Cambodian–Thai border dispute

Cambodian–Thai Border dispute

Photograph of the Preah Vihear Temple
Date June 2008 – Ongoing
Location Cambodian – Thai border
Status Ongoing[1]
Territorial
changes
None
Belligerents
Cambodia Thailand
Commanders and leaders
PM Hun Sen
DM GEN Tea Banh
Mj.GEN Srey Doek
Lt.GEN Chea Dara
PM Abhisit Vejjajiva
CA GEN Prayuth Chan-Ocha
Lt.COL Nut Sri-in
COL Thanet Wongcha-um
COL Chayan Huaysoongnern
COL Thawatchai Changprachack
Casualties and losses
20 soldiers killed[2]

(64 killed claimed by Thailand)[3]
1 soldier missing[4]
3 civilians killed[5]
65+ soldiers and civilians wounded

16 soldiers killed[6]
(141 killed claimed by Cambodia)[7][8][9]
2 civilians killed[10][11]
140+ soldiers and civilians wounded

The Cambodian–Thai border dispute began in June 2008 as the latest round of a century-long dispute between Cambodia and Thailand involving the area surrounding the 11th-century Preah Vihear Temple, located in the Dângrêk Mountains between the Choam Khsant district in the Preah Vihear province of northern Cambodia and the Kantharalak district (amphoe) in the Sisaket province of Northeastern Thailand. According to the Cambodian ambassador to the United Nations, the dispute began when about 50 Thai soldiers moved into the Keo Sikha Kiri Svara pagoda vicinity located in Cambodia's territory at about 300 meters from the Temple of Preah Vihear.[12] Thailand claims that demarcation has not yet been completed for the external parts of the area adjacent to the temple itself which was judged to be Cambodian by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in 1959.[13] By August 2008, the dispute had expanded to the 13th century Ta Moan temple complex 153 km west of Preah Vihear, where Cambodia has accused Thai troops of occupying a temple complex on Cambodian land. The Thai foreign ministry had denied that any troops had moved into that area until several were killed there in April 2011.[14][15] An agreement was reached in December 2011 to withdraw troops from the disputed area.[16]

Contents

Background

The Preah Vihear temple area has been the subject of often rancorous debate within Cambodia and Thailand and between the two nations since the very late 19th century.

The temple was built during the 9th and 10th centuries by the Khmer Empire. As the empire reached its zenith and began a slow decline, the Ayutthaya Kingdom began its climb to the modern-day state of Thailand. Siam and Vietnam conquered Cambodian territory in turn during the Ayutthaya, Thonburi and Rattanakosin eras.

The Franco-Siamese treaty of 1893 forced Siam to renounce suzerainty over Cambodia, and leaving Siam for the control of Battambang, Siem Reap, Banteay Meanchey and Oddar Meancheay provinces,[17] which officially became provinces of Thailand. Later in 1907, the 4 provinces were ceded back to France in an exchange for regaining Thai sovereignty of Trat Province and Amphoe Dan Sai of Loei Province, in a border treaty between France and Thailand, during the state visit of King Rama V to France.[17] In 1907 the Thai-Cambodian border was mapped by the French on behalf of a bilateral border commission. However, the subsequent map showed Preah Vihear Temple as being in Cambodia, which is different from the 1904 agreement. Despite this, Thailand circulated the map for official use. The circulation significantly affects the current dispute.[18]

During World War II, Thailand took advantage of the 1940 French surrender to regain Khmer and Lao territory lost in the 1904 and 1907 exchanges; Battambang Province of Thailand (modern day Battambang Province and Pailin municipality, Cambodia), Phibunsongkhram (modern day Siem Reap, Oddar Meancheay and Banteay Meanchey provinces, Cambodia), Nakorn Champasak Province (modern day Champassack Province, Laos) and Lan Chang (modern day Xaignabouli, Laos); (See map below) [17] Beginning in December 1940, this invasion started the French-Thai War. The Thai army and air force, better equipped and outnumbering the Colonial French forces, easily won on land. The French achieved a decisive naval victory at the Battle of Koh Chang. The Japanese forcibly mediated the conflict, fearing that the invasion would affect their colonies in Southeast Asia.[19] A general armistice was declared on January 28, 1941. On May 9 a peace treaty was signed in Tokyo, with the French being coerced by the Japanese into relinquishing their hold on the territories demanded by Thailand.

