Friday, 28 August 2020

Cambodia Distributes New Map of Border With Vietnam Despite Claims it Cedes Land to Hanoi


Khmer Circle

We are well into the twenty-first century and Vietnam - a nation carved out of its neighbours' territories - is still proactively usurping Cambodian lands and sea by all means unsavoury and hideous. When Pol Pot’s regime sought to defend Cambodian sovereignty against like acts of aggression and encroachment through arms, Hanoi labelled that response “mediaeval rural mentality”.  What is the mentality behind Hanoi taking full, unashamed advantage of a small nation in the grip of another brutal regime it had installed and has helped to remain in power over the last four decades?  With “friends” such as these, who needs enemies?!

'Map drawn jointly by the two countries'? Really? Why so many straight-protruding lines at Cambodia's expense everywhere? And, is it still 181, 035 km2 in total to Cambodia? No? 

Now you see it, now you don't?! Hanoi must be feeling so smug at this point in time. A people they have always seen as easy preys; "savages" given to being manipulated and deceived again and again, have lived up to their expectations to the fullest sense. All thanks to an uneducated, undeniably savage brute they placed on Cambodia’s political throne.

The Vietnamese’s traditional distaste for Cambodian ‘savages’ does not preclude their sponsorship of a man or a group seen as the best possible manifestation of their worst prejudice and stereotype when they need such a personality to accomplish their predatory designs on their behalf. Now you see why many Khmers have this ‘negative’ views of their Vietnamese neighbours, and much of this is all down to centuries of this kind of treachery and aggrandisement from the Vietnamese state.   

It is said that true and lasting peace cannot be achieved without Justice being its foundation. If so, this principle applies to nations and their long-term relations also...

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2020-08-27
Cambodian police confront Vietnamese soldiers in a disputed area of the border, April 26, 2020.
Cambodian police confront Vietnamese soldiers in a disputed area of the border, April 26, 2020.
Kandal province police

 
 
Cambodia on Thursday distributed a newly drawn topographical map of the country’s shared border with Vietnam to local authorities and submitted it to the United Nations for recognition, despite ongoing allegations that the government has allowed Vietnam to encroach on Cambodian territory.

The border designation reflects one agreed to in a 1:25,000 scale map exchanged between Cambodia and Vietnam in a ceremony at the Moc Bai International Border Gate in southern Vietnam’s Tay Ninh province, on the border with Cambodia’s Svay Rieng province, on Aug. 1.

Speaking at Thursday’s distribution ceremony, Cambodian Defense Minister Tea Banh called the new map “historic” and of “significant importance” to the country.

“These maps are for public use—they are authentic,” he said.

“We didn’t have one in the past, but it is real now. We have demarcated the border according to the maps … I am very proud of it. This gives us a strong foundation to resolve our differences.”

Tea Banh said that anyone who criticizes the government’s handling of the border is an “extremist” and “will not be forgiven” for making false statements about Cambodia ceding land to its neighbor. He noted that Cambodia also shares a border with Laos and Thailand, but only the border with Vietnam receives negative attention from activists.

Unresolved border issues between Cambodia and Vietnam, former French colonies from the 1860s to 1954, have regularly inflamed nationalist sentiment. The disputed border has sparked incidents in the past, with the construction by Vietnam of military posts in contested areas quickly challenged by Cambodian authorities in Phnom Penh.

Activists in Cambodia say farmers are losing land because the government is demarcating the border based on a 1985 treaty from Vietnam’s 1979-89 occupation of the country following its ouster of the Khmer Rouge regime.

A joint communique signed by Cambodia and Vietnam in 1995 stipulates that neither side can make any changes to border markers or allow cross-border cultivation or settlement pending the resolution of outstanding border issues.

The dispute again came to the forefront with the July 31 arrest of union leader Rong Chhun for claiming the Cambodian government has allowed Vietnam to encroach on farmland along their shared border. The president of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions (CCU), was officially charged with “incitement to commit a felony or cause social unrest” the following day, prompting near-daily protests demanding his release.

Since then, two of Rong Chhun’s supporters from the civil society group Khmer Thavarak have been charged with crimes in connection to a protest calling for him to be freed, while Suong Sophorn, the president of the little-known opposition Khmer Win Party (KWP), was arrested and charged with “incitement” after visiting the border and making similar accusations.

