2013-11-18 17:16:25
Cambodia has no hurry to start talks with Thailand over the
implementation of the verdict of the International Court of Justice
(ICJ) in the case regarding the hotly-contested land around the 11th
century Preah Vihear Temple, a government spokesman said Monday.
"Now,
we are the winner. We slow down talks because we don't want Thai
extremists and opposition politicians to use this issue to put pressure
on the Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's government,"
Information Minister and government spokesman Khieu Kanharith told
reporters. "We do not rush on this issue because we won it already."
He
said currently, Yingluck's government has two major challenges. One is a
controversial amnesty bill, which has been strongly opposed by the
nationalists and the opposition group and the other is a disputed border
case near Cambodia's Preah Vihear Temple.
"Therefore, we slow
down the talks, we don't want her ( Yingluck) to have the same
unfortunate fate as his brother (former Thai Premier Thaksin
Shinawatra)," he said.
Thaksin, a close friend of Cambodian Prime
Minister Hun Sen, was deposed in bloodless coup in 2006 by a powerful
group of Thai army. He has been living in Dubai to avoid a two-year jail
term for violating a conflict-of-interest law.
The ICJ
unanimously ruled last Monday that Cambodia has sovereignty over the
whole territory of the promontory of Preah Vihear Temple, and in
consequence, Thailand was under an obligation to withdraw from that
territory the Thai military or police forces, or other guards, or
keepers that were stationed there.
The Hague-based ICJ handed
down the verdict in the bitter border row between the two countries over
a 4.6 square-km disputed land near the temple after Cambodia filed a
request in April 2011 for the interpretation of the court's ruling in
1962.
Soon after the announcement of the ICJ's verdict last
Monday, Hun Sen expressed his satisfactions with the verdict and called
on armed forces along the border to keep calm and exercise utmost
restraint to avoid any activities that could lead to tension or clashes
so that the governments of Cambodia and Thailand would be able to
discuss the implementation of the verdict.
Preah Vihear, a Hindu
temple, is located on the top of a 525- meter cliff in the Dangrek
Mountains, about 500 km northwest of Phnom Penh, the capital of
Cambodia.
The ICJ awarded Cambodia the temple and its vicinity on
June 15, 1962, but Thailand claimed the ownership of 4.6 square km of
scrub next to the temple in 2008 when the UNESCO inscribed the temple on
the World Heritage List. The temple had become a flashpoint of armed
clashes between the two countries' troops since then.
Hun Sen
said in June 2011 that the sporadic clashes left 24 Cambodian civilians
and soldiers dead, forced tens of thousands of people to flee homes, and
caused serious damages to the temple.
Tensions between the two nations have calmed since July 2011 when Yingluck took office.
Khieu
Kanharith said the situation at the border near the temple is normal so
far and the two countries' troops have cooperated with each other well.
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