Published on : Wednesday, April 24, 2019
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and his Thai counterpart, Prayuth Chan-ocha, witnessed a signing ceremony at a Thai border post before riding together to the Cambodian town of Poipet on a train donated by Thailand.
The pair — with Prayut dressed in a bright yellow shirt — stepped from the train in Poipet with their clasped hands held high to the cheers of waiting crowds, waving flags of both countries.
Hun Sen described their journey as “historic” and thanked neighbor country Thailand for its efforts “to reconnect the railway between Cambodia and Thailand.”
The railway connection would also better link his country to other Southeast Asian neighbors and boost economy and trade, he added. The bilateral trade between Thailand and Cambodia currently stands at $6 billion.
Cambodia last year re-opened the final stretch of a 370-kilometer railway running from the capital, Phnom Penh, to the Thai border. The Asian Development Bank bankrolled the reconstruction of the link to the tune of $13 million.
Much of Cambodia’s railways — built by the French in colonial times — were damaged by the years of bitter conflict that engulfed the country during the Cold War era. The 48-kilometer section of track near Poipet was destroyed in 1973 while the rest of the track to Phnom Penh had been suspended for over a decade due to its poor condition.
The Southeast Asian country has more than 600 kilometers of track extending from its northern border with Thailand to the southern coast.
Tags: Cambodia, phnom penh, Thailand