Prime Minister Hun Sen on Aug. 15 told the public that the new map was published in Denmark, suggesting it was independently arbitrated, but said it had put Cambodia “at an advantage over Vietnam.”

However, Um Sam An, the border policy chief of the banned opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), suggested that the new map was unilaterally drawn by Hanoi and said it had caused Cambodia to cede at least 3,000 hectares (7,415 acres) of land to Vietnam.

“The government has handed over an illegal map and we have lost Cambodian land,” he told RFA, adding that he will continue to advocate for a redrawing of the border.

Um Sam An did not offer any evidence to support his claims but referred to the 1985 treaty as the reason for the land loss.

Rong Chhun discusses border demarcation with villagers in Tbong Khmum province’s Ponhea Kraek district, July 21, 2020.
Rong Chhun discusses border demarcation with villagers in Tbong Khmum province’s Ponhea Kraek district, July 21, 2020. Photo courtesy of villagers
 
 
Border structures

Meanwhile, border activists called Thursday on the government to prevent Vietnamese authorities from building concrete structures near nondemarcated border areas in the Cambodian provinces of Takeo and Kandal, Kratie, Prey Veng, Svay Rieng, Tboung Khmum, Mondulkiri and Ratanakkiri.

They said that so far, the Vietnamese have built 27 permanent structures.

RFA was unable to reach Kandal Provincial Governor Kong Sophoan for comment about the structures on Thursday, but he recently told local media that he had made a formal request to stop building structures to his counterparts in Vietnam, which was refused. He said he would continue to call for an end to the construction.

Cambodia’s government has lodged diplomatic protests over the structures, but Vietnam has yet to respond.

Government spokesman Phay Siphan said Thursday he had not received reports of the construction from Kandal provincial authorities but added that he doubts the legitimacy of the claims.

“Hun Sen already talked with Vietnamese leaders and asked them not to build any structures in border areas that have not been demarcated,” he said. “We have already agreed on that principle.”

Cambodia Watchdog Council (CWC) President Men Nath urged the government to resolve the issues in Kandal province, adding that it is time for Cambodia to file a complaint against Vietnam with the International Court of Justice and the U.N. to find a resolution.

“The Vietnamese have violated international law and invaded Cambodia—this is our concern,” he said.

“We want Hun Sen to tell Vietnam to stop violating international law.”

A border activist named Mean Prumh Mony said Vietnam had also violated the charter of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), of which both nations are members, and called for Cambodia to seek resolution of the issue through the regional and international community.

“Vietnam has threatened our territorial sovereignty,” he said. “We urge the government to file a complaint with the international court.”

The Vietnamese Embassy was not immediately available for comment on the dispute.

Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ah Chor Phnek Muoy Hun Sen has committed so many traitorous acts destroying Cambodia, favoring his master Yuon.
The 1991 Paris Peace Accord superseded all the treaties signed by the evil Yuon and its puppet Hun Sen.

But Ah Roleuy Hun Sen has violated the Paris agreement and signed the 2005 supplemental treaty with the evil Vietnam to revive the old treaties while Vietnam occupied Cambodia.

And now Ah Hun Sen violated the constitution by adopting a new map drafted by the evil Yuon. Ah devil Hun Sen has done and will do whatever it takes to please his master Yuon at the expense of Khmer people and Cambodia.

If Khmer people keep silencing, they should not cry when the Vietnamization of Cambodia is complete.

Anonymous said...

Ah Chor Phnek Muoy Hun Sen has committed so many traitorous acts destroying Cambodia, favoring his master Yuon.
The 1991 Paris Peace Accord superseded all the treaties signed by the evil Yuon and its puppet Hun Sen.

But Ah Roleuy Hun Sen has violated the Paris agreement and signed the 2005 supplemental treaty with the evil Vietnam to revive the old treaties while Vietnam occupied Cambodia.

And now Ah Hun Sen violated the constitution by adopting a new map drafted by the evil Yuon. Ah devil Hun Sen has done and will do whatever it takes to please his master Yuon at the expense of Khmer people and Cambodia.

If Khmer people keep silencing, they should not cry when the Vietnamization of Cambodia is complete.