PHNOM PENH, Aug. 20 (Xinhua) -- Cambodian and Thailand have agreed to
arrange a second-phase troop redeployment at the disputed border area near the
Preah Vihear Temple in the eponymous province of Cambodia, foreign minister Hor
Namhong said here on Wednesday.
Both sides will convene a meeting between Head of the Cambodian Temporary
Coordinating Task Force and Head of the Thai Regional Border Committee (RBC) On
Aug. 29 in Cambodia to discuss the second-phase of redeployment, said Hor,
Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, who just returned
home from Thailand after having a meeting with his Thai counterpart Tej Bunnag
to end the 37-day-long military standoff at the two countries' border area.
Both troops started to face off there on July 15 and the personnel
gradually accumulated to over a thousand in the coming weeks. However, major
evacuation occurred on Aug. 16 and there are now only dozens of officers and
soldiers left near the area.
In addition, Hor said Wednesday at the airport, both ministers also agreed
to recommend to their governments that the next meeting of legal experts and the
Thai-Cambodian Joint Commission on Demarcation for Land Boundary (JBC) be
convened in early Oct. 2008 to discuss the issues related to the survey and
demarcation of the relevant sectors under the term of reference and master plan
of JBC.
On July 15, Thai troops went into the border area to fetch three
trespassers who had intended to claim Thai sovereignty over the Preah Vihear
Temple. The troops stationed there ever since, thus triggering the military
stalemate.
On July 28, foreign ministers from Cambodia and Thailand held a meeting in
Siem Reap province and agreed to mull the possibility of evacuating troops from
the border.
On Aug. 3, Thai troops entered the Tamone Toch and Tamone Thom temples in
neighboring Otdar Meanchey province of Cambodia, thus aggravating the standoff.
On Aug. 16, most of the troops at the Keo Sikha Kiri Svara Pagoda and
within the surrounding area of the Preah Vihear Temple were evacuated according
to both sides' agreement.
The Preah Vihear Temple straddles the Cambodian-Thai border atop the
Dangrek Mountain and was listed as a World Heritage Site on July 7 by UNESCO's
World Heritage Committee.
In 1962, the International Court of Justice decided that the 11-century
temple and the land around belongs to Cambodia, which rankled the Thais and has
led to continuous disputes.