PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia's prime minister has accused Thailand
of firing more than 50,000 artillery and mortar shells in more than a
week of border clashes.
Prime Minister Hun Sen said Tuesday that
some shells that landed in Oddar Meanchey province have not exploded and
must be disarmed before civilians return to evacuated areas. Cambodia
still face the problem of unexploded ordnance, especially mines, from
the Vietnam War era and guerrilla wars in the decades afterward.
While
much of the area remains inaccessible to journalists, witnesses did not
report such intensive fire that could account for so many shells.
"It
is impossible for us to fire such a number of shells," Col. Prawit
Hukaew, a spokesman for Thailand's army in the northeast, said
Wednesday. He put the number of shells fired in the hundreds.
The
fighting that started April 22 has quieted in recent days. But
Thailand's state broadcaster MCOT reported a Thai soldier was killed
Monday night, bringing the death toll to one Thai civilian and a total
of 17 soldiers from both sides.
The conflict involves small swaths
of land along the border that have been disputed for more than half a
century. The latest fighting was the sixth since 2008, when Cambodia's
11th-century Preah Vihear temple was given U.N. World Heritage status
over Thailand's objections.
Local commanders for both countries
last Thursday held talks that led to a de facto cease-fire, which did
not actually end the clashes but reduced their intensity. On Monday,
tens of thousands of refugees from the combat zone began returning to
their homes.
Hun Sen said the two sides' regional commanders would meet to seek to implement a true cease-fire.
Hun
Sen is supposed to meet Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva for talks
on the border issue at a weekend meeting in Indonesia of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
The two countries have
tentatively agreed to allow Indonesia observers be stationed at the
border and are also seeking more lasting solutions to their dispute.
Cambodia
last week asked the United Nations' highest court to order Thailand to
withdraw troops and halt military activity around a temple at the centre
of a decades-old border dispute that has flared into deadly military
clashes.
In a request filed April 28 and made available Tuesday on
the court's website, Cambodia asked International Court of Justice
judges to urgently deal with its request "because of the gravity of the
situation."
Cambodia claims that according to a 1962 ruling by the
court the temple is on its territory and warns that if the intervention
request is rejected and clashes continue, "the damage to the Temple of
Preah Vihear, as well as irremediable losses of life and human suffering
... would become worse."
Rulings by the court are supposed to be final and binding.
Cambodia
has formally applied for an "interpretation" — a written explanation —
by the court of its 1962 judgment, and argued in its written application
that the court's opinion "could then serve as a basis for a final
resolution of this dispute through negotiation or any other peaceful
means."
___
Associated Press writer Mike Corder in The Hague contributed to this report.
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