Thai Prime Minister, Surayud Chulanont (L) stands with
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen at Phnom Penh International Airport on Oct. 15,
2006. Chulanont arrived in Bangkok Sunday on the second leg of his
weekend tour, which is widely believed to beef up ties with Thailand's
neighboring countries and reassure them that his one-year term will be stable.
-Xinhua
Thai Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont left Bangkok Sunday for a one-day visit
and talks with Cambodian leaders to bolster bilateral ties and to assure Phnom
Penh that his interim government will continue to adhere to the previous
government's policy of economic and political cooperation with the neighbor
country, Thai News Agency reported.
Surayud, who came to power after a bloodless military coup toppled the
government of prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra on Sept. 19, is scheduled to
confer with his Cambodian counterpart Hun Sen and Senate Speaker Chea Sim on
political changes in Thailand as well as reaffirm Thai pledges to carry out
projects agreed earlier between the two countries.
On Saturday, Surayud and his retinue, including Deputy Prime Minister and
Finance Minister Pridiyathorn Devakula and Foreign Minister Nitya Pibulsonggram,
visited another neighbor Laos as the new PM's international debut after he was
royally appointed two weeks ago.
Surayud also plans to visit Malaysia on Wednesday and hold talks with his
Malaysian counterpart Abdullah Badawi.