What's new

Thai and Cambodian Troops Clash Over Hindu Temple

Veeru

BANNED
Joined
Oct 12, 2010
Messages
2,609
Reaction score
0
Thai and Cambodian Troops Clash Over Hindu Temple

Thai and Cambodian Troops Clash Over Temple
By SETH MYDANS
Published: February 7, 2011

THNAL BEK, Cambodia — Refugees clustered around cooking fires at a schoolhouse here as Cambodia and Thailand prepared for the possibility of further violence after a fourth day of shelling on Monday at their disputed border.

The Cambodian Army cleared out military vehicles and construction equipment and evacuated villagers from the foot of a steep cliff that is the site of an 11th-century Hindu temple claimed by both sides.

The dispute involves a century-old French colonial map, a ruling by the International Court of Justice and a decision in 2008 by Unesco, the cultural arm of the United Nations, to list the temple, Preah Vihear, as a Cambodian World Heritage site.

It has become tangled within the complex knot of Thai politics as well as simmering enmity between the two neighbors that has erupted into violence near the temple several times since the World Heritage listing.

The current fighting is the most sustained engagement between the two nations. As many as five civilians and soldiers have been killed on both sides, according to Thai and Cambodian news media reports.

Cambodia called on the United Nations to send peacekeepers to the border area one day after asking the Security Council to convene an urgent meeting to “stop Thailand’s aggression.”

“We will go to the Security Council whether you like it or not,” Prime Minister Hun Sen said in a speech Monday, addressing his counterparts in Thailand. “The armed clash is threatening regional security.”

Thailand has always taken the position that the dispute is a bilateral issue and that there is no need to involve outside organizations.

The Thai Foreign Ministry sent its own letter to the Security Council on Monday formally protesting what it called “repeated and unprovoked armed attacks by Cambodian troops.”

Both sides have accused each other of initiating the conflict and of shooting first in each exchange of shelling.

“Thai soldiers had no choice but to exercise the inherent right of self-defense,” Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva of Thailand said.

The Cambodian government said that Thai shelling had damaged part of the temple, but reporters were barred from the conflict area and the report was impossible to verify.

Late Sunday, the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, said he was “deeply concerned” by the fighting and urged both sides “to exercise maximum restraint,” according to a statement by his spokesperson.

In the dispute, both sides offer different interpretations of a French colonial map drawn up at the beginning of last century.

The temple is most easily accessible on the Thai side. It can be reached only up a steep cliff on the Cambodian side.

In 1962, the International Court of Justice ruled that the temple belonged to Cambodia.

The Cambodian side erected a plaque near the temple that read, in English: “Here! is the place where Thai troops invaded Cambodian territory on July 15, 2008, and withdrew at 10:30 A.M. on Dec. 1, 2010.”

Responding to Thai demands, the Cambodians removed the plaque, but replaced it with another that read: “Here! is Cambodia.” It, too, was later removed amid objections from Thailand.

The temple dispute has become a rallying cry for the “yellow shirt” demonstrators in Thailand, who oppose the “red shirts” who occupied Bangkok’s central shopping area last year in a protest that ended with a military crackdown.

As political tensions heat up in an election year in Thailand, thousands of yellow shirt protesters have blocked a Bangkok street for a second week, demanding that Mr. Abhisit take tougher measures at the border.

Some have called for Mr. Abhisit to resign, the same demand the red shirts made last year.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/08/world/asia/08thailand.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
 
.
Cambodia: U.N. help sought in Thai-Cambodia fighting at temple - latimes.com

Nation & World | Heritage site damaged in border clashes, Cambodia says | Seattle Times Newspaper


BERNAMA - Call For Preah Vihear Temple To Be Handed To UN


2014150849.jpg


Cambodian soldiers walk at a military base Sunday as they prepare to go to Preah Vihear temple, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that has been the focus of tension.

