Hun Sen Asks Western Leaders to Help Resolve Cambodia’s Border Disputes
RFA | 15 July 2015
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen sent letters to the leaders of the
three western countries on Wednesday asking to borrow a decades-old map
to try to settle disputes over alleged territorial encroachment by
Vietnam.
The Cambodian leader sent letters to U.S. President
Barack Obama, French President Francois Hollande and U.K. Prime Minister
David Cameron to ask for their “cooperation and assistance on an
important issue about territory integrity of the Kingdom of Cambodia” by
lending him the 1964 map so it could be compared to Southeast Asia
nation’s official map.
Besides copies of the map of mainland
Southeast Asia prepared by former colonial ruler France, Hun Sen asked
the three western leaders to provide a group of experts to verify the
map that is being used by Cambodia and Vietnam to demarcate the border,
according to copies of the letters obtained by RFA’s Khmer Service.
“This request is
aimed at building a peaceful border with neighboring countries,” the
letters continues. “So for the sake of regional peace and our Cambodian
people, I hope that you will cooperate and provide us the requested
assistance.”
sVar Kim Hong, chairman of Cambodia’s border
committee, said his country would use the maps loaned by the three
western nations to verify the Cambodian map being used to demarcate the
border with Vietnam and clear up persistent accusations against the
government that its official map is fake.
“We will use the maps
to verify with our Cambodian one if people still don’t believe [the
government],” he said. “The opposition party continues to criticize us.
They said our map is fake. We are seeking assistance from foreign
countries to prove the government’s stance.”
Earlier this month,
Hun Sen had asked U.N. secretary-general Ban Ki-moon to loan him the map
prepared by France so it could be compared to the one Cambodia is using
to demarcate the border.
Disputes lead to clashes
Ongoing
border issues between Cambodia and Vietnam led to clashes at the end of
June when Vietnamese villagers attacked and beat Cambodian activists
who were inspecting a road that the Vietnamese constructed in a disputed
area of Svay Rieng province, according to the opposition Cambodia
National Rescue Party (CNRP). The Vietnamese say they were also attacked
by Cambodians.
Now CNRP lawmakers say they will lead about 1,000
of their supporters to the site of a border dispute with Vietnam in the
southeast Cambodian province, where they claim that Cambodia has lost
about 30 hectares of land to its more powerful and populous neighbor.
CNRP
Lawmaker Ou Chanrith said the group will visit villagers in the area to
tell residents that they can cultivate crops on the contested land in
the province’s Romdoul district.
“If the Vietnamese prevent
them from trying to take the land, then please report it to us, and we
will ask the local authorities to intervene,” he said.
But CNRP
lawmaker Riel Khemarin said Svay Rieng authorities informed him that
they will allow only 100 supporters to access the site, while the rest
of the group must stand 200 to 300 meters away.
“The authorities
told me that they will not allow such a large group of people because
they are afraid that they will step on people’s crops,” he said.
But Riel Khemarin said he does not accept that explanation.
“We must go to see the border posts,” to make sure all activities along the border are stopped, he said.
On
Tuesday, Interior Minister Sar Kheng instructed about 400 officials,
including border police and provincial governors from the regions
bordering Vietnam, not to make informal deals concerning disputed land
with their Vietnamese counterparts, The Cambodia Daily reported.
The
CNRP also sent a letter asking the government to call off its work on
demarcating the border until after the next general election in 2018,
but National Assembly [parliament] president Heng Samrin refused to
endorse it, the report said.
Last week, the Cambodia-Vietnam
Joint Border Committee held talks in which the two countries recognized
that the process of land delineation was “complicated,” despite having
completed around 83 percent of the 1,228-kilometer (763-mile) border so
far, and “agreed to finish demarcating the border very soon.”
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