Cambodian Government Declares French Maps Match Its Own

2015-09-03
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Cambodian border officials verify French maps with Cambodian ones in Phnom Penh, Sept. 3, 2015.
Cambodian border officials verify French maps with Cambodian ones in Phnom Penh, Sept. 3, 2015.
RFA

Hours after French officials handed over a set of maps to Cambodia on Thursday, the government border committee announced that the documents matched its own, calling an end to an ongoing political dispute over the demarcation of the Southeast Asian nation’s border with neighboring Vietnam.

The opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), a merged political grouping that includes the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP) in the Senate, has accused Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government of ceding land to Vietnam based on its own set of incorrect charts that adhere to a 1985 agreement signed by the two countries during Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia.

Former colonial ruler France had agreed to lend a set of maps to Cambodia following a request from Hun Sen, who also requested the same maps from the United Nations, United States and United Kingdom.

“The French maps match the Cambodian maps that are being used to demarcate Cambodia-Vietnam border,” Var Kimhong, chairman of Cambodia’s border committee, told reporters during a verification ceremony in Phnom Pehn.

French officials loaned Cambodia 25 pieces from the 26-piece map set, produced by its National Geographic Institute (IGN) prior to Cambodian independence in 1953, because they had failed to locate the final one.

Cambodia officials used their own final piece when they compared the complete sets to verify that the charts currently used by the government to demarcate the 1,228-kilometer (763-mile) border with Vietnam matched.

Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, who presided over the map verification process, prevented participants from asking questions.

But during a speech, he attacked the CNRP, saying it was exploiting the border issue for political gain.

“The maps issue must be finished at this time,” he said. “We don’t want political parties using the border issue to incite people to go against the government.”

CNRP lawmaker Ou Chanrith, who was involved in the map verification, expressed suspicion about the process because the government did not allow representatives from opposition political parties to raise questions about the documents.

“We can’t say that this verification process is acceptable,” he told reporters. “The CNRP at this time is collecting documents and other information to verify the maps separately [from the government].”

Ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) spokesman Chhim Phalvorun told RFA earlier this week that if the Cambodian and French maps matched, it would dispel any allegations that the government has been using incorrect charts.

Cambodia’s maps matched those in the 1964 set sent by the U.N. in early August.

On Aug. 26, Um Sam An, a CNRP lawmaker who is traveling in the United States on a fundraising tour, said he found the corresponding U.S. set of maps in the Library of Congress in Washington and copied it to verify against Cambodia’s set.

Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

Comments (4)
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Dina

from USA

Your story should be updated to mention that the CNRP MP who found the map at the UN,was put in jail by the govrnment to silence him, so that he cannot interfere with Vietnam's plans to takeover more Cambodian land.

Dec 18, 2016 01:33 PM

sean

Both parties are heavily corrupted and keep everything politicized in their favor, CPP is terrible and CNRP is even worse. Why spending so much time and money arguing over some km2 of land, that won't be enough to solve Cambodia's political and economic problems anyway. Just invade Vietnam and be done with it already, finish Pol Pot's job, and everyone will be happy.

It's just how easily people are manipulated under the name of patriotism for the benefit of a few elites.

Sep 07, 2015 04:15 AM

Anonymous Reader

"French officials loaned Cambodia 25 pieces from the 26-piece map set, produced by its National Geographic Institute (IGN) prior to Cambodian independence in 1953, because they had failed to locate the final one."

Could this final one they didn't find did not match the government maps? Very interesting.

"Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, who presided over the map verification process, prevented participants from asking questions."

This is the kind of opaque this corrupt government has been operating the last 35 years, which creating a lot suspicion and distrust among the people.

Sep 04, 2015 06:14 AM

Pnompenh Kmer

from Pnompenh

Of course the Maps are Matched Because they may print from the same printer or the same place But People who uses the Land They are not using within their own border and they just don't care about the Map..What Map? I don't see the Map here when I dig the soil.

Sep 03, 2015 11:01 PM

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