Published: 30/10/2010
via CAAI
Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said his government is protecting the national interest by observing the 2000 Thai-Cambodian memorandum of understanding that governs the survey and demarcation of the land boundary between the two countries.
He made the point in response to the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) which filed a complaint with the Administrative Court yesterday, accusing the government of jeopardising Thai territory by its observance of the MoU.
Mr Abhisit, who was attending the 17th Asean summit in Hanoi yesterday, said his government had neither a hidden agenda nor vested interests.
The cabinet intended to protect the national interest in its request that parliament approve three proceedings of the Joint Commission on Demarcation for Land Boundary or the Joint Boundary Commission (JBC) of Thailand and Cambodia, he said.
The JBC was formed to implement the 2000 MoU, but it cannot begin its task without approval from the Thai parliament.
Mr Abhisit said he was surprised by the PAD accusation. He denied his government had used the widespread flooding in the country to mask the submission of the three JBC proceedings to parliament.
He said the proceedings were submitted to parliament publicly and the proposal took its normal pace after it had been shelved for a long time.
He said he was not worried about the PAD's planned rally on Tuesday to oppose the process but he warned participants to abide by the law.
Yesterday afternoon, PAD representatives accused Mr Abhisit's government of violating the laws of good national administration.
The group also accused the prime minister of violating the 2007 constitution by supporting an implementation of the 2000 MoU.
The PAD claimed seeking parliament's approval for the JBC's proceedings will lead to a loss of national territory.
Section 1 of the charter states that Thailand is one indivisible kingdom.
The PAD said that approval of the JBC's proceedings would lead to a temporary border agreement between the two countries and the agreement would allow Cambodia to challenge earlier settled sections of the boundary.
It also complained that the 2000 MoU recognised the French-made map at 1:200,000 scale. This put Thailand at a territorial disadvantage as the borderline in the map drawn by France encroached on Thai territory, the PAD claimed.
The PAD filed its complaint with the Administrative Court and asked the court to revoke the JBC's proceedings, the 2000 MoU and cabinet resolutions endorsing the negotiation framework for the JBC and supporting the proposal of the JBC's proceedings to parliament.
The PAD also sought an injunction to stop parliament from considering the proceedings. The court is expected to rule on the injunction on Monday.
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