro district.
Leaving on July 19, the group plans to visit border posts 202 and
203, where clashes between an opposition-led group and Vietnamese
authorities left more than a dozen injured on June 28.
Camerin said ruling party lawmakers and Va Kim Hong would be invited
on the expedition, and that there were “a lot of people” asking to go.
He rejected the assertion that they were causing trouble for
political gain, saying Kim Hong should “know the reality” of Vietnamese
encroachment.
Svay Rieng authorities, who were notified yesterday, lent their
tentative support to the plan, saying they would defend the activists’
march if permitted by the Interior Ministry.
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