
China denies supplying new weapons to Cambodia amid its border conflict with Thailand
Chinese officials denied supplying any new weapons or military support to the Cambodian Armed Forces amid the conflict, which has spilled into its third day.
Senior Col Sheng Wei, deputy director of the Asia division of the Office of International Military Cooperation (OIMC) of China's People Liberation Army said all the Chinese military equipment currently possessed by Cambodia are 'the result of historical cooperation projects'.
'Since tensions began along the Thailand-Cambodia border, China has not provided any military equipment to Cambodia for use against Thailand...Please do not believe fake news generated by malicious actors,' Col Sheng Wei said, according to The Straits Times.
The conflict began on Thursday, with the two nations trading air strikes along contested stretches of their 817km border.
Over a dozen people were killed on the first day of conflict, prompting hundreds of thousands to evacuate from border areas between the two nations.
Thailand reported clashes in multiple areas along the border on Friday, including near the ancient Ta Muen Thom temple, which is claimed by both nations.
The Thai Army accused Cambodian forces of using heavy artillery and Russian-made BM-21 rocket launchers, prompting them to engage in what they called 'appropriate supporting fire' in return.
Thailand's UN Ambassador Cherdchai Chaivaivid called Cambodia's actions a "flagrant act of aggression" and a "serious" breach of international law.
"Thailand further strongly condemns Cambodia's indiscriminate attacks against civilians, civilian objects, and public facilities, particularly hospitals, which constitute a flagrant violation of the Geneva Conventions of 1949,' the Thai UN Ambassador said.
Thailand also blamed Cambodia for laying new landmines – one of which injured a Thai soldier, and called for quick military response.
Cambodia, on the other hand, accused Thailand of launching air strikes and dropping bombs on roads inside its territory.
It expressed outrage at Thailand's use of what it claimed was a large amount of cluster munitions, labelling it a violation of international law.
Both sides claim to have acted in self-defence.
Cambodia also said it sought a 'peaceful solution to the dispute'.
Cambodia's UN Ambassador Chhea Keo told reporters that the country 'asked for immediate ceasefires, unconditionally'.
He responded to accusations that Cambodia attacked Thailand, asking how a small country with no air force could attack a much larger country with an army three times its size.
Cambodia has a defence budget of $1.3bn in 2024 with 124,300 active military personnel, compared to Thailand's well-funded military that has a defence budget of $5.73bn in 2024 and over 360,000 active army personnel.
The conflict has entered its third day on Satuday, with the death toll climbing to 33 and tens of thousands seeking refuge.
Amid speculations of China providing weapons to the Cambodian army, a Chinese delegation meeting Thai officials in Beijing requested that its clarification be communicated to the Thai public in the interest of regional stability and trust.
The delegation said the Chinese weapons in the Cambodian armoury are from past military cooperation agreements, adding that no new military support has been provided.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
US and China hold trade talks after Donald Trump eyes ‘world tariff'
Update: Date: 2025-07-29T06:58:13.000Z Title: US-China talks extension 'likely' as Trump targets 'world tariff' Content: Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of business, economics and financial markets. After the US and EU announced the outline of a trade deal that would limit tariffs to 15%, it looks like talks with China could be the next on the agenda, with an extension of a truce in the trade war 'likely', according to a top official in the Trump administration. US Treasury chief Scott Bessent arrived yesterday in Sweden, alongside China's vice premier He Lifeng, according to Reuters. Back in the US, Howard Lutnick, the commerce secretary told Fox News that a delay to a higher tariff deadline was probable: Is that a likely outcome? Sure, it seems that way, but let's leave it to President Trump to decide. Donald Trump triggered financial market chaos after slapping tariffs at 145% on China. However, in May he announced a 90-day pause, lowering tariffs to (a still significant) 30%. That left a deadline of 12 August for the talks, but it is US trade representative Jamieson Greer told the CNBC news channel he did not expect 'some kind of enormous breakthrough today' at the talks in Stockholm, although he flagged that a deal last month to speed up rare earth metal imports from China to the US would be on the agenda. He said: What I expect is continued monitoring and checking in on the implementation of our agreement thus far, making sure that key critical minerals are flowing between the parties and setting the groundwork for enhanced trade and balanced trade going forward. It came after the US and EU announced a deal to limit tariffs to 15%. The end of market uncertainty appeared to be welcomed at first by markets on Monday – only for the mood to sour somewhat later in the day. The French prime minister, François Bayrou, said the EU had capitulated to Donald Trump, and said it was a 'dark day' for the EU. Trump on Monday suggested that he could impose a 'world tariff' on all of the countries that have not agreed a trade deal. That tariff could be 15% or 20% – meaning that, after all the negotiating effort, the EU could be left with similar terms to the rest of the world. At his golf course in Scotland yesterday, while visiting UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Trump said: I would say it'll be somewhere in the 15 to 20% range. Probably one of those two numbers. On the prospects of Chinese talks, Trump said: I'd love to see China open up their country. Back in May, Trump had said that China had already 'agreed to open up' – but it appears there may be more work to be done. 9:30am BST: Bank of England mortgage approvals (June; previous: 63,032; consensus: 63,000) 9:30am BST: Bank of England consumer credit (June; previous: £859m; consensus: £1.2bn)


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Thailand-Cambodia border calm as military commanders hold talks
