Deputy PM to visit Phnom Penh Saturday to explain stance on the temple
Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban on Tuesday said he will travel to Phnom Penh on Saturday on a mission to clarify to Khmer PM Hun Sen the Bangkok's opposition to Unesco's listing of the Preah Vihear temple. The Unesco has agreed to register the temple as a World Heritage Site of Cambodia in July, 2008. Suthep said he and Defence Minister Gen Prawit Wongsuwan would visit Cambodia to meet Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen to stave off any misunderstanding on the Preah Vihear issue between the two neighbouring countries. He said Thailand and Cambodia had shared common stance to avoid border conflicts and the issue at the moment was not between Thailand and Cambodia, but Thailand and UNESCO's World Heritage Committee. Thai Prime Minister Abhisit said earlier the government would ask UNESCO's World Heritage Committee to review last year's decision to register Preah Vihear as a World Heritage Site when the meets this week in Spain. He would also propose that the temple be registered jointly as a World Heritage Site by Thailand and Cambodia, not as a unilateral action by Cambodia. Suthep said he hoped that Hun Sen would have better understanding on Thailand's position. In 1962 the International Court of Justice ruled that Preah Vihear belongs to Cambodia, but the most accessible entrance begins at the foot of a mountain in Thailand, and both sides claim overlapping portions of the surrounding territory. Armed clashes between the two military forces have since then occurred periodically near the temple, especially in a 4.6-square-kilometre disputed area.
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