Published: 10:37PM Thursday October 25, 2007
Source: Reuters
China is giving Cambodia nine naval patrol boats to safeguard
oil installations in the Gulf of Thailand, another sign of
Beijing's deepening ties with the Southeast Asian nation, military
officials said.
"These boats will enable us to prevent maritime crimes such as
terrorism, but also to protect natural resources within our sea
territory," said General Nim Sovath, who attended a signing
ceremony in the Chinese city of Guangzhou this week.
An army-run Cambodian TV channel heralded the deal as evidence of
stronger military cooperation with China, which provided Phnom Penh
with six naval patrol boats in 2005 to help combat people and drug
smuggling.
Beijing followed up the next year with $600 million (NZ$794
million) in aid and grants - a sum equal to the annual amount given
by Cambodia's traditional donors.
Cambodia is expected to take possession of the vessels, believed to
be worth around $60 million (NZ$79.4 million), early next
month.
Even though Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen spent much of his life
fighting Pol Pot's Beijing-backed Khmer Rouge, he has worked hard
in recent years to build ties with China as a counterweight to
Vietnam, which lies between them.
The improved relationship also works well for Beijing, keen to
negotiate access to friendly deep-sea ports in Southeast Asia, its
main fuel gateway.
Sihanoukville, Cambodia's only such port, will be the processing
centre for oil and natural gas expected to flow from its Block A
chunk of the Gulf of Thailand by 2010.
US oil giant Chevron Corp is leading exploration drilling.
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