On December 7, 1941, a few hours before the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japan, demanding the right to move troops across Thailand to the Malayan frontier, launched the invasion of Thailand. After six to eight hours of battles, Thailand's Prime Minister Plaek Phibunsongkhram ordered a ceasefire. Shortly thereafter Japan was granted free passage, and on December 21, 1941, Thailand and Japan signed a military alliance with a secret protocol wherein Tokyo agreed to help Thailand in regaining territories lost to the British and French colonial powers, in exchange for which Thailand had to assist Japan in its war against the Allies.

After World War II, Thai Prime Minister Pridi Phanomyong agreed to return the captured territories to France, as a condition for being regarded as neither an aggressor nor a member of the Axis Powers so as not to suffer a similar fate to Germany, Japan and Italy, and admission to the newly created United Nations. Initially both the UK and the Soviet Union willingly regarded Thailand as an aggressor. The US chose to intervene politically for reasons involving the Free Thai Movement and prevailed on its wartime allies to change their stances as a result of the returning of occupied territories.

Upon Cambodian Independence and the French withdrawal in 1953 Thailand occupied Preah Vihear Temple in 1954.

In 1962 the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague, Netherlands, awarded ownership of Preah Vihear Temple to Cambodia by a 9 to 3 vote, stating that the 1907 map clearly showed Preah Vihear as being in Cambodia. The court only ruled that the temple belong to Cambodia, and did not rule on the surrounding adjacent lands. Thailand reacted angrily, as the 1907 map and ICJ ruling did not follow the watershed line at Preah Vihear despite clearly following the watershed for hundreds of kilometers along the surrounding Dangrek Mountains as had been the agreement of the bilateral border commission. Thailand eventually reluctantly handed over the temple but virtually no surrounding areas, claiming that the border has never been officially demarcated here.[18]

The ownership dispute reappeared in recent years after Cambodia submitted an application to UNESCO requesting that Preah Vihear be designated as a World Heritage site. Thailand contended that the application requested such designation for land surrounding the temple that Thailand considers belong to it. In the interest of cross-border relations Cambodia withdrew the application, and in 2008, after winning support from Thailand, submitted a modified map requesting the designation only for the temple but not the surrounding land.

The Preah Vihear temple issue, both its location and listing, has become the subject of nationalist political posturing in both Cambodia and Thailand:

The People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), a Thai protester group, has turned the temple into a cause célèbre wedge issue in its battles against the People Power Party government of Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej in their attempts to unseat the former (57th) and current (58th) Cabinet of Thailand.[20][21] In 2006 the PAD led street protests that led first to the Thai general election of April 2006, won by then-incumbent former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's Thai Rak Thai Party and then to the military coup of June 2006, which ousted Thaksin Shinawatra. Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej is commonly seen as a proxy for the self-exiled Thaksin Shinawatra.

The Cambodian People's Party (CPP) government of Prime Minister Hun Sen used the possibly coincidental timing of UNESCO's annual meeting and the listing of the temple as a World Heritage site in its campaigning for the July 27, 2008, parliamentary election.[21]

Timeline

Lead-up to the fighting

Clashes

October 2008

November 2008

April 2009

January 2010

April 2010

February 2011

April–May 2011

July 2011

Both sides said they were satisfied with the decision. Thai foreign minister Kasit, speaking outside the court, said that a withdrawal of armed Cambodians from the temple complex "has been our consistent position." Further noting that the decision is binding on both countries, he added that Thailand would withdraw her forces and facilitate the observers' deployment, and further agreed to allow unhindered supplies to Cambodian civilian personnel at the temple complex.
Cambodian foreign minister Hor Namhong said a demilitarised zone would mean "a permanent cease-fire … tantamount to a cessation of aggression" by Thailand. He also said he was satisfied with the dispatch of truce observers, which he said Cambodia had been seeking since last February, but made no reference to the demand for Cambodian troops to abandon the temple grounds.
The court said its ruling would not prejudice any final ruling on the where the border in the area between Thailand and Cambodia should fall. It could take the court many months or even years to reach that decision.[131]
But Abhisit, caretaker Prime Minister since the just-concluded Thai general election, said that Thai soldiers will not pull out from the disputed area until the military of both countries agree on the mutual withdrawal.
"We need to talk to the Cambodians as the Cambodians also have to pull out their troops," Abhisit said at a news conference in Bangkok.
"So there has to be some kind of mechanism to verify, to do it in an orderly manner. And therefore it depends on the two sides to come together and talk," he said, suggesting that an existing joint border committee would be the appropriate place to plan a coordinated pullback.[132]

