The Phnom Penh Post

Tea Banh set for Turkey visit to boost mutual relations

- Ry Sochan

PR I ME Mi n i ster Hu n Sen announced on Monday that Deput y Prime Minister a nd Minister of National Defence Tea Ba n h w i l l “soon” v isit Turkey as a cont inuat ion of ef for ts to i ntensif y bi latera l relat ionsh ips bet ween t he t wo countries.

As he presided over the graduation ceremony of more than 1,400 cadets at the Police Academy of Cambodia in Kandal province’s Kien Svay district, Hun Sen said that following his trip to Turkey last year and Inter ior Minister Sar Kheng’s last week, another high-level visit will be paid by Tea Banh. He did not specify the exact date.

Sar Kheng ended his official visit to Turkey on Thursday, during which he met his Turkish counterpar­t Suleyman Soylu in Ankara for talks on internatio­nal security.

The meeting resulted in the signing of a securit y cooperat i on a g r e e ment b e t we e n Ph nom Pen h a nd A n ka ra. Their meeting focused largely on new t hreats to peace, st abi l it y, publ ic order a nd nationa l securit y.

The agreement will play a fundamenta­l role in creating a framework for expanding Cambodian-Turkish security cooperatio­n, the Ministry of Interior said on Thursday.

It will focus on transnatio­nal and organised crime, particular­ly the combating of terrorism, the traffickin­g of people and weapons, cybercrime, money laundering and illegal smuggling of goods.

Hun Sen said the signing of the agreement reflected Cambodia’s ability to have strategic partners outside the region, and that while Turkey was not a member of the EU, it was a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on (Nato).

M i n i s t r y o f Na t i o n a l Defence spokesman Chhum Socheat told The Post on Monday that he had not received f ur t her i nfor mat ion of Tea Banh’s v isit.

Kin Phea, the director of the Roya l Academy of Ca mbodia’s Internatio­na l Relations I nst it ut e, empha si s ed t he warming ties between Cambodia and Turkey.

He likened Turkey’s current political situation to that of Cambodia, saying that Ankara is currently “having a problem” with Washington, thus Turkey turns to other alliances such as Russia and China, as well as other Asian countries.

Phea stressed that cooperatio­n in securit y and politica l areas are necessar y if Cambodia and Turkey wanted to be strategic partners.

Exchanging visits, he said, indicated that bilateral relations between the two countries was being promoted.

Politica l analyst Meas Nee reiterated t hat Turkey was in a similar position to Cambodia in terms of facing severe criticism from t he West.

He said more and more countries created separate alliances with each other, gradually turning their backs on the West.

“These new alliances with non- t ra di t i onal c ountr i e s could increase Cambodia’s presence in the internatio­nal geopolitic­al sphere,” he said.

Prime Minister Hun Sen visited Turkey last year and signed s e v e r a l a g r e e me n t s t o s t r e n g t h e n c o o p e r a t i o n between the two countries, including a memorandum of understand­ing on cooperatio­n in the fields of culture, education, sport, agricultur­e, water resources, tourism, investment and mine clearance.

In June, Hun Sen also met Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, as he attended the fifth summit of the Conference on Interactio­n and Confidence Building Measures in Asia.

 ?? JOU MARY VIA FACEBOOK ?? Van Vanny after he left the monkhood.
JOU MARY VIA FACEBOOK Van Vanny after he left the monkhood.

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