Dear Editor,
My
attention has been drawn to your
reporting of events concerning the
temple of Preah Vihear over the past
week. I notice that your reporters have
referred to Preah Vihear as being “a
disputed 11th century Hindu monument”.
May I point out that the temple of Preah
Vihear is not a “Hindu monument” but a
Khmer sanctuary, built by Khmer kings
and dedicated to Shiva the Hindu god.
Indeed, construction of the temple was
began under the rule of the Khmer King
Yasovarman I (889-910AD) and completed
during the rule of one of his
successors, King Suryavarman II
(1113-1145).
It should be understood that for past
Khmer kings, a sanctuary was first and
foremost a cosmological recreation.
Thus, the construction of Khmer
sanctuaries in the form of multi-tiered
Pyramids meant that the place was
considered a sacred cosmic mountain.
This was particularly noticeable in the
temples dedicated to Shiva, because of
the association with the god’s mountain
home, Mount Kailasa. A mountain or a
cliff top location, as in the case of
Preah Vihear, was always the first
choice for the Khmer architects building
these major temples.
The fact that Preah Vihear is a Khmer
sanctuary and not a “Hindu monument” has
been extensively acknowledged by most
experts in Khmer architecture including
in such books published in Thailand by
Thai authors like Professor S.
Siribhadra of Silpakorn University in
Bangkok in 1992, Dr Dhida Saraya in 1994
and by the Italian author Vittorio
Roveda in 2000.
There is no dispute over the temple
itself but rather over surrounding land
that is claimed by both Cambodia and
Thailand. The temple has always been
Khmer, except for a period when it was
occupied by Siam from 1431 to 1907. In
1431, under the reign of the Siamese
King Chao Saam Phraya (Boromrajadhiraj
II) who ruled from 1424 to 1448, in what
is known as the Ayutthaya period of
Siamese (Thai) history, the armies of
Siam defeated the Khmer armies and
forced the evacuation of Angkor and the
capital of the Khmer Empire was moved to
Oudong and then to Phnom Penh.
The Siamese armies occupied Battambang,
Sisophon, Siemreap-Angkor as well as
Preah Vihear and they were annexed into
Siam.
On March 23, 1907, King Chulalongkorn (Rama
V) signed the Franco-Siamese boundary
treaty with the President of France, by
which Siam agreed to return Battambang,
Sisophon, Siemreap-Angkor as well as
Preah Vihear to Cambodia, under French
protectorate, in exchange for Chantaburi,
Trat and the land of Dan Sai in Loei
province of today’s Thailand.
According to the American scholar
Lawrence Palmer Briggs and to other
French scholars, Siam had made no
attempt to colonize the provinces or to
convert its citizens into Siamese
subjects. Indeed, during the whole
period of Siamese suzerainty this region
was the hereditary fief of a Cambodian
family and was ruled according to
Cambodian customs and few could speak
the Siamese language, using always Khmer
to communicate.
Thailand took advantage of the Second
World War to regain part of the
territory that it had previously
returned to Cambodia, under French
protectorate. However, with the defeat
of the Japanese and the end of
hostilities French authority was
restored in Indochina and in 1946 by the
treaty of Washington, Thailand ceded the
border provinces back once again.
In 1953, when King Norodom Sihanouk
obtained full independence for Cambodia
and refused to join the South East Asia
Treaty Organization (SEATO), Thailand,
under the pretext to strengthen its
border, established a police post in the
Dangrek mountain range, just north of
Preah Vihear temple and hoisted the Thai
flag over the temple and expelled the
Cambodian officials posted to the temple
by the Royal Cambodian government.
Cambodia sent several diplomatic notes
to Thailand seeking a negotiated
solution of the problem but Thailand did
not reply until August 1958 when
negotiations were held in Bangkok but
ended in failure.
At that time, in a gesture to keep the
friendship between the two countries,
Cambodia proposed two solutions to
Thailand: a) the joint administration of
the Khmer sanctuary; and b) that the
matter be referred to the International
Court of Justice (ICJ).
As Thailand did not reply to the
Cambodian proposal, in October 1959,
King Norodom Sihanouk decided to bring
the matter to the International Court of
Justice for adjudication.
Commenting on Cambodia’s decision to
take the case to the ICJ, the leading
Bangkok newspaper Siam Rath
editorialized as follows:
“If Cambodia has taken this matter to
the ICJ, we cannot prevent her from
doing so. It is her right to do it. She
is in her right because the ICJ is an
organ of the United Nations having the
mission of peacefully settling
differences between its members.… As for
the Thai government, faced with this
correct attitude on the part of the
Cambodian government, it should accept
it in a friendly spirit and with the
honesty worthy of a member of the United
Nations.”
On June 15th 1962, the judgment of the
ICJ was announced. By nine votes in
favor and three against, it held that
Preah Vihear was under the sovereignty
of Cambodia. The ICJ urged Thailand to
immediately withdraw any military,
police and any other guards or keepers
from the site.
Thailand was disappointed by the ICJ’s
judgment. It withdrew its Ambassador
from France and its delegations from the
SEATO Council and the Geneva Conference
on Laos, in protest to what it felt was
the “uncooperative behavior of some of
its SEATO allies”, members also of the
ICJ, and which had voted for Cambodia.
The Thai Foreign Minister at the time,
Mr Thanat Khoman, rejected the ICJ
ruling on behalf of the Thai government
and wrote to U Thant, the UN Secretary
General, expressing his government’s
reservations but providing no new legal
argument which would back up the Thai
government’s reservations.
Furthermore, and I think this is of
fundamental importance, he attached to
his letter to U Thant, a map in which it
was clearly stated: “The map
representing the area where the Temple
of Preah Vihear (Pra Viharn in Thai
language) is situated, over which
Thailand has relinquished her
sovereignty”.
I fear that by continuing to refer to
Preah Vihear as a “disputed 11th century
Hindu monument” your esteemed newspaper
is contributing to the misunderstanding
existing over the sovereignty of the
temple which has always been a Khmer
temple, built by Khmer rulers in honor
of a Hindu god.
Yours sincerely,
Ambassador Julio A. Jeldres
Official Biographer of HM the King
Father
Samdech Preah Upayuvareach Norodom
Sihanouk of Cambodia;
Research Fellow, Monash University’s
Asia Institute