Cambodia takes control of CATS

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Cambodia takes control of CATS

  • Published: 19/11/2009 at 04:48 PM
  • Online news: Local News

Cambodia has taken control of Cambodian Air Traffic Services (CATS), a wholly owned subsidiary of Thailand's Samart Corporation, and appointed a senior Civil Aviation official as its temporary caretaker, Samart said in a statement on Thursday.

Cambodian authorities ejected all Thai employees from their offices at CATS on Wednesday after Phnom Penh filed formal charges against Siwarak Chutipong, a Thai engineer working for the air traffic control firm, accusing him of spying. 

"The caretaker has prohibited Thai expatriates from performing their duties," Samart vice-chairman Sirichai Rasameechan said in a statement filed with the Stock Exchange of Thailand, where the company is listed.

CATS has a 32-year concession (2001-2033) to provide air traffic control services under a build, cooperate and transfer arrangement with the Cambodian government. Revenue from the operation this year contributed about 5 per cent of the group's earnings.

The deal was covered by an investment protection agreement between the two countries, he said. Samart was seeking the government's help to end the problem.

"Samart has been closely cooperating with the Thai government to help negotiations with the Cambodian government for the release of Mr Sivarak and to resolve this incident," the statement, which was issued in Thai, said.

Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya insisted that Cambodia must comply with the law in ejecting Thai nationals from their jobs at CATS, replacing them with Cambodians and seizing  the company's equipment. 

Kasit said any action against the company and its employees must be strictly according to the law and comply with Cambodia's own investment and internal affairs regulations.

"The ministry is waiting for reports from the Thai embassy and we will also have to get clarification from the Cambodian government. If it violates bilateral agreements, then we will find ways to proceed from there," he told reporters.
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"Cambodia is a market economy," he added. "Just seizing [a company] would not seem right."

The Foreign Ministry had sent the Consular Affairs Department deputy director-general to see Mr Sivarak's mother in Nakhon Ratchasima. Mr Kasit said Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva had promised Mr Sivarak's mother that he would visit her detained son if possible.

The government had to wait for Cambodia's confirmation of a time for the meeting with Mr Sivarak. The ministry had also hired a lawyer to liaise with Samart about the problem.

"There are, however, no problems with Thai-Cambodian relations," he insisted.

Chavanond Intarakomalyasut, secretary to the foreign minister, denied Puea Thai Party MP Jatuporn Promphan's claim that Mr Kasit had ordered the Thai embassy's first secretary Kamrob Palawatwichai to find out the flight schedule of ousted premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

Mr Chavanond challenged Mr Jatuporn to make public a copy of the tape he claimed to have of the conversation, and slammed Mr Jatuporn's statement as "nonsense".

He said the Foreign Ministry is providing assistance for Mr Sivarak and finding a lawyer to defend him.

The ministry this morning asked the Cambodian government to allow Mr Sivarak's mother to visit her son in Prey Sar prison.

The Thai engineer is accused of "stealing classified information affecting national security" by passing details of Thaksin's and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen's flight plan to an official at the Thai  embassy.

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  • CalmKhmer

    Discussion 37 : 20/11/2009 at 10:52 PM37

    Re: Spiceman
    The same old story between a (Thai) cobra and a (Cambodian) farmer! When are we going to learn our lesson? A snake is always a snake. Does anybody know the proper way to kill one?

  • Scratching my head

    Discussion 36 : 20/11/2009 at 09:07 AM36

    I've read through all 35 comments so far and as usual they are the PAD haters who continually bring up the airport siege into any and every conversation and demand that everyone go to jail, the Thaksin supporters who look at his time in office as one of a new renaissance in Thai society, the ones who think calling for a new government every six months when things aren't going their way is part of the democratic process, and the obligatory nationalists on both sides of the border who take any comment about their country as a personal insult. In other words it's the usual mixed bag of lively discourse peppered with the occasional rant. But I digress.

    My question to the forum is based on this statement "The Thai engineer is accused of "stealing classified information affecting national security" by passing details of Thaksin's and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen's flight plan to an official at the Thai embassy".

    To the best of my knowledge, Hun Sen was not flying anywhere so that part of the statement is a mistake. But the more important question is this. If CATS is a foreign owned Thai company and Cambodia considers Thaksin's flight plan to be classified information affecting national security, how is it that Cambodia can claim he was spying when Cambodia gave the information to a Thai national working for a Thai company. I'll leave the international law questions about the secrecy of international flight plans of civil aviation to the ICAO lawyers in the forum. But if information is deemed to be "classified information affecting national security", which is what this spat is based on, didn't that information cease to be classified information affecting national security when it legally came into the hands of a Thai company in the course of everyday business. Classified information is information that a government wants to protect, and takes steps to protect. Not something it gives to a foreign company on a regular basis. Or is this another of those strange twisted logic sort of things that foreigners will never understand because we're not Asian?