Thai%20man-420x0.jpg


A Thai man walks though a crater left by an artillery shell. Photo: AP

cambodia-map-420x0.jpg


Heritage temple hit in shelling, says Cambodia

12345-travel-adventure-Preah-Vihear-Cambodia-02.jpg


2662495_orig.jpg


CAMBOGIA_-_preah_vihear.jpg
 
.
Preah Vihear Temple

Phraviharngopura.jpg


Preah Vihear Temple or Prasat Preah Vihear or Temple of Preah Vihear is a Hindu temple built during the reign of Khmer Empire, that is situated atop a 525-metre (1,722 ft) cliff in the Dângrêk Mountains, in the Preah Vihear province of northern Cambodia and on the border of Kantharalak district (amphoe) in Sisaket province of eastern Thailand. In 1962, following a lengthy dispute between Thailand and Cambodia over ownership, a majority of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague awarded the temple to Cambodia.

Affording a view for many kilometers across a plain, Prasat Preah Vihear has the most spectacular setting of all the temples built during the six-centuries-long Khmer Empire. As a key edifice of the empire's spiritual life, it was supported and modified by successive kings and so bears elements of several architectural styles.

Preah Vihear is unusual among Khmer temples in being constructed along a long north-south axis, rather than having the conventional rectangular plan with orientation toward the east, and was obviously built to serve the region to the north.

The temple gives its name to Cambodia's Preah Vihear province, in which it is now located, as well as the Khao Phra Wihan National Park which borders it in Thailand's Sisaket province and through which the temple is most easily accessible. On July 7, 2008, Preah Vihear was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[1]

Preah Vihear Temple - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
. .
niether thailand nor combodia have hindu population... wonder why they are fighting for the temple...

GOI should intervene in this matter
 
.
niether thailand nor combodia have hindu population... wonder why they are fighting for the temple...

It holds hertiage value for them .

GOI should intervene in this matter

If India called itself a Hindu state , maybe we should.

I think Cambodia has more weight here since Khmer empire was Cambodian

On the whole this just another example of how colonists have screwed things up for the region.
 
.
niether thailand nor combodia have hindu population... wonder why they are fighting for the temple...

GOI should intervene in this matter

Both the countries have tiny Hindu populations, but thats not the reason they fight. Its heritage and most importantly LAND!!! Entire ideologies are built up around that precious commodity! Whats a skirmish!
 
.
niether thailand nor combodia have hindu population... wonder why they are fighting for the temple...

GOI should intervene in this matter

What made you think we can help them when we could not resolve our temple issues? we can certainly help in restoration effort of the temple but not in the conflict resolution..
 
.
Apparently, during the Cambodian civil war - the Thais built a road in that area. Before the road was constructed, it was impossible to travel through the terrain. They had to use elephants.

Now Thailand is claiming the territory in which it built the road along with the temple.

GOI should intervene in this matter

NO.
 
.
The temple brings in millions of tourist every year to Cambodia, its a money making big tourist attraction.
 
.
sorry state of affairs..The Temple looks almost finished already.
 
.
Did Hindus at any point form a majority or a significant minority in Cambodia/Thailand?
Looking at the situation from an unbiased foreigners eye i would have to take the Cambodian side.
 
.
Did Hindus at any point form a majority or a significant minority in Cambodia/Thailand?
Looking at the situation from an unbiased foreigners eye i would have to take the Cambodian side.

Hinduism was the only religion till the born of Budhdha [for 2-3 thousand years] . So Hindus were in majority [and 100% majority] from Afghanistan to South East Asia. :)
 
.
Hinduism was the only religion till the born of Budhdha [for 2-3 thousand years] . So Hindus were in majority [and 100% majority] from Afghanistan to South East Asia. :)

Are you sure about this? South East Asians had their own animist beliefs didnt they? Many still survive in Indonesia for example from what i know.
 
.
As I know, During French colony times, Thai were defeated by France, so they had to give up the temple for Cambodia, and of course France made a map about it also.So, it must belong to Cambodia.

Thailand just make some political issue when they got stuck with many coups happend lately
 
.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom