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| Prime Minister Hun Sen embraces Prime Minster Nguyen Xuan Phuc on Wednesday in Siem Reap during a meeting at the Cambodia-Laos-Vietnam Summit. Photo supplied |
French to help with Vietnam border map: PM
Phnom Penh Post | 25 November 2016
Prime Minister Hun Sen and Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen
Xuan Phuc agreed yesterday to write to the French government to request
expert assistance in copying colonial border maps mandated by the
Constitution into higher resolution for use in demarcation.
The countries have been working to complete demarcation of the border for more than two decades, with the most recent meeting in August breaking down over Cambodia’s request to seek France’s assistance and for Vietnam to stop building on undemarcated areas.
Only the colonial maps of Cambodia’s border with Vietnam, which use
the antiquated Bonne method of map projection at a 1/100,000 scale, can
legally be used for erecting border posts, but Hun Sen acknowledged last
year that more detailed maps were often employed.
The CNRP has questioned the constitutionality of the practice and
expressed concern that those maps – drawn at a 1/50,000 scale using the
UTM method, which is compatible with GPS, unlike the Bonne method –
might, in fact, be ceding sovereign territory to Vietnam.
Hun Sen has previously proposed making 1/50,000-scale maps from the
colonial maps with the help of neutral French cartographers, and after
yesterday’s development meeting in Siem Reap, said he had made a deal
with Vietnam’s premier to seek such assistance.
“Both prime ministers agreed with each other to make a joint letter
to France to ask for experts in making a map to change it from 1/100,000
to 1/50,000,” Kao Kim Houn, a minister attached to the prime minister,
told reporters after the meeting between the premiers.
Kim Houn said Foreign Affairs Ministry Secretary of State Long
Visalo, who has long worked on demarcation issues, would be placed in
charge of developing the maps, which would be used only for the small
parts of the border that still remain unmarked.
“He was assigned to work together with a Vietnamese counterpart,” Kim
Houn said of Visalo. “For the unclear points, we will ask France for
help.”
Kim Houn said the premier had also reiterated Cambodia’s demands for
Vietnam to stop constructing buildings in undemarcated “white zones” of
the border, but did not say what the Vietnamese premier said in reply.
The border issue is one of the most politically sensitive in
Cambodia, with an opposition lawmaker and senator presently in prison
for comments made during a 2015 CNRP campaign against Vietnamese border
violations.
Hun Sen has pledged to arrest anyone who continues to say the government is using the wrong maps.
CNRP lawmaker Um Sam An was arrested in April
for claiming on his Facebook page that the government was using the
wrong maps for demarcation, and opposition Senator Hong Sok Hour was arrested in August last year for a lecture in which he presented as real a fake border treaty dissolving the Cambodia-Vietnam border.
However, citing such arrests, the opposition party has since late
last year not pushed the issue further, saying they do not want to anger
the government.
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said yesterday that the opposition welcomed
Hun Sen’s proposal to invite French experts to help, and said that it
could help to build trust in the new 1/50,000 maps that are produced for
use in demarcation of the border.
“If there is a referee in attendance in making the maps, which is
something unclear and easy to make errors in, I welcome that, and I hope
that France can help, because it would be positive for both countries
to end the political border issue,” Sovann said.
A Foreign Ministry press release also said that Foreign Minister Prak
Sokhon would next week visit Paris to meet with his French counterpart,
Jean-Marc Ayrault, to discuss “cooperation between the two countries,
particularly in the fields of politics, economics and culture”.

CNRP kept accusing United Nations for bringing the wrong map to compare with Cambodian official map. It is unwise. UN will never help CNRP in the future.
ReplyDeleteCNRP can only fool the naïve Khmer commoners. Really, when UN was in Phnom Penh with the official map and the whole press conference, it's the best time to come out and show how much of the fraudulent the Cambodian official map was.
But no, CNRP was no show, then waited until UN left Phnom Penh to come out and sing the same song: "The government uses a fake map".
But look, the press conference already showed the official map from UN matched with the Cambodian official map. So, stop accusing both maps as fake. You will anger both UN and the Cambodian government.
Stop lying to the naïve Cambodian commoners. They do not know.