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Author Topic: Preah Vihear - A Shared Heritage  (Read 5814 times)

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Offline Andrew Hicks

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Preah Vihear - A Shared Heritage
« on: October 28, 2008, 08:41:57 AM »
I'd like to share with you an article from my blog at www.thaigirl2004.blogspot.com where you'll find a series of pictures of the temple that's disputed between Thailand and Cambodia.  The next article on the blog, "Frogs and a Border War is about the impact of all this on bordertade at the Chong Jom market.


Khao Phra Viharn – A Shared Heritage

A personal view by Andrew Hicks


I can’t stop thinking about the long running border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia over the temple of Khao Phra Viharn.  Called Preah Vihear in Khmer, this fine Khmer style temple sits on top of a cliff in Cambodia just across the border from Thailand’s Si Saket, not far from where I now live.  The volatile state of domestic politics in both countries has recently caused relations to deteriorate badly and the Cambodians have closed the temple to visitors from Thailand.  The issue has become a political football, the focus of an entirely avoidable crisis.

   The current tension flared up over Cambodia’s application to UNESCO to have the temple listed as a World Heritage Site, which was duly granted on July 15.  With Thai and Cambodian troops occupying disputed land below the temple it only needed one hot-headed soldier for fighting to break out.  Cross-border trade between the two countries has been badly affected and it could be years before the temple is again open to access from Thailand.

   The conflict perhaps now highlights a positive point that is easily missed.  Until recently cooperation by the two countries over access to the temple has been little short of exemplary and could easily be continued.  Thailand was forced to accept the 1962 decision of the International Court of Justice that the temple fell within Cambodia and realized that its best interest lay in working with and not against Cambodia. 

   When the Khmer Rouge were first out the area in 1998 and essential mine clearance done, agreements were then reached to allow visitors from Thailand into the temple without any passport formalities whatsoever.  It was a pleasantly relaxed atmosphere and for all practical purposes the border became invisible. 

   As the ancient Khmer empire included much of Thailand, the many fine temples that remain are part of a shared heritage.  People on both sides of an artificial divide should thus have ready access to Khao Phra Viharn.  Rather than inflaming ultra-nationalist passions, they should now demand that their governments again cooperate in the open border policy that has served so well.

   Listing as a World Heritage Site should be seen as an opportunity for the two countries to work together for their mutual benefit, though if the Thais do not co-operate in this, then Cambodia will go it alone.  Talk is of Cambodia building a new road to the foot of the cliff and of private interests building a cable car up to the temple.  There are wider issues too as all 800 kilometres of the border still needs demarcation, a process that has been delayed by the threat of land mines.  The border that divides the territorial sea also needs precise definition.  With substantial energy resources to be discovered there, the implications for the two countries are considerable.

   Meanwhile the world looks on, aghast that local domestic politics could so unnecessarily foment an international incident.  It’s not hard though to see a link with past turmoil in Indo-China.

   Observers may be dismayed at the current dispute but the countries of South East Asia are not solely to blame for the tensions that still set them apart.

Further pictures of Khao Phra Viharn can be found on Andrew’s blog at                           www.thaigirl2004.blogspot.com.

 

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