By Jonathan Head
BBC News, Bangkok
Monday, 10 November 2008
Senior Thai and Cambodian officials have started two days of negotiations over their disputed border.
It is the first high-level meeting since their armed forces clashed near an ancient temple last month, causing the deaths of three soldiers.
Thailand has selected one of its most experienced officials to head its team for this meeting.
It is an attempt to break the deadlock over the 800km (500-mile) border - but progress is predicted to be slow.
The dispute centres on a small piece of land around the ancient temple at Preah Vihear, but has now spread to other parts of the border.
Cambodia stands by a map drawn up a century ago by French cartographers, which clearly puts the temple and the surrounding land inside its territory.
It was this map that Cambodia used in its successful case at the International Court of Justice in 1962.
Thailand argues that it never recognised the map, and that while it accepts the ICJ verdict on the temple itself, the area next to it is still disputed.
Troops from both countries are now confronting each other from trenches dug recently in this strip of land.
The talks could make some headway by reducing the tensions between the two sides, and thus the likelihood of repeated clashes.
But with nationalist sentiment now fired up in both countries, neither government is yet ready to make the concessions necessary for a permanent demarcation of their troubled border.
BBC News, Bangkok
Monday, 10 November 2008
Senior Thai and Cambodian officials have started two days of negotiations over their disputed border.
It is the first high-level meeting since their armed forces clashed near an ancient temple last month, causing the deaths of three soldiers.
Thailand has selected one of its most experienced officials to head its team for this meeting.
It is an attempt to break the deadlock over the 800km (500-mile) border - but progress is predicted to be slow.
The dispute centres on a small piece of land around the ancient temple at Preah Vihear, but has now spread to other parts of the border.
Cambodia stands by a map drawn up a century ago by French cartographers, which clearly puts the temple and the surrounding land inside its territory.
It was this map that Cambodia used in its successful case at the International Court of Justice in 1962.
Thailand argues that it never recognised the map, and that while it accepts the ICJ verdict on the temple itself, the area next to it is still disputed.
Troops from both countries are now confronting each other from trenches dug recently in this strip of land.
The talks could make some headway by reducing the tensions between the two sides, and thus the likelihood of repeated clashes.
But with nationalist sentiment now fired up in both countries, neither government is yet ready to make the concessions necessary for a permanent demarcation of their troubled border.
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