Cambodian Government Minister Cautions Opposition Not to Exploit Map Issue
RFA | 26 August 2015
Cambodia’s foreign affairs minister on Wednesday warned the
country’s opposition party not to exploit an issue surrounding the
accuracy of official maps for political gain, following the government’s
verification of its charts against ones provided by the United Nations.
The U. N. sent a set of 1964 maps delineating the border between
Cambodia and Vietnam to the Southeast Asian nation last Thursday after
Prime Minister Hun Sen asked for help in dispelling allegations by the
Cambodian National Rescue Party (CNRP) that his government had ceded
land to neighboring Vietnam based on its own set of incorrect charts.
After a two-hour verification process, a government official declared
that the U.N. maps, which were printed according to the same 1/100,000
scale as the government’s own 26 maps, matched Cambodia’s charts, and
that the matter was resolved.
“You will be surprised [if] you criticize the Cambodian and Vietnam
border issue in order to exploit the political situation,” said Foreign
Affairs Minister Hor Namhong. “If you don’t stop the criticism, then it
will be up to the government to take action on this matter.”
He also said the government expected to receive a map from former
colonial ruler France on Thursday, so it could be compared to the ones
Cambodia is using to demarcate the border.
The Cambodian government requested maps from France, the United
States and the United Kingdom in July to verify its border demarcations.
Hor Namhong ruled out taking the matter to the International Court of
Justice, which issues rulings on land disputes between countries,
because the process would require a lot of time and money.
Sok Touch, head of border research for the Royal Academy of Cambodia,
said he already had received a 26-piece set of maps from France, which
appeared to be printed according to the same 1/100,000 scale as
Cambodia’s maps and published by Indochina Geographic Group.
“I had received this map a long time ago,” he said. “I believe it is
the same map. I don’t want to say yet because I need to wait for the
official one.”
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said he welcomed France’s response to Cambodia’s request.
He said that Cambodia did not belong to the ruling Cambodian People's
Party (CPP) alone, and that the CNRP was willing to do everything for
sake of the nation.
“Cambodia belongs to the citizens, so everything that involves its territory will be involved with our people,” he said.
Disputed border areas
In the meantime, tension continues to mount between Cambodians and Vietnamese in disputed border areas.
On Thursday, a villager from Thna Thnong commune in the Romdoul
district of Svay Rieng province accused local Vietnamese of destroying
his rice field in one such area after spraying it with a chemical
powder.
"They have sprayed chemicals on my crops twice already, and the crops
have rotted,” he said. “All the land here belongs to Cambodia. I don't
know why they won't allow us to grow rice here."
Cambodian villagers feel insecure because authorities do not seem to
care that the Vietnamese are encroaching upon the country’s border
territory, he said.
"Why are the Vietnamese able to grow rice there, but the Cambodian
cannot?,” he said. "It’s sad that we can't do anything on our land."
In late June, several CNRP lawmakers and activists were injured when a
group of Vietnamese villagers attacked them with sticks while they
inspected an area of the border in Svay Rieng province’s Kampong Ro
district, where they say Vietnamese authorities built a road in
Cambodian territory.
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