Saturday, January 29, 2011
Thai PM tells AP: I'll do what's right for my country over Cambodia border
Friday, January 28, 2011By Matt Moore (CP)
DAVOS, Switzerland — Thailand's prime  minister told The Associated Press on Friday that protesters demanding  it revoke its pact with Cambodia over a border dispute have a right to  make they're demands, but he will do what is best for the country.
Speaking Friday at the World  Economic Forum, Abhisit Vejjajiva said that since both nations are part  of ASEAN any resolution must be done in a peaceful manner yet protect  Thai interests, too.
"You know, they can make their  demands. They have the right to do so. We have to do what is the best  for the country," he told AP. "We feel that the way we approach the  border problems, and the problems — as far as the relationship with  Cambodia is concerned — is best for the country, which is that we try to  resolve whatever issues come up in a peaceful manner."
Earlier this week, a rally by  the People's Alliance for Democracy — also known as the Yellow Shirts —  and an associated fringe group, raised tensions in a country still  recovering from political violence last year that turned parts of the  capital into a war zone. Police on Monday arrested five men accused of  plotting to bomb the protest.
The demonstrators set up a stage  along a major street near the U.N.'s Asian headquarters and Government  House, the prime minister's office that the Yellows occupied for three  months in 2008.
The protesters want the  government to revoke a pact with Cambodia on settling border disputes;  withdraw from the U.N. Education Scientific and Culture Organization  World Heritage Committee, which approved Cambodia's application for  landmark status for a temple on the border; and force Cambodian  residents off land the group claims should belong to Thailand.
"So that we preserve good  relations — we are both part of ASEAN — and at the same time we make  sure that we protect Thai interests," he said. "So all we can do is to  explain to them (that) we feel that this is the best approach and I am  confident that majority of Thai people support" it.
The Cambodian issue has its  origins in a dispute between Cambodia and Thailand over land near a  landmark temple on their border, but has evolved into a Thai domestic  political issue.
The International Court of  Justice ruled in 1962 that the 11th-century Preah Vihear temple belongs  to Cambodia, but the decision rankled Thailand, which still claims land  around the temple.
As for neighbouring Myanmar, he  said while its recent elections "may not be perfect," they were "an  important first step and what we want to do now is to see the gradual  opening up and making sure that political process becomes more  inclusive, and we hope that the rest of the world will try to make sure  that we can support Myanmar to do that."
He pointed to the release  earlier this year of Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi in November  after seven years under house arrest as a "positive step" in that  process.
Afterward, she gave a recorded  address to the Forum, urging investment in technology and  infrastructure, and micro-lending programs in her country, but said  investors "should pay close attention to the costs and collateral damage  of our development, whether environmental or social."
Suu Kyi's party won the  country's last election, in 1990, but the army would not let it take  power and refused to convene parliament. The first parliamentary session  since 1988 is to convene Monday, dominated by a military-sponsored  party.
Suu Kyi spoke to the Davos  participants hours after Myanmar's highest court declined Friday to hear  a case she filed seeking to overturn the government's dissolution of  her party.


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