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Cambodia-Thailand border talks drag on

Cambodia-Thailand border talks drag on

The Stara day ago

THE country's defence ministry has said that the country's troops haven't withdrawn from a patch of land whose ownership is hotly disputed by neighbouring Thailand, but the declaration also echoed recent statements by both sides seeking a peaceful resolution to their competing border claims.
Cambodian and Thai authorities engaged in saber-rattling last week after an armed confrontation at the border on May 28 left one Cambodian soldier dead.
The incident, which each side blamed on the other, reportedly took place in a relatively small 'no man's land' constituting territory along their border that both countries claim is theirs.
A declaration by the Cambodian defence ministry on Monday had 'No Withdrawal of Troops' as its first principle.
It said that 'Cambo­dian forces have not been withdrawn from any areas under Cam­bodian ­sovereignty where they have been stationed for an extended period'.
The wording left unclear exactly which positions had been occupied for 'an extended period'.
His statement also reaffirmed Cambodia's territorial claims covering not only the spot near Morakot village in Cambodia's north-western province of Preah Vihear where the soldier was killed, but also three other pieces of disputed land.
Cambodian Defence Minister Tea Seiha himself on Sunday had painted a slightly different picture, stating that Cambodia and Thai military leaders had met and decided to adjust the military forces of both sides to return to appropriate areas in order to reduce tension.
His statement appeared to be in accord with what Thai Defence Minister Phumtham Wechayachai announced on Sunday, that both sides had withdrawn their forces to where they had been in 2024.
That came after Thailand began shutting or limiting crossing hours at some of the numerous checkpoints along the countries' common border.
The tough talk on both sides appeared aimed mostly at drumming up nationalist support among their own domestic audiences. — AP

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