The U.N.'s highest court Monday ordered Thailand and Cambodia to immediately withdraw their troops from a disputed area around an ancient temple on the border between the two Asian neighbors.
"Both parties should immediately withdraw their military personnel currently present in the provisional demilitarized zone and refrain from any military presence within that zone," said the order, read by International Court of Justice president Judge Hisashi Owada at a sitting in The Hague.
"Having noted that the temple area had been the scene of armed clashes between the parties and that such clashes may reoccur, the court decided... there was an urgent need for the presence of all armed forces to be temporary excluded from a provisional demilitarized zone around the area of the temple," the judge said.
Cambodia in late April launched a bitter legal battle before the ICJ in which it asked for an interpretation of a 1962 ICJ ruling around the 900-year-old Preah Vihear temple.
It also asked the court, while judges were pondering that request, to approve provisional measures including an immediate Thai troop withdrawal and a ban on all Thai military activity there.
Although Thailand does not dispute Cambodia's ownership of the temple, secured by the 1962 ruling, both Phnom Penh and Bangkok claim the 4.6-square-kilometer area surrounding the Khmer complex.
In February the United Nations appealed for a permanent ceasefire after 10 people were killed in fighting near the Khmer complex.
However fresh clashes broke out in April further west, leaving 18 dead and prompting 85,000 civilians to flee.
The court Monday urged the two countries to continue to work with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to come to an agreement to allow observers representing the 10-nation bloc to have access to the provisional demilitarized zone around the temple.
"Both parties should refrain from any action which might aggravate or extend the dispute before the court or make it more difficult to resolve," the court added.
The U.N.'s highest court Monday also ordered Thailand not to obstruct Cambodia's free access to the Preah Vihear complex or prevent Cambodia from taking fresh supplies to its non-military personnel there.
Cambodia said although there had been clashes in the past, Thai aggression substantially increased after July 2008, when the U.N.'s cultural body UNESCO listed the temple as a World Heritage site.
The 11th-century complex has been at the center of a long legal wrangle between Thailand and Cambodia -- which first took its southeastern Asian neighbor to the ICJ in 1959 over the issue.
Thailand's Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya said Monday his country would honor the ICJ ruling.
"We are satisfied in the sense that the decision of the withdrawal of the troops is applicable to both Cambodia and Thailand," he told reporters afterwards.
Established in 1945, the ICJ is the U.N.'s highest judicial organ and it settles disputes between states. It is the only one of six principal U.N. organs not located in New York.
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