Friday, July 30, 2010
Op-Ed by MP
"The Khmer people have been no strangers to such things as grief and suffering, but if come under attack they will likely summon all their resolve and strain their every sinew to defend their sacred ancestral grounds. As for the Thais, should they decide to make good their threat, my hunch is, Preah Vihear could prove ‘a bridge too far’ for them."
NATIONALISM at its heart is an emotive force and can
be a dangerous aberration as the tone of some of the reports we have coming
from the Thai press and media would seem to indicate.
Most Thais have learned through selective history
texts only of 'Thai territories' lost to the French at the turn of the last
century. Indeed many Thais have been led to believe that all of present-day
Cambodia had once been part of their domain. Some prominent Thai officials have
even claimed that the Thais love Cambodia more than the Cambodians themselves
love their own country. If this refers to the Thais' insatiable appetite for
more portions of Khmer land or to the disunity and incompetence in sections of
the Cambodian elite down the centuries, then it is perhaps a claim difficult to
dismiss out of hand. The point is, if the Thais feel genuine grievances over
these so-called 'lost territories' which had been under continued Thai/Siamese
subjugation or influence for perhaps a few hundred years at the most, how much
greater might be the sense of injustice and grievance the Khmer people have had
to bear over territories ceded by one means or another to both Vietnam and
Siam, and in view of the fact that these territories had also been known to be
part of the Khmer Universe since before recorded history?
The ICJ's resolution could not have been 'murky' or
'unclear' about the Temple's environs or its proximities including ludicrous
references - in some sections of Thai influenced media - to 'the land
underneath the Temple' itself. Not if the Resolution rules that the Temple
stood on Cambodian soil - unless one imagines that the Temple can be sustained
in mid-air?
In fact, any structural dimension of this Temple
whether it consists of a causeway or staircase forms an integral part of the
Temple as a whole and must be considered inextricably linked to it. Otherwise,
what we have is a dismembered rather than a single compact structure. On the
other hand, If the Temple is more accessible from the Thai side of the border
it is more an evidence of the ICJ’s or the Franco-Siamese Treaty’s shortcomings
in ensuring that Cambodia would have ownership over the house as well as the
entrance path leading up to it than any supporting factor in favour of the
Thais’ claim to the area, or indeed the fault of geography itself.
Of course, at the time of the Temple’s construction,
Thailand or Siam had not even existed on the mainland of South East Asia.
Moreover, as I understand it the ‘watershed principle’ is only meant as a
general operating norm subject to variations as to existing topographic,
cultural features or details where necessary, exemplified perfectly in this
case by the Temple complex as such, and I think this basic assumption is what
is subsumed in the Franco-Siamese Treaty of 1906-1907 and what underlies the
ICJ's judgement of 1962 in Cambodia's favour.
The Khmer people may be a little lost and confused
after centuries of wars and strife (starting with the cultural genocide
committed against the Khmers by the Siamese Kingdom of Ayutthaya around mid
14th century onward) as to certain forms of cultural identity, but they would
never have sufficient cause to resort to applying alien appellations such as
the prefix ‘Hindu’ by which to identify their historical roots and ancestral
heritage. That such a term is used at all is indicative of both intellectual
dishonesty and a shameless, contrived instance of Thai political correctness
gone mad. One could write many books about the Hindu civilisation, but they
would be more pertinent to that dawn of Indian civilisation that arose over
several thousand years ago in the Hindus Valley somewhere on the Indian
sub-continent, than it is to the sacred Prasats
built by the Khmer kings, even if Brahmanism – but not this religious influence
alone - can be said to have informed their world view or religiosity.
The latest news is that the WHC has postponed its
discussion of Cambodia’s management plan proposal to another year on technical
procedural grounds. This decision should not be allowed to overly impinge upon
or hinder Cambodia’s desperate need for economic investment and rebuilding in
the area concerned notwithstanding Bangkok’s delaying tactics and objecting
nuisances of which Cambodia already has more than enough.
Legally or technically, it may appear that the Thais
are not after the Temple itself, but only the so-called ‘disputed’ surrounding
areas. Yet, if the Thais are to have their way over this dispute, it is the
actual intrinsic capital that the Temple contains as mediated through its
commercial and economic appeal and repercussions that will ultimately sooth
their appetite. So yes, in other words, it is the Temple that they really want
first and foremost, over and above even considerations of national sovereignty
or security; something they have ostensibly invoked to front their true
motives, fooling the Thai public and international opinion alike in the
process.
How could any decent soul be swayed by a ruling elite
that has seen nothing wrong in formally churning hard foreign currency out of
the flesh and humiliation of thousands of poor vulnerable young women; who even
jest that ‘the flesh industry’, whatever else it implies, is still nonetheless
‘good for the national balance of payment’? Even our much derided and
uncultured Prime Minister who had never been to Eton or Oxbridge for learning
has shown far better moral scruples on this subject of vice, even if he has
been somewhat ineffectual in matching his rhetoric with action.
There is nothing wrong with the proposed Management
Plan in the area around the Preah Vihear temple. After Siem Reap and Angkor
Wat, Preah Vihear has the potential to become Cambodia's second most popular
tourist destination owing perhaps to its breath-taking location and topography
and therefore any resulting economic benefit will have been felt far beyond the
immediate region, not excluding Thai businesses and local people on either side
of the Dangrek Range. Cambodia also has every right to construct highways and
erect facilities to integrate this landmark region into her own national setup
in order to engender or stimulate rural development.
One could only hope that there are cooler heads and
more sensible forces within the Bangkok administration than the ones penning
one-sided – if amusing - pieces that have been appearing on the pages of The
Nation and Bangkok Post newspapers in the last few years. Politicians –like
most mortals - are capable of reacting and/or succumbing to pressure exerted
upon them through the media. The most potent and sinister influence that could
drive the Thais into a fateful armed collision with Cambodia over the Preah
Vihear temple issue again, however, will have to be their own self-perpetuated
delusion that their nation’s habitual imperial rise – manifest destiny - in the
region has been rather unnecessarily inconvenienced by a small, poverty-ridden
nation like Cambodia. Such a scenario is of course something to be dreaded, not
least because of war’s inevitable ‘collateral’ exactions upon humanity.
The Khmer people have been no strangers to such things
as grief and suffering, but if come under attack they will likely summon all
their resolve and strain their every sinew to defend their sacred ancestral
grounds. As for the Thais, should they decide to make good their threat, my
hunch is, Preah Vihear could prove ‘a bridge too far’ for them.
Source: KI Media
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