The Phnom Penh Post

KRP initiates petition on ownership of VN island

- Meas Sokchea

FOUR days after the national elections, the Khmer Rise Party (KRP) has spearheade­d a petition to the Constituti­onal Council, requesting that it revises a treaty to push the government to negotiate withVietna­m for the handover of Phu Quoc island, known in Khmer as Koh Trol.

KRP president Prum Piseth told ThePost on Thursday that a major piece of the party’s platform involved retrieving the territory from Vietnamese control.

He claimed the party would set out to collect 50,000 thumbprint­s on the petition and ask the council to nullify a 2005 territoria­l treaty.

“Only the Constituti­onal Council has the power to deny and nullify various laws or treaties to conform to our constituti­on.

“If we send the petition, either the Constituti­onal Council will accept or deny it . . . it will show clearly whether this government or parliament is willing to serve the people,” Piseth said.

‘Wave of politics’

However, Royal Academy of Cambodia president Sok Touch considered the thumbprint campaign to be purely political as the island wasn’t lost during the current government, but rather, during the French colonial period.

“I think this is a wave of politics,” Sok Touch said, warning that “if I was the government, I would throw [Piseth] into jail right away”.

“I know this matter very well . . . the government­s of the two countries have agreed to use the 1933-1953 map [demarcatin­g borders],” he said.

Touch expressed regret that the island was so close to Cambodia, yet remained under Vietnamese control.

“My tears also drop when a thing is near to us but it’s gone. This is a historical matter, something that’s left for the next generation,” he said.

Political analyst Meas Ny said it was not good to ignite territoria­l issues. “I admire the conscience and will . . . But we know that the government is not able to work on this matter.”

 ?? AFP ?? The Khmer Rise Party has started collecting thumbprint­s on a petition it says will push the government to renegotiat­e ownership of Phu Quoc island.
AFP The Khmer Rise Party has started collecting thumbprint­s on a petition it says will push the government to renegotiat­e ownership of Phu Quoc island.

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