BANGKOK, July 29 (Reuters) - Military commanders from Thailand and Cambodia held talks on Tuesday, as calm return to their disputed border and displaced residents began trickling back, following the Southeast Asian neighbours announcing a truce to end five days of fighting. Thai and Cambodian leaders met in Malaysia on Monday and agreed to a ceasefire deal to halt their deadliest conflict in more than a decade that has killed at least 40 people, mostly civilians, and displaced over 300,000 in both countries. Although Thailand's military said that there had been attacks by Cambodian troops in at least five locations early on Tuesday, violating the ceasefire that had come into effect from midnight, commanders from both sides met and held talks, a Thai army spokesman said. This includes negotiations between the general leading Thailand's 2nd region army, which oversees the stretch of the frontier that has seen the heaviest fighting during the conflict, and his Cambodian counterpart, Thai Major Gen. Winthai Suvaree told reporters. The commanders, who met at the border, agreed to maintain the ceasefire, stop any troop movement, and facilitate the return of the wounded and dead bodies, he said. "Each side will establish a coordinating team of four to resolve any problems," Winthai said. In Bangkok, Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai, who travelled to the Malaysian capital to secure the truce deal, said he had spoken to Cambodia's defence minister and calm had returned to border area. "There is no escalation," Phumtham told reporters. "Right now things are calm." Maly Socheata, a spokesperson for the Cambodian Defence Ministry, said at a briefing on Tuesday that there had been no new fighting along the border. Vehicular traffic and daily activity resumed in the Kantharalak district of Thailand's Sisaket province on Tuesday, about 30 km (20 miles) from the frontlines, where Thai and Cambodian troops remain amassed. Chaiya Phumjaroen, 51, said he returned to town to reopen his shop early on Tuesday, after hearing of the ceasefire deal on the news. "I am very happy that a ceasefire happened," he said. "If they continue to fight, we have no opportunity to make money." In Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey province, 63-year-old Ly Kim Eng sat in front of a makeshift tarpaulin shelter, waiting for directions after hearing of the ceasefire deal. "So, if the authorities announce it is safe for all of the refugees to return home, I would immediately return," he said. The Southeast Asian neighbours have wrangled for decades over their disputed frontier and have been on a conflict footing since the killing of a Cambodian soldier in a skirmish late in May, which led to a troop buildup on both sides and a full-blown diplomatic crisis. Monday's peace talks came after a sustained push by Malaysian Premier Anwar Ibrahim and U.S. President Donald Trump, with the latter warning Thai and Cambodian leaders that trade negotiations would not progress if fighting continued. Thailand and Cambodia face a tariff of 36% on their goods in the U.S., their biggest export market, unless a reduction can be negotiated. After the ceasefire deal was reached, Trump said he had spoken to both leaders and had instructed his trade team to restart tariff talks. Pichai Chunhavajira, Thailand's finance minister, said on Tuesday that trade talks with Washington are expected to be concluded before August 1, and that U.S. tariffs on the country are not expected to be as high as 36%. The ceasefire deal reflected a rare convergence of interest between the U.S. and China, which also pushed for the talks, but the agreement itself remained fragile and third-party monitoring was essential to keep it in place, said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a political scientist at Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University. "The ceasefire agreement has to be enforced," he said. "It cannot be left to Thailand and Cambodia to implement because the hostilities are running so deep now."


BBC News
4 hours ago
- BBC News
Thailand accuses Cambodia of violating hours-old ceasefire
Thailand has accused Cambodia of "deliberately" violating a ceasefire the two countries had agreed on Monday to end border clashes that have killed at least 33 people and displaced thousands. It's a shaky start for the ceasefire, which was meant to bring an end to five days of bombardment and rocket attacks along the shared Thai military says it stopped firing after midnight, but that it continued to receive gunfire from the Cambodian side "at multiple locations" up until this morning. But Cambodia's defence ministry told the AFP news agency there had been "no armed clashes" between the two sides since the ceasefire began at midnight. A meeting between local commanders which was part of the ceasefire agreement has been postponed twice, and may not happen at all. Tensions between the South East Asian countries over their century-old disputed border ramped up in May when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a clash. They escalated into a full-scale conflict last week after five Thai soldiers were injured in a landmine explosion. Thailand closed some of its border crossings, expelled the Cambodian ambassador and recalled its own from Phnom Penh. After the two sides exchanged gunfire early on Thursday, Cambodia fired multiple rockets into Thailand, killing several civilians. More civilians died on both sides in the following days, and tens of thousands more were evacuated to shelters. Intense exchanges of fire between the two armies continued up to midnight on Monday, the deadline for the ceasefire, with Thailand launching more air strikes on Cambodian positions. But on Tuesday morning, before Thailand alleged the ceasefire had been violated, Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Manet said that the "frontlines have eased" since midnight. Under the agreement, both sides had agreed to pull back their armies and to accept some kind of independent monitoring to prevent further Manet and his Thai counterpart Phumtham Wechayachai had met on Monday in Malaysia in a meeting brokered by its leader Anwar Ibrahim. An outgunned Cambodia had been pushing for a ceasefire and its leader called it a very good meeting. Thailand, which had initially been reluctant to negotiate, agreed after US President Donald Trump threatened to halt talks over tariffs until Thailand and Cambodia stopped fighting. A dispute going back decades In fact, the argument between Thailand and Cambodia dates back more than a century, when the borders of the two nations were drawn after the French occupation of officially became hostile in 2008, when Cambodia tried to register an 11th Century temple located in the disputed area as a Unesco World Heritage Site - a move that was met with heated protest from the years there have been sporadic clashes that have seen soldiers and civilians killed on both latest tensions ramped up in May after a Cambodian soldier was killed in a clash. This plunged bilateral ties to their lowest point in more than a the past two months, both countries have imposed border restrictions on one another. Cambodia banned imports from Thailand such as fruits and vegetables, and stopped importing power and internet countries have also strengthened troop presence along the border in recent weeks.