Cambodian PM says no China naval base being built

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen attends a news conference in Tokyo, Japan, on Oct 9, 2018. Mr Hun Sen has said that Cambodia will not allow foreign military bases on its soil, amid rumours of a Chinese naval site being built. PHOTO: REUTERS

PHNOM PENH (AFP) - Cambodia will not allow foreign military bases on its soil, strongman premier Hun Sen said on Monday (Nov 19), swatting away United States concerns about a possible Chinese naval site near hotly contested seas.

China has lavished billions of dollars in soft loans, infrastructure and investment on the poor South-east Asian kingdom, gifting Prime Minister Hun Sen with a fast-growing economy that he wields as justification for his 33-year authoritarian rule.

In exchange, Cambodia has been a staunch China ally.

It has seeded disunity among the 10-member Asean bloc of South-east Asian nations over a diplomatic pushback to Beijing's aggression in the strategically pivotal South China Sea.

Rumours that a Chinese naval base is under construction off Cambodia's south-west coast have been swirling.

The area under scrutiny is in the Gulf of Thailand but gives ready access to the South China Sea.

Beijing claims most of the flashpoint area, infuriating the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Taiwan who all have competing claims to its islands and potentially resource-rich waters.

But in comments during a Cabinet meeting, broadcast on Facebook live, Mr Hun Sen denied that military bases of any kind have - or will be - built on Cambodian territory.

"I have received a letter from Mike Pence, US Vice-President, regarding concerns that there will be a China naval base in Cambodia," he said.

"The Constitution of Cambodia bans the presence of foreign troops or military bases in its territory... whether naval forces, infantry forces or air forces."

The US, once the region's undisputed military power, is acutely aware of the strategic and trading importance of the South China Sea and insists that it remains international waters.

US, Australian and British warships have increasingly conducted "freedom of navigation" operations through the sea to press that point, infuriating Beijing.

Mr Hun Sen dismissed reports of a Chinese base as "information that only tries to manipulate the truth".

"I will reply to the letter from US Vice-President Mike Pence to make him understand clearly about the issue," he said.

Chinese-bankrolled casinos, developments and dams have mushroomed in recent years, fanning growth but incubating resentment among some Cambodians who fear the country is increasingly in the pocket of the regional superpower.

Several joint military exercises have also taken place while in June. Beijing has promised US$100 million (S$137 million) to modernise Cambodia's military.

China has established military positions on disputed outcrops in the South China Sea and intimidates fishermen and naval vessels from rival countries.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang last week sought to soothe anxieties, backing a rule book on behaviour in contested waters to be finished in three years.

"We are not and we will not seek hegemony or expansion. That is something that we will never do," he added, ahead of a summit of South-east Asian leaders in Singapore.

Critics have countered that China has deliberately spent years negotiating the rule book with South-east Asian neighbours to buy time to build up its military bases.

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