Vietnam misplanted posts on border: academic
Vietnam planted border posts between 5 and 50 metres inside
Cambodian territory during the late 1980s, researchers from the Royal
Academy of Cambodia said yesterday.
Sok Touch [tool of the Vietnamese puppet government], the director of border research at the academy, said there
are three distinct sets of border posts – those planted during the
French colonial period; those planted during the People’s Republic of
Kampuchea (1985 – 1987); and those planted during the current regime.
Of those planted during the People’s Republic, most were planted by
Vietnam, and many of these are deeper inside Cambodia than they ought to
be, according to Touch.
“It is not fair; most posts were planted 5 metres [meters or KILOmeters!!!?], some 10 metres, and others about 20 to 50 metres inside Cambodia,” he said.
The lack of global positioning technology at the time may have led to
errors [errors or annexation!!!!!!?], Touch added, noting that Vietnam has not planted any border
posts inside Cambodia since the late 1980s.
Koy Pisey, the vice president of Cambodia’s border committee,
declined to comment on Touch’s findings, and added that a 2005 treaty
with Vietnam was meant to correct “gaps” in an earlier 1985 treaty.
Opposition lawmaker Um Sam An, who has campaigned actively on the
border issue, said yesterday the border posts are even deeper in
Cambodian territory than the researchers claim.
“Cambodian people lost many hectares of land when the new posts were planted,” he said.
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