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Unesco Delegation Inspects Border Temple

Posted by dorbsra Friday, March 13, 2009 0 comments



13 March 2009


[insert caption here]
Olabiyi Babalola Joseph Yai, center, president of executive council of UNESCO, views Cambodia's Preah Vihear temple site.
A high-level Unesco delegation traveled to the temple of Preah Vihear Friday morning, in what Cambodian officials called an effort to protect the structure, which has been at the center of a military standoff since July 2008.

The delegation, led by Olabiyi Babalola Joseph Yai, executive counselor for Unesco, was the first visit of its kind since the temple was recognized as a World Heritage site by the UN cultural organization, sparking protests in Bangkok and at the temple that led to the massing of troops from Thailand and Cambodia on the border.

Yai “inspected the real situation at Preah Vihear temple, over the Heritage site, and the flag of World Heritage,” said Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan, who accompanied the delegation.

Yai also examined a damaged statue “affected by the attack of the Thai military” and visited the Keo Sikha Kiri Svara pagoda near the temple, Phay Siphan said

Yai did not comment on the military situation nor visit any military bases, he added, but a group of experts would come later in March to evaluate the development plans for the temple.

Thousands of soldiers remain at the border, despite several rounds of talks between the two countries and skirmishes that have left at least four soldiers dead.

Yai returned to Siem Reap Friday afternoon and is scheduled to remain in Cambodia through March 18. On the remainder of his visit, he will tour the temples of Angkor Wat and Koh Ke temple in Preah Vihear province.

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13 March 2009


Finance ministers and central bankers from G-20 nations struggled to find common ground Friday as they began a two-day meeting near London on ways to ease the global recession.

The group is expected to back calls to double the International Monetary Fund's resources and expand the lender's powers to help emerging economies hit by a collapse in global demand and a sharp reduction in available credit.

But U.S. and European leaders continue to disagree whether more government spending or tighter regulation of the international financial markets is the best way to tackle the growing economic crisis.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is expected to press for a coordinated stimulus and lower taxes to spur growth. But many European leaders say instituting global rules for banks, tax havens and hedge funds is more urgent.

World Bank President Robert Zoellick speaks to reporters in London, 13 Mar 09
World Bank President Robert Zoellick speaks to reporters in London, 13 Mar 09
World Bank President Robert Zoellick urged officials to take strong and effective action, saying this is turning into a "dangerous" year for the economy.

As he arrived for Friday's meeting, Zoellick warned that continued fiscal stimulus without stabilizing the banking sector would result in nothing more than a "sugar high" for the world economy - temporary relief with no lasting benefits.

The problem of how to recapitalize the banks and clean up the "toxic" assets weighing down their balance sheets remains a key unsolved issue.

On Friday, a global association of financial firms, the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, described the uncertainty surrounding the size and value of those assets as "the fault line of the financial crisis."

The G-20 officials are using the meeting of leading industrialized and developing economies to set the stage for a summit of national leaders scheduled for April 2nd.

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