[PHNOM PENH POST]
THE Minister of Commerce has postponed a major Thai trade exhibition
planned for this week in Phnom Penh, claiming the exhibition’s safety
could not be guaranteed.
In a letter addressed to the Charge
d’Affaires of the Royal Thai Embassy in Phnom Penh, Minister of Commerce
Cham Prasidh said the ministry would contact the Thai organisers to
postpone the event until a “more favourable time comes”.
Highlighting
restrictions on border trade imposed by Thai Military Region 2, he
said: “I am of the opinion that this is not the right time to promote
Thai products in Cambodia. We cannot guarantee the reaction of Cambodian
visitors to such exhibition after such bad behaviour.”
The Thai
2nd Army Command had banned exports of fuel and other products it said
the Cambodian military may need to support their troops in operations
against Thai forces, according to The Bangkok Post. The order was
intended for customs officials at the Chong Chom checkpoint, the Thai
side of the O’Smach border crossing in Oddar Meancheay province, the
report said.
Jiranan Wongmongkol, commercial counsellor based at
the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh, said yesterday she would “follow
government policy” when asked about the Ministry of Commerce letter,
dated May 13, to postpone the 2nd Thailand Trade Exhibition 2011.
She maintained that bilateral trade continued as normal.
Earlier
this month, she said plans to hold the trade fair, scheduled for May 19
to 22 at Phnom Penh’s Diamond Island Exhibition Centre, were on track
despite the resumption of violence on the border in April.
Carlyle
Thayer, politics professor at the University of New South Wales in
Australia, said the temporary loss of the exhibition was unlikely to
have a major impact on Thailand and that it was “more symbolic than
real”.
But if the Kingdom was trying to use economic means to hurt its neighbour, that plan may backfire, he said.
“If
this thing escalates, Cambodia will lose more” because of its large
trade deficit with Thailand, Thayer said, adding it was one of the
“needling activities” both countries have employed throughout the recent
conflict.
Cambodian Centre for Human Rights President Ou Virak
said he believes an escalation becomes increasingly possible the longer
the conflict between Cambodia and Thailand lasts, with trade becoming
more likely to be used as a weapon.
“The potential for a further
escalation of this conflict, and spilling into an economic one, is real.
The economic impact will be huge,” he said.
Ou Virak said the
Thai army’s decision to block fuel exports was “unfortunate”, given that
Thai and Cambodian small-business owners are most likely to be hurt –
and not the Cambodian Royal Armed Forces.
“The skirmishes are now claiming more victims – this time the business owners, workers and consumers,” he said.
Thai Foreign Ministry Spokesman Thani Thongpakdi could not be reached for comment.
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