    Thoughts?

  • grhh

    Discussion 35 : 20/11/2009 at 06:15 AM35

    This is just Cambodia being controlled by Thaksin and his friends. Its a political game that the red shirts have which involves other countries around Thailand as well. I'm guessing the people that are doing this is getting PAID to do so, seriously.
    I'm worried about the situation of some of the people do not come into the right frame of mind

  • Uncle Dick

    Discussion 34 : 20/11/2009 at 05:16 AM34

    How many Yellow Shirts were arrested for holding international travellers to ransom a few months ago?

    Sounds as if there's a lot of screaming and shouting going on among Thais when the lawlessness of their own state continues without comment or change. You can't have laws that you pick up and drop whenever it suits you!

  • Richard Collins

    Discussion 33 : 20/11/2009 at 04:27 AM33

    "Cambodian Air Traffic Services (CATS), a wholly owned subsidiary of Thailand's Samart Corporation" wow, can you imagine a company in Thailand wholly owned by a foreign company? Why can Thai companies own 100% of companies outside of Thailand but not allow other countries to do this here?

  • SPICEMAN

    Discussion 32 : 20/11/2009 at 03:46 AM32

    The same old story between a (Cambodian) cobra and a (Thai) farmer! When are we going to learn our lesson? A snake is always a snake. Does anybody know the proper way to kill one?

  • wantmymoney

    Discussion 31 : 20/11/2009 at 03:28 AM31

    The problem with western culture is that everyone wants to be a hero and everybody loves a hero. They love ex US President Bush for invading the evil Sadam and his country Iraq, but Bush also gave this world its worst recession since 1930. Iraq daily killing has taken more lives both local and americans than the first gulf war. So these "almighty" farang wants a piece of Hun Sen? Air space should be control by its own citizen not some neighbour citizens, an idiot would know this. Most westerners especially the european have no concept of sovereinty since they faught 2 world wars and gave up their right to self-rule, so another world war 3 would come from europe again. Cambodia did what is important and necessary, to stop sabotage and espionage or spying Thaksin and Hun Sen each time these two people fly. Until you become someone very very important otherwise return to your bars and drinking. Thailand should know how it feel to confiscate another company after it did the same after the coup.

  • CalmKhmer

    Discussion 30 : 20/11/2009 at 03:03 AM30

    @ Mike Oscar,
    What are you based your statement on? Cambodia maybe a poor country and Hun Sen may act childish in your eyes. I'm sure Cambodians aren't that stupid to put passengers of airlines at risk. Open your eyes and look at Cambodia again. I am hoping you are seeing Cambodians in a new light. Yes, Cambodia had gone through hell but it's back and rebuilding its country from ground up -- progress is being made every day and a lot of helps come from other nations not just Thailand.

  • CalmKhmer

    Discussion 29 : 20/11/2009 at 02:37 AM29

    First I am in agreement with Kasper.

    @Just Thinking
    I didn't mean that Thailand should hold a new election to please Hun Sen but to appease everyone in Thailand and hopefully, it's someone that Hun Sen can work with. It's obvious right now that Hun Sen doesn't want anything to do with the current Thai government and this Thai government is playing politic with Cambodia to please the PAD -- to me as an outside, here's how I see it: the PAD is holding all the cards and has great influence on the current Thai government and this Thai government is doing everything it can to meet the PAD's demand(s), and this in turn causing the Thai-Cambodia relation to deteriorate.

    As I see it, the PAD is really causing a lot of headaches for Thailand and Cambodia.

  • Mike Oscar

    Discussion 28 : 20/11/2009 at 02:22 AM28

    As air traffic controller I am shocked at Hun Sen's blatant disregard of the lives of airline passengers and flight crews. This childish tit for tat manoeuver is a serious blow to flight safety in Cambodian airspace. Let's hope, the remaining understaffed and overworked ATC personnel will be able to maintain a minimum safety standard.

    Until Mr. Hun Sen regains his mental stability I recommend that people should avoid any flights into, out of and through Cambodia.

    Oh, and for any accident or incident that might be caused as a result of Mr. Hun Sen's actions only the air traffic controllers will be blamed.

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