Hun Sen Says New Border Map Will Be ‘Accurate’
Cambodia Daily | 28 November 2016
Prime Minister Hun Sen took to Facebook on Friday and Saturday to
explain why Cambodia was asking France to draw up a bigger version of
the colonial-era map the government is constitutionally bound to use to
demarcate its disputed border with Vietnam, saying the new map will be
more accurate.
Mr. Hun Sen used his busy Facebook page last week
to announce that Cambodia and Vietnam had just agreed to ask France to
turn the so-called Bonne map mandated in the Constitution—drawn at a
scale of 1:100,000—into a bigger version at a scale of 1:50,000.
“Transferring
or copying the map must be done with accuracy based on the original
map, and it will be used to make accurate measurements and demarcation,”
he elaborated in a post on Saturday. “We have asked for French experts
because France is the one that made this map while France colonized
Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos.”
“A scale of 1:100,000 makes it
difficult to find the points to demarcate on the border because it is
too small,” he said in a post on Friday. “Therefore, it is essential to
transfer it…at a scale of 1:50,000, which will make it easier to measure
and find the points to demarcate.”
Cambodia in fact already has a
version of the Bonne map at a scale of 1:50,000. In a speech last year,
Mr. Hun Sen said Cambodia and Vietnam had made it using a more modern
Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) method, as per a supplemental treaty
the neighbors signed in 2005.
The government has yet to explain why it wants a new UTM map at 1:50,000 when it already has one.
The
opposition CNRP has long accused Hun Sen’s government of using the
wrong maps to demarcate the border and quietly ceding large swaths of
Cambodian land to Vietnam.
Last week, CNRP president Sam Rainsy
said Cambodia’s turn to France for a new map was a tacit admission that
the current UTM map could not be trusted to stake border posts in the
right place.
“If you read between the lines, this is a
confession,” he said from France, where he is living in exile, barred
from returning to Cambodia.
Local news outlet CEN reported on
Sunday that a delegation of mapping experts would arrive today from
Vietnam for a three-day visit. Var Kimhong, head of Cambodia’s joint
border committee, declined to speak with a reporter on Sunday.
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