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| Unesco and Cambodian flags at the ancient Khmer Preah Vihear temple ruins - image google |
"UNESCO called the temple, "an outstanding masterpiece of Khmer architecture, in terms of plan, decoration and relationship to the spectacular landscape environment.""
By MIKE CORDER Associated Press
THE HAGUE, Netherlands April 15, 2013 (AP)
Cambodia asked the United Nations' highest court
Monday to clarify a 50-year-old ruling on ownership of a 1,000-year-old temple
near its border with Thailand, warning that maintaining the status quo would be
a threat to peace between the Southeast Asian neighbors.
The International Court of Justice ruled in 1962 that
the Preah Vihear temple stands in Cambodia, but Thailand says it did not draw
definitive boundaries around the World Heritage-listed site and the Southeast
Asian neighbors' armies have repeatedly clashed there in recent years.
Failure to clarify the boundaries would "very
probably have unfortunate consequences which would prevent the two states from
living in a friendly, peaceful and cooperative environment." Cambodian
Foreign Minister Hor Namhong warned as four days of hearings opened in the
court's newly renovated Great Hall of Justice.
Thailand will make its legal arguments Wednesday and
its delegation had no immediate comment Monday. Judges will likely issue their
judgment within six months. Decisions by the world court are final and legally
binding.
In written arguments submitted to the court, Thailand
accuses Cambodia of seeking to use the 1962 judgment as a pretext for settling
an ongoing border dispute between the two countries.
In 2011, the court in The Hague created a
demilitarized zone around the temple after fighting left about 20 dead and
displaced thousands of people from near the temple, but Namhong said talks
about withdrawing troops have gone nowhere.
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization put the temple, perched on a rocky plateau overlooking
Thailand and Cambodia, on its world heritage list in 2008.
UNESCO called the temple, "an outstanding
masterpiece of Khmer architecture, in terms of plan, decoration and
relationship to the spectacular landscape environment."
But, ironically, the 2008 listing — intended to help
protect the site — instead led to an escalation of long-simmering tensions
between Cambodia and Thailand over the 1962 ownership ruling.
Cambodia is now hoping a definitive clarification of
the 50-year-old ruling will form a foundation for peace.
"I hope your court will be able to hand down a
judgment ... which will finally close this dispute which has darkened relations
over the past years" between the two countries, Namhong said.

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