Preah Vihear tense after influx of Cambodian troops
The government will flex its  muscles for the protesting yellow shirts from the People's Alliance for  Democracy (PAD) to show it will protect land in disputed border areas.  It plans to issue a statement of protest against Cambodia.
Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva  has instructed the Foreign Ministry to issue a protest, because Phnom  Penh has refused to remove its national flag from the disputed area  adjacent to the Hindu temple at Preah Vihear, the ministry spokesman  Thani Thongpakdi said.
"Concerned officials are working  on it and we could issue the statement soon," he said. Abhisit said  last week that Cambodia had no right to fly its national flag at Wat Keo  Sikkha Kiri Svara temple as Thailand also claimed territorial rights to  the area.
Thailand managed to convince  Cambodia to remove two stone tablets saying the area where Thai troops  invaded in 2008 belonged to Cambodia. 
However Phnom Penh refused to  follow any further demand from Bangkok to remove its national flag  there. It says the temple built by Cambodian people in 1998 is clearly  situated in Cambodian territory. 
"Therefore the national flag of  Cambodia is legitimately able to fly over the pagoda," a statement by  Cambodia's Foreign Ministry said last week.
The border area adjacent to  Preah Vihear has been argued over ever since the International Court of  Justice (ICJ) ruled in 1962 that the temple was situated in Cambodian  territory. 
Abhisit has argued that the ICJ ruled only the stone ruins belong to Cambodia while surrounding areas belong to Thailand. 
The areas have not been  demarcated yet but the two countries signed a memorandum of  understanding in 2000 to set up a joint mechanism to try to settle the  dispute.
The PAD, which has staged a  rally near the Prime Minister Office, wants Abhisit to use force to  remove Cambodians from the disputed area and scrap the 2000 MOU on land  boundary demarcation. They have pressured the government by vowing to  stay until their demands are met. 
Cambodia, meanwhile, is reported  to have boosted troops in the area, notably near Preah Vihear. Thai  news teams have said the border areas are tense while outlets in Phnom  Penh have reported that the Cambodian military is ready for war with  Thailand.
Abhisit insisted he would settle  the border dispute with Cambodia by peaceful means. The 2000 MOU was an  effective instrument for settling the border dispute, he said. 
Deputy Prime Minister Suthep  Thaugsuban, who oversees security matters, said the Thai military was  strong enough to protect the country but would not boost forces in the  area near the historic temple. 
The government would continue to negotiate with Cambodia over the border issue, he said.
"Please do not provoke any news  to create tension with our neighbouring country. We have to live with  them peacefully," Suthep said when asked about Cambodian troops along  the border.
"We don't have any problem with Cambodia and our two governments have no problem," he said.
Asked if the government in Phnom  Penh criticised Thailand every day, Suthep said, "don't look only at  one side. If you are in Cambodia, you would see a group of Thai people  scolding Cambodia every day." 







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