ENVOY CONFIDENT UNESCO WILL AGREE TO POSTPONE REVIEW OF CAMBODIA'S PREAH VIHEAR TEMPLE PLAN
Thailand hopes Unesco's World Heritage Committee will delay consideration of Cambodia's management plan for Preah Vihear temple for at least another year.
Asda Jayanama, a member of the delegation representing Thailand in
the case, said he was confident members would agree to postpone the
deliberation after Thailand had lobbied hard on several occasions.
"We gave them the reason that if both countries have no mutual
cooperation, [the implementation of] the management plan will not
happen," said Mr Asda.
"We can't compromise on this issue because the plan trespassed on Thai territory."
Mr Asda spoke to the Bangkok Post before he left Bangkok for Paris yesterday to attend Unesco's 35th WHC meeting convened today.
He was accompanied by Natural Resources and Environment Minister
Suwit Khunkitti, who was assigned by Deputy Prime Minister Trairong
Suwankiri to lead the Thai delegation in the WHC dispute.
Thailand wants the WHC to delay its consideration of Cambodia's plan
until border demarcation is completed. The meeting will conclude on June
29.
Cambodia's plan for the 11th-century Hindu temple is due to be the
seventh of the 21 items to be discussed at the meeting on Thursday.
The Preah Vihear temple border conflict flared up after Cambodia
submitted an application to have the temple inscribed as a World
Heritage Site in 2008. Thailand objected to the plan at the WHC meeting
in Brazil last year, reasoning it trespassed on Thai territory. The
meeting agreed to put off consideration for another year.
A Foreign Ministry source said the Paris meeting would consider "the state of conservation" in each agenda.
The meeting might ask Thailand to explain the reason for the postponement request, the source said.
He said if the meeting decided not to postpone consideration of
Cambodia's plan, Thailand would ask the cabinet to withdraw its
membership from the WHC on grounds that the international body failed to
promote peace and stability in contravention of its original
principles.
ML Wanwipa Charoonroj, of Thammasat University's Thai Studies
Institute, who has closely monitored the dispute, agreed with Thailand
withdrawing from the WHC if it failed to postpone consideration of
Cambodia's plan.
"It is the most appropriate way for Thailand to react to the international organisation's failure," she said.
"We have seen poor and unfair management of Unesco's WHC since it
agreed to inscribe Preah Vihear temple as a World Heritage Site despite
the fact the two countries still have border conflicts."
She said Unesco was now an organisation to promote war among countries instead of promoting peace.
Bangkok Post
0 comments