September 2011 Football diplomacy

The general election resulted in a decisive victory for the Pheu Thai Party, with their leader, Ms. Yingluck Shinawatra, replacing Abhist as Prime Minister on 5 August 2011. Many United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD — also called "Red Shirts") members were elected to the House of Representatives ("MPs" in press reports.) Core UDD leaders arranged with Cambodian PM Hun Sen for a friendly football match to be played in Phnom Penh's Olympic Stadium on 24 September.[135] MP–and–UDD leaders Jatuporn Prompan and Natthawut Saikua were prohibited from leaving the country due to pending charges arising from the 2010 Thai political protests, so an attorney petitioned the Criminal Court for permission for them to travel to Cambodia for the game.[136] Former Thai premier Somchai Wongsawat led the Thai side. Cambodian premier Hun Sen led his side to a 10–7 victory, following which he announced that "the nightmare era" between Thailand and Cambodia was over. Former foreign minister Kasit Piromya rejoined that Hun Sen should not think that he could benefit from close ties with ousted former Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra and the ruling Pheu Thai Party. "Don't think that you will get at our natural resources and territory by be-friending or playing football with the Pheu Thai MPs," he said.[137]

December 2011

Civilian effects

After the initial attack on February 4, 2011, the Cambodian army fired rockets using BM-21 multi-launch rocket systems into the town of Sao Thong Chai located about 5 km from the border. As a direct result, primary schools, a local hospital, and 4–5 houses were destroyed.[139] Only minutes before the hit, the local authority had issued a warning to the locals to evacuate and close the school. Despite this, there was one civilian fatality and at least 34 injured from the attack by Cambodian forces.[140] There are reports that 22,000 Thai citizens had to evacuate and abandon their homes. The Cambodian government blamed the Thai army for firing onto the world's heritage temple causing severe damage. Whereas the Cambodian army settled that heritage temple as an army base. There is evidence, such as video and photo footage from Reuters[141] showing that Cambodian forces used the temple as a military base and fired machine guns and artillery. Thai soldiers responded by firing rifles at the Cambodian soldiers hiding on the temple.[142] However, there are only a few bullet scratches on the temple.[143] The AFP reported that Cambodian troops were stationed in the temple.[144]

Thai army was accused of using cluster munitions against Cambodia during the border fighting in February. Thailand at first denied the allegation, but later admitted it had fired the weapons. The Cluster Munition Coalition says that should not be a justification for using weapons which are banned by more than 100 countries. According to the campaigners, thousands of Cambodian villagers are now at risk of death or serious injury because of unexploded ordnance near their homes.[145]

Reactions

International

Many Asian nations, including China, Indonesia, Malaysia, The Philippines, Japan and Vietnam, as well as Canada, the United Kingdom and United States, have called on both sides to exercise restraint.[146][147][148][149][150][151]

Local

Despite the 1976 Treaty of Amity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia, which commits parties to resolve intra-state conflict without violence, and 2000 Memorandum of Understanding, which established a Joint Border Commission to peacefully resolve overlapping claims, important constituent groups in Thailand, including the "Yellow Shirts," maintain that the status of Preah Vihear remains unresolved.[152]

Villagers from Ban Phum Srol denounced plans by the People's Alliance for Democracy ("Yellow Shirts") to bring relief supplies. "You have created the war. You troubled us. We don't welcome you," said Wichit Duangkaew, 46.[153]

Police arrested a Thai, a Cambodian and a Vietnamese in Si Sa Ket's Kantharalak district, near the Thai-Cambodian border. The suspects carried maps with military bases marked on them, but they denied they were spying.[154]

According to Michael Montesano, a visiting research fellow on Thai history and regional affairs at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore, "They're people who say that Hun Sun's playing up the situation on the Thai border is a way to distract the Cambodian people from his much softer stance vis a vis Vietnam relating to poorly demarcated borders."[155]

Satirical

Not The Nation, an anonymous website[156] that satirizes The Nation (Thailand), in early September following the August change of government, posted a seemingly factual article reporting that the Thai army quietly abandons Preah Vihear temple as lack of press coverage makes border defense “too expensive.”[157]

See also

911 Para-Commando Special Forces
Vietnamese border raids in Thailand
Border Patrol Police
Thahan Phran
Thai–Laotian Border War

