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Thailand, Myanmar sign gas production, anti-drug agreements

TNA

Wednesday, April 30, 2008


BANGKOK, April 30 (TNA) -- Thailand and its neighbour Myanmar Wednesday signed agreements on natural gas production in the Gulf of Mataban and on joint cooperation in drug suppression along their common border, Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej said Wednesday.

Both agreements were signed at Government House on the second of a three-day official visit to Thailand by Myanmar Prime Minister Gen. Thein Sein.

PTT Exploration and Production Public Co., Ltd. (PTTEP), listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand, earlier located a combined 71.48 million cubic feet per day field of natural gas at two zones located in the Gulf of Mataban, about 300 kilometres south of Myanmar's former capital of Yangon.

PTTEP first struck natural gas at M9 Block in early 2007. The company has held a production sharing contract with the Myanmar government since 2003 and has a 100 per cent interest in M9 Block.

The two countries, however, did not sign a contract farming agreement as expected earlier because the issue has yet been discussed by the Myanmar cabinet, Mr. Samak said.

Under the contract farming project, Thailand will use Myanmar to produce and supply agricultural products to Thailand while this country will transfer technological expertise to Myanmar farmers to assist them in earning extra income.

Mr. Samak and his Myanmar counterpart also discussed cooperation in transportation networks designed to link the two countries with Laos and China upon completion.

The Thai prime minister said he would travel to China and meet President Hu Jintao on May 15 and would discuss on a plan to build a new railway line from Kunming to the Laotian capital of Vientiane and then passing through to the western Thai province of Kanchanaburi bordering Myanmar and ending at Myanmar's Tavoy deep seaport.

The two leaders, according to Mr. Samak, also discussed problems regarding Myanmar people who are staying and working illegally in Thailand.

Thai Foreign Minister Noppadon Pattama has said that there are an estimated 2.2 million Myanmar people in Thailand illegally of which two million are workers and the remainder have fled their homeland and are living in this country as refugees or displaced persons.

Mr. Noppadon said Thailand would not push back these displaced persons to their country, but will  provide assistance on a humanitarian basis.

Touching on Myanmar politics, Mr. Samak said Gen. Thein Sein had told him that a general election would be held in Myanmar in about  two years, as political parties will have to be established first.

Myanmar is scheduled to hold a national constitutional referendum on May 10.

Gen. Thein Sein, who is paying his first official visit to Thailand since taking up his post in October, is scheduled to have an audience with King Bhumibol Adulyadej at Bangkok's Chitrlada Palace Wednesday evening.

On Thursday, he is due to inspect a crop substitution project in Thailand's northernmost province of Chiang Rai and depart from there to Myanmar. (TNA)-E111

 

 
 
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