Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva took the Indonesia-brokered peace solution back to square one yesterday as he insisted that Cambodia withdraw its troops "before" a team of observers can be accepted and added an extra condition by requesting that Jakarta dispatch an advance survey team to the border area.
Foreign ministers from Cambodia, Indonesia and Thailand met in
Jakarta on Monday and agreed to combine all conditions and demands from
both sides into one package. However, under the package, all parties
must refrain from setting prerequisites before the package is
implemented.
"We talk about who must do what in advance before
taking the next step. It is a process, not an event-by-event thing,"
Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said.
To be more precise, he said it would happen when Thailand had formally agreed with the terms of reference (TOR) of the team of Indonesian observers, and at the same time Phnom Penh had announced the meeting of the military-run General Border Committee (GBC).
Initially, both sides agreed to
the text of the TOR, but Thailand would not officially accept it until
Cambodia withdrew its troops from the disputed areas and the Preah
Vihear temple. Bangkok wants the troop withdrawal to be discussed by the
GBC.
For its part, Cambodia has rejected the condition and is
refusing to call the GBC meeting until Thailand formally accepts the
team of observers.
In the Cabinet meeting yesterday, Abhisit said
he would have the new peace package considered by the Cabinet as well
as propose that Indonesia send an advance survey team to the border
before the TOR and troop withdrawal is discussed.
Premier's proposal of an advance team is a modification
Abhisit's
proposal of an advance team is a modification, because the four-page
TOR - a copy of which was seen by The Nation - does not mention any
advance teams. The TOR mostly indicates the role of the team of
observers and the location where they will be stationed.
The
prime minister also said he wanted the conflict in the border areas of
Ta Muen Thom and Ta Khwai in Surin province, where a serious military
clash broke out in late April, to be included in the peace package.
Cambodia
has not put any additional conditions in the package because, as
Foreign Minister Hor Namhong told Kyodo News, his government was ready
to accept the package, which involves a series of steps to be taken by
the two countries under a specific timeline.
Speaking to
reporters upon arrival from the Jakarta peace talks, Thai Foreign
Minister Kasit Piromya said there would be no implementation of the
peace package until Cambodia withdrew its troops from Preah Vihear and
adjacent areas.
Thailand has been consistently calling for the
withdrawal of Cambodian troops, because a military presence goes against
the spirit of the Hague Convention for the protection of cultural
property and the memorandum of understanding signed in 2000 by both
countries, he said.
The Nation
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