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Thailand and Cambodia to accept monitors for border row". News Asia-Pacific (BBC). February 22, 2011. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12534980. Retrieved February 23, 2011. 
  2. ^ 3 KIA on October 15, 2008,[1] 2 KIA on April 3, 2009,[2] 5 KIA on February 4–7, 2011,[3][4][5] 9 KIA on April 22 to May 3, 2011,[6] 1 KIA on July 23, 2011,[7] that makes a total of 20 killed
  3. ^ a b "Govt probes claim 64 killed". Bangkok Post. http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/security/220077/govt-probes-claim-64-killed. Retrieved February 7, 2011. 
  4. ^ a b http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jJn8xO17x_XAkjKoCey0zHOfsnmw?docId=CNG.ce5e2e67a61454295cd54a08b0ebf3f2.851
  5. ^ http://www.valleynewslive.com/story/13981303/thai-cambodian-clashes-resume-at-disputed-border?redirected=true
  6. ^ 1 KIA on October 15, 2008 [8], 1 KIA on October 18, 2008 [9], 3 KIA on April 3, 2009 [10], 1 KIA on January 31, 2010 [11], 1 KIA on February 5, 2011 [12], 1 KIA on February 8, 2011 [13], 8 KIA on April 22 to May 3, 2011 [14] that makes a total of 16 killed
  7. ^ "88 Thais killed in '08 and '09: Cambodia". The China Post. Taiwan (ROC). March 25, 2010. http://www.chinapost.com.tw/asia/regional-news/2010/03/25/249773/88-Thais.htm. Retrieved February 7, 2011. 
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  9. ^ a b "មន្ត្រីខ្មែរ ៖ កម្ពុជាស្លាប់ ៣ ថៃស្លាប់ជាង ៣០នាក់". Rfa.org. http://www.rfa.org/khmer/indepth/3_Cambodians_and_more_than_20_Thais_die-02052011103042.html. Retrieved February 7, 2011. 
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  101. ^ Thai-Cambodian Troops Clash Continue
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  103. ^ Vietnamese tanks moving to Preah Vihear
  104. ^ Thai TV was warned about its coverage
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  120. ^ Thailand, Cambodia clash for 9th day, 16 dead
  121. ^ Thai, Cambodian troops clash again at border
  122. ^ 10 Thai troops injured after 'light weapons' clashes on border
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  129. ^ International Business News – Thai, Cambodian armies agree to ceasefire, borders opened for trade
  130. ^ Ibn Live – No border observers until Cambodia withdraws troops: Thai PM
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  133. ^ Phnom Penh Post – Soldier dead at border
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  139. ^ "ร่ำไห้หนัก!! สาวภูมิซรอลพบบ้านถูกปืนใหญ่เขมรยิงใส่พังยับ – มท.พร้อมเยียวยา". Manager.co.th. http://www.manager.co.th/Home/ViewNews.aspx?NewsID=9540000016125. Retrieved February 16, 2011. 
  140. ^ "สธ.เผยเหตุปะทะชายแดนไทย-กัมพูชา มีผู้เสียชีวิต 2 ราย เจ็บ 34 ราย". Manager.co.th. http://www.manager.co.th/Home/ViewNews.aspx?NewsID=9540000016656. Retrieved February 16, 2011. 
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  142. ^ "IndoChina – Manager Online – ฉีกหน้ากากแขมร์ เขมรใช้ปราสาทพระวิหารกำบัง เป็นที่ตั้งทหาร-ปืนกล". Manager.co.th. http://www.manager.co.th/IndoChina/ViewNews.aspx?NewsID=9540000015969. Retrieved February 16, 2011. 
  143. ^ "เขมรเวอร์จริง บันไดนาคโดนสะเก็ดถลอก แต่โวยวายพระวิหารใกล้พัง". Manager.co.th. http://www.manager.co.th/IndoChina/ViewNews.aspx?NewsID=9540000015960. Retrieved February 16, 2011. 
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  151. ^ Statement by Minister Cannon on Clashes at Thai-Cambodian Border
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  156. ^ Anonymous (September 28, 2011). "About". Not The Nation. http://notthenation.com/. Retrieved September 28, 2011. "Not The Nation is for entertainment purposes only. Redistribution of Not The Nation content with attribution is permitted. Some photos and images used on Not The Nation are taken from the Internet. If one of them is yours, we apologize and are grateful. The author(s) of Not The Nation choose(s) to remain anonymous." 
  157. ^ Anonymous (September 9, 2011). "Thai army quietly abandons Preah Vihear temple". Not The Nation. http://notthenation.com/2011/09/thai-army-quietly-abandons-preah-vihear-temple/. Retrieved September 28, 2011. "With July’s election results confirmed by the Election Commission, and the nation’s contentious political divide firmly aligned on policy battles in Parliament and the Cabinet, the usefulness of the Preah Vihear issue as a knee-jerk nationalist wedge issue has diminished to the point where the army no longer feels it merits the commitment of defense resources, according to a regional commander." 

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