BANGKOK, June 16 — Thailand has appointed two conciliators for a United Nations arbitration process that was initiated by Cambodia to resolve a long-running maritime dispute, Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow told reporters today.
Cambodia launched the compulsory conciliation process under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) earlier this month, after Thailand unilaterally ended a 2001 agreement that provided a framework for negotiations over the disputed area in the Gulf of Thailand.
Earlier, Cambodia had appointed its Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn as its agent for the proceedings, alongside Danish diplomat Peter Taksøe-Jensen and French academic Jean-Marc Thouvenin as conciliators.
The dispute relates to approximately 26,000sqkm of sea in the Gulf of Thailand, known as the Overlapping Claims Area, which is estimated to hold nearly 340 million cubic metres of natural gas and large quantities of oil, worth about US$300 billion (RM1.2 trillion).
Ties between the Southeast Asian neighbours have been on edge after two rounds of intense border clashes last year killed nearly 150 people and displaced at least 300,000 on both sides, but a December ceasefire still holds.







