The delegation from Vietnam at a meeting in Phnom Penh in August. KT/Mai Vireak |
Border Land to be Exchanged
Khmer Times | 25 October 2016
Delegates from both sides of the border at a meeting last week. Supplied |
Cambodia
and Vietnam have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to exchange parcels
of land in provinces along the border in both countries after Joint Border
Committee meetings in Ho Chi Minh City in July and last Thursday.
The Vietnamese
Foreign Ministry released information on its website last Thursday, initially
in Vietnamese only, detailing the agreements ironed out in the meetings,
focusing specifically on the exchange of land between both countries.
Both
Le Hoai Trung, the deputy minister of Foreign Affairs for Vietnam, and Va Kim
Hong, chairman of the border committee for Cambodia, signed off on the
agreement along with various ministers from both countries.
Cambodian
border committee officials attempted to downplay the news, saying the two sides
had yet to actually discuss which plots of land would be transferred to
Vietnamese control and vice versa. They only decided to allow a “group of
experts” to study the situation and follow up with them.
Mr.
Kim Hong did not respond to requests for comment yesterday, but told local
media outlets that Cambodia and Vietnam have yet to transfer any land between
each other.
“We
have nothing to exchange. We just talked about the exchange in principle,
because we have had this principle for a long time since the MoU in 2011, which
Prime Minister Hun Sen said at the National Assembly,” he said.
“So
nothing is new, it’s just a problem that we need to fix by exchanging some land
in the provinces that we’ve seen, but we have not exchanged it because we have
not agreed with each other yet.”
He
said an exchange of land along the border would only be possible if the
Vietnamese government “complied” with the terms and conditions of the agreement
and held a neutral study first.
This
is far from the first time Cambodia and Vietnam have either exchanged land or
discussed the topic. In 2012, Cambodia negotiated with Vietnam to keep Thlok
Trach village and Anlong Chrey village, the hometown of ruling party stalwart
Heng Samrin, in exchange for two unnamed villages that are now Vietnamese.
The
Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) pounced on the issue and harshly
criticized the government for using Cambodia’s territorial integrity as a
trading chip.
CNRP
spokesman Yim Sovann declined to comment, telling reporters to ask the
opposition member from Kampong Cham province, Mao Monyvan. But Mr. Monyvan
could not be reached for comment.
Independent
analyst Meas Ny said the entire border situation was too murky and the
government was not being transparent enough with how it is handling the border
demarcation process.
They
take action against any protesters, activists or politicians who raise the
issue of the border, yet are duplicitous and mysterious when asked of their own
plans for the border with Vietnam, he said.
“The
current exchange can become another issue that will receive criticism from
people if the government is not more transparent, and there may be even more
losses,” he said. “As citizens stated, be careful about exchanging Khmer
villages and Khmer land.
“It
is not an exchange of Khmer villages for Vietnamese land, but an exchange of
Khmer land for Khmer land that will allow us to claim that we are beneficial.”
He
added that the situation around Mr. Samrin’s home village was emblematic of the
issue many have with the border demarcation process and any potential village
trades.
“We
have had it for a long time and they didn’t accuse it of being a Vietnamese
village in the past. So why does it happen now?” he asked.
“We look at the border between Cambodia and Vietnam and it was made when Vietnam had influence over Cambodia. Cambodia at that time was prepared by the Vietnamese, so it cannot be 100 percent accurate.”
“We look at the border between Cambodia and Vietnam and it was made when Vietnam had influence over Cambodia. Cambodia at that time was prepared by the Vietnamese, so it cannot be 100 percent accurate.”
Many
have been critical of the government’s handling of the border with Vietnam,
particularly of their inability to stop Vietnam from constructing buildings on
Cambodian land without their consent.
Despite
Cambodia denying Vietnam permission to build in Rattanakiri province and
sending 24 diplomatic letters to the Vietnamese Foreign Ministry asking for
construction to be stopped, soldiers from across the border have continued to
dig ponds and build structures in the area.
The
land, near the border post in Pok Nhai commune across from Vietnam’s Gia Lai
province, was designated as no-man’s land in a January 17, 1995, agreement
between the two countries until defined borders were created.
But
for more than a year now, residents, police and provincial government officials
have reported non-stop construction by Vietnamese soldiers. Last April at least
eight ponds, approximately four by eight meters wide and three to four meters
deep, were dug by Vietnamese soldiers in the O’Koma area near a border
protection office in Pok Nhai commune.
Government
officials said they would handle the issue diplomatically, but many nearby
residents say the Vietnamese soldiers continue to dig deeper into the ponds.
Mr.
Kim Hong in August confirmed that the Vietnamese had in fact violated the
agreement between the two countries, yet there has been no change in the
relationship between both nations militarily, financially or diplomatically.
Chhay
Thy, the Adhoc provincial coordinator in Rattanakiri province, said it has been
a year since people reported seeing Vietnamese soldiers digging ponds and yet
they have repeatedly ignored directives from the government to stop.
The
actions, he said, show that Vietnam is not simply confused about the
borderline, but willfully ignoring Cambodia’s sovereignty.
“We
have forbidden them from doing it for a month. But now they [the Vietnamese
soldiers] have finished the foundations and are working on the shape,” he said.
In a
closed-door meeting at the Council of Ministers in August, Mr. Kim Hong and Mr.
Hoai Trung met and discussed a number of contentious issues related to the
Cambodia-Vietnam border, including mapping assistance from France.
The
two sides discussed the technical assistance needed from France in mapping the
border, hoping to use their “Bonne” maps of the region and their high-tech
mapping instruments to settle a number of disputed areas.
But
even the message they plan to send to France is causing friction between the
two sides, as Cambodia believes that only two of the seven disputed areas along
the border require France to step in, while Vietnam thinks France should
arbitrate decisions for all seven of the areas being debated.
Last
year, much was made over attempts to demarcate the border with Vietnam. The
opposition claimed the government had openly ceded land to Vietnam by using
unverified border maps and in June last year, politicians and supporters went
to the Vietnamese border in Svay Rieng province.
That
trip led to a scuffle between local Vietnamese residents and Cambodians,
resulting in multiple injuries on both sides.
The
land border between Cambodia and Vietnam is 1,270 kilometers long. In March,
National Police officials claimed that 89 percent of the demarcation was
completed after they planted 282 border posts from a total of 314 along the
border.
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