PHNOM PENH (AFP) – Cambodia has accused Thailand of "deceitful
fabrication" after Thai police arrested three men on suspicion of spying
near the neighbours' disputed border.
"The Royal Government of Cambodia wishes to assert that the above
fabrication is only a pretext to justify future aggression against
Cambodia," said a foreign ministry statement released on Friday.
Thailand and Cambodia are locked in a bitter dispute over their shared
border that has seen 28 people killed in two outbreaks of fierce
fighting this year, and the row has since moved to the United Nations'
highest court.
On Friday Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said the alleged spying
activities were unacceptable and accused Phnom Penh of "violating Thai
territory".
One Thai, one Cambodian and a Vietnamese man were picked up in
Thailand's northeastern Si Sa Ket province on Tuesday evening carrying
maps with military facilities marked on them, according to Thai police.
The suspects have denied they were spying in the area, the officer who made the arrest told AFP.
Cambodia said it "categorically rejects this deceitful fabrication by
the Thai authorities and prime minister, intending to mislead the public
and malign Cambodia", adding it had no need to spy.
Last month the country launched a legal bid at the International Court
of Justice (ICJ) in the Hague seeking to force Thailand to pull troops
from a disputed strip of land near the 900-year-old Preah Vihear temple.
The court ruled in 1962 that the temple itself belonged to Cambodia but
both Phnom Penh and Bangkok claim ownership of a 4.6-square-kilometre
(1.8-square-mile) patch of nearby territory.
In April Cambodia asked the ICJ to clarify its initial ruling. Source: AFP
The full statement dated June 10 reads as follows:
Cambodia Rejects Thailand’s Fabrication over Espionage
AKP Phnom Penh, June 11, 2011 –
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation of the Kingdom
of Cambodia has in a statement rejected the fabrication by the Thai side, stressing that Cambodia does not have any need, whatsoever, to commit what Thailand has slanderously termed as espionage. The full statement dated June 10 reads as follows:
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