Aug 1, 2010

Temple tension mounts

                                                                 Preah Vihear Temple, Cambodia

CAMBODIAN and Thai officials held abortive talks on the sidelines of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee meeting in Brazil yesterday in a last-ditch attempt to resolve a dispute over Cambodia’s management plan for Preah Vihear temple.

Phay Siphan, spokesman for the Council of Ministers, said that during the 45-minute meeting, Deputy Prime Minister Sok An and Thai Natural Resources and Environment Minister Suwit Khunkitti reiterated their governments’ stances on the temple listing.

He said the Thai official demanded joint management of Preah Vihear, and that Sok An repeated Cambodia’s long-standing opposition to such an arrangement.

“There was no significant result from the meeting. The meeting focused on the issue of sovereignty,” Phay Siphan said, but Cambodia “welcomed” UNESCO’s attempt to broker a resolution to the conflict.

The 21-member WHC, which is meeting until Tuesday, was to note the submission of Cambodia’s management plan for Preah Vihear late yesterday, and the lead-up to the session has prompted a fresh flare-up in the long-standing temple dispute.

Thailand has opposed Preah Vihear’s listing as a World Heritage site since before its July 2008 inscription, claiming sovereignty over a 4.6-square-kilometre area adjacent to the temple.

On Wednesday, Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva threatened that if the WHC approved the Cambodian plan, Bangkok would consider withdrawing from UNESCO.

The Associated Press also quoted Abhisit as saying that the committee should act as a “purveyor of peace and culture, not of tension and conflicts”, and that the Thai army was ready to defend the country’s sovereignty.

Cambodian officials, however, have dismissed the Thai claims, pointing to a 1962 ruling by the International Court of Justice that handed the temple – and surrounding lands – to Cambodia.

Phay Siphan said the Thai threats of noncooperation with UNESCO were an “insult” to the world body.

“Thailand will not gain if they walk out of the WHC because Thailand has many tourism sites [listed as] World Heritage sites,” he said. “The obligation of Cambodia is to implement the decision from the WHC, and we have done that since 2008.” He described the management of Preah Vihear as an “absolutely technical matter”.

UNESCO spokeswoman Sue Williams said yesterday that the dispute between Cambodia and Thailand was “a strictly bilateral” issue, and that the WHC had no mandate to address it.

She also said that Thai talk of the WHC “approving” the Cambodian management plan was misguided.

“The World Heritage Committee does not adopt or approve any plans. All they can do is note that the management plan has been submitted,” she said. Williams added that all member states had the right to withdraw from UNESCO, but that Thailand’s potential withdrawal would not affect the status of any of its World Heritage sites.

News from PhnomPenhPost


Assembly to cut Mu Sochua’s salary

 
THE National Assembly would deduct a portion of opposition lawmaker Mu Sochua’s salary by the end of the month and use it to pay court-ordered compensation to Prime Minister Hun Sen, officials said yesterday.

Sman Teath, a Cambodian People’s Party lawmaker and deputy president of the National Assembly’s Finance and Banking Commission, said the assembly’s Permanent Committee made the decision to dock Mu Sochua’s salary at a meeting yesterday.

“The committee has made the decision ... because the court has ordered the financial department of the assembly to dock Mu Sochua’s salary,” and the measure would start at the end of the month, Sman Teath said.

The move would mark a step forward in the court’s attempt to collect fines levied against Mu Sochua in connection with her legal dispute with the prime minister.

Last August, Phnom Penh Municipal Court convicted Mu Sochua of defaming Hun Sen and ordered her to pay him 8 million riels (US$1,886) in compensation, in addition to a fine of 8.5 million riels.

She has refused to hand over the sums, arguing that the case is both an attempt to intimidate the opposition and evidence that the judiciary lacks independence.

On Thursday, Mu Sochua called the decision to dock her salary unjust.

“Being docked by force, it is contrary to internal regulations,” she said.

“I would like to have a proper justice system for the people. I am one victim among thousands of people.”

The court has ordered the National Assembly to dock 4.2 million riels per month ($990) until the compensation is paid in full.

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