PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA: Thai and Cambodian military officials said a Thai soldier lost his leg after stepping on a land mine Thursday (2 April) but disagreed over which country he was in at the time, the latest flare-up in a tense border dispute.
The soldier was injured near the 11th century Preah Vihear temple, which is on a cliff along the countries' ill-defined border and has been a source of conflict for decades.
Troops from both countries have been stationed at the border since July 2008, and two clashes near the temple last year sparked brief concerns of war.
According to Phnom Penh, the mine exploded after a group of Thai soldiers crossed into Cambodian territory. The blast prompted the soldiers to fire shots into the air and put Cambodian troops on alert, said Yim Kheang, a Cambodian soldier at the border.
"We have received an order from the commander that if Thai soldiers enter Cambodian territory (again), we have the right to open fire," he told The Associated Press.
Thai Maj. Gen. Tawatchai Samutsakorn disputed that account.
"The Thai troops were not in Cambodian territory," he told the AP, saying the wounded soldier was a 46-year old paramilitary trooper on a patrol near the border in Thailand's northeastern Sisaket province.
Stretches of the Thai-Cambodian border remain strewn with land mines from Cambodia's civil war in the 1970s.
Last week Cambodia accused some 100 Thai soldiers of entering Cambodia at the same location, and at one point said the two sides were getting ready to fight. Thailand insisted all was calm and the border had not been breached.
The two countries share a 500-mile (800-kilometer) land border, much of which has never been clearly demarcated because the countries refer to different maps. (AP)
MySinchew 2009.04.02
The soldier was injured near the 11th century Preah Vihear temple, which is on a cliff along the countries' ill-defined border and has been a source of conflict for decades.
Troops from both countries have been stationed at the border since July 2008, and two clashes near the temple last year sparked brief concerns of war.
According to Phnom Penh, the mine exploded after a group of Thai soldiers crossed into Cambodian territory. The blast prompted the soldiers to fire shots into the air and put Cambodian troops on alert, said Yim Kheang, a Cambodian soldier at the border.
"We have received an order from the commander that if Thai soldiers enter Cambodian territory (again), we have the right to open fire," he told The Associated Press.
Thai Maj. Gen. Tawatchai Samutsakorn disputed that account.
"The Thai troops were not in Cambodian territory," he told the AP, saying the wounded soldier was a 46-year old paramilitary trooper on a patrol near the border in Thailand's northeastern Sisaket province.
Stretches of the Thai-Cambodian border remain strewn with land mines from Cambodia's civil war in the 1970s.
Last week Cambodia accused some 100 Thai soldiers of entering Cambodia at the same location, and at one point said the two sides were getting ready to fight. Thailand insisted all was calm and the border had not been breached.
The two countries share a 500-mile (800-kilometer) land border, much of which has never been clearly demarcated because the countries refer to different maps. (AP)
MySinchew 2009.04.02
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