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| Only 10 soldiers on each side will remain inside a pagoda at the heart of the dispute near Preah Vihear temple, a military commander said. |
Cambodia
and Thailand
are set to withdraw the mass of their troops near Preah Vihear temple over the
weekend, a top Cambodian military commander said Thursday.
The withdrawal follows a meeting between high-ranking
military commanders on both sides in Surin province Wednesday.
"The redeployment of the armed forces that both
countries have agreed to will be complete before the meeting of foreign affairs
ministers in Hua Hin, Thailand,"
Aug. 18 and Aug. 19, said Gen. Neang Phat, secretary of state for the Ministry
of Defense, who is head of Cambodia's
Preah Vihear negotiating task force.
The reconfiguration of the maximum number of troops possible
would take place on either Saturday or Sunday, he said, declining to give the
exact number of soldiers that would remain at the Keo Sikha
Kiri Svara pagoda and its surrounding areas.
The pagoda has been at the center of the crisis since Thai
troops occupied it on July 15, leading to a build-up of thousands of soldiers
on both sides and the deployment of artillery and other armed vehicles.
Both sides will keep 10 soldiers each inside the pagoda and
45 personnel in a 1-kilometer perimeter around the pagoda, the Bangkok Post
reported Thursday, citing a Thai official present at Wednesday's meeting.
Both sides agreed during the meeting that soldiers who stay
in the temple area will not be equipped with heavy arms, and trenches in the
area would be refilled, Neang Phat said.
Neither side will establish camps inside the pagoda, but
they will be allowed to stay in tents nearby, Neang Phat said.
The commanders will meet again following the bilateral
discussions between foreign ministers, he said.
Thai soldiers must allow Cambodian soldiers and civilians to
reach Ta Moan Thom temple, from Thursday, he added.