logo
Thailand and Cambodia truce talks due but strikes continue

Thailand and Cambodia truce talks due but strikes continue

Business Times2 days ago
[SAMRAONG, Cambodia] Thailand and Cambodia's leaders are due to meet for peace talks on Monday, as a festering territorial dispute along their shared frontier dragged into a fifth day of open combat.
At least 35 people have been killed and more than 200,000 displaced since Thursday as the countries fight over a smattering of contested ancient temples.
In an effort initiated by US President Donald Trump, Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai and Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Manet will meet at 3.00 pm (0700 GMT) in Kuala Lumpur. China is also expected to send a delegation.
Ahead of the talks, Thailand and Cambodia traded fresh fire and accusations.
'This is the fifth day that Thailand has invaded Cambodia's territory with heavy weapons and with the deployment of a lot of troops to grab Cambodia's land,' said defence ministry spokeswoman Maly Socheata.
The previous night, Thailand's military said Cambodian snipers were camping in one of the contested temples, and accused Phnom Penh of surging troops along the border and hammering Thai territory with rockets.
A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU
Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business
Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies.
Sign Up
Sign Up
It said fighting was ongoing at seven areas along the rural border region, marked by a ridge of hills surrounded by wild jungle and agricultural land where locals farm rubber and rice.
'The situation remains highly tense, and it is anticipated that Cambodia may be preparing for a major military operation prior to entering negotiations,' the Thai military statement read.
On Saturday, Trump said he made a late-night call to both leaders, who had agreed to 'quickly work out' a truce.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet said the summit - which will be mediated by Malaysian leader Anwar Ibrahim - was also organised 'with the participation of China' - a key trade and political ally.
'The purpose of this meeting is to achieve an immediate ceasefire, which was initiated by President Donald Trump and agreed to by both prime ministers of Cambodia and Thailand,' Hun Manet said.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that US officials 'are on the ground in Malaysia to assist these peace efforts', while Anwar told domestic media he would focus on securing an 'immediate ceasefire'.
Both sides point the finger
Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn marked his 73rd birthday on Monday, but a notice in the country's Royal Gazette said his public celebrations scheduled for Bangkok's Grand Palace have been cancelled amid the strife.
Both Thailand and Cambodia have agreed in principle to a truce - but accused each other of undermining armistice efforts and of firing first.
Trump has threatened both countries with eye-watering levies in his global tariff blitz unless they agree to independent trade deals.
'When all is done, and Peace is at hand, I look forward to concluding our Trading Agreements with both!' he wrote on social media.
But each side has also blamed the other for undermining peace efforts.
The Thai foreign ministry accused Cambodian forces of firing shells into civilian homes in Surin province.
'Any cessation of hostilities cannot be reached while Cambodia is severely lacking in good faith,' the ministry said.
Meanwhile, Cambodia's defence ministry accused Thailand of 'deliberate and coordinated acts of aggression'.
Thailand says eight of its soldiers and 14 civilians have been killed, while Cambodia has confirmed eight civilian and five military deaths.
The Thai military said it had returned the bodies of 12 Cambodian soldiers killed in combat.
The conflict has forced more than 138,000 people from Thailand's border regions, and 80,000 have been driven from their homes in Cambodia.
The Cambodian government has also accused Thai forces of using cluster munitions, while Bangkok has accused Phnom Penh of targeting hospitals.
With the conflict enflaming nationalist sentiments, Thailand issued a warning to its citizens to 'refrain from any kind of violence, whether in speech or action' against Cambodian migrants living in the country. REUTERS
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's Thailand pick to tell Bangkok border conflicts don't help alliance
Trump's Thailand pick to tell Bangkok border conflicts don't help alliance

Straits Times

time11 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Trump's Thailand pick to tell Bangkok border conflicts don't help alliance

Armoured personnel carriers (APC) are seen on a road near Thailand-Cambodia's border in Sisaket province, the day after the leaders of Cambodia and Thailand agreed to a ceasefire on Monday in a bid to bring an end to their deadliest conflict in more than a decade and ahead of military negotiations, Thailand, July 29, 2025. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha WASHINGTON - President Donald Trump's nominee to be U.S. ambassador to Thailand said on Tuesday he would tell Bangkok if confirmed in the post that conflicts like Thailand's recent border skirmish with Cambodia do nothing to help the Thai people or the country's alliance with Washington. Sean O'Neill, a career foreign service officer who has served twice before as a diplomat in Thailand, made the comment at his Senate confirmation hearing when asked about five days of clashes between Thailand and Cambodia that killed at least 43 people and displaced over 300,000. Thai and Cambodian leaders met in Malaysia on Monday and agreed to a ceasefire to halt their deadliest conflict in more than a decade. That agreement came after Trump warned the Thai and Cambodian leaders at the weekend that trade negotiations with the U.S. would not progress if fighting continued. Asked what he would do to ensure that the ceasefire became a long-term peace agreement, O'Neill said: "I think the first thing I would do is to point out to Thailand, which is one of our only treaty allies in Asia, that wars like this, conflicts like this, do nothing to help their people. "They do nothing to strengthen our alliance, they do nothing to address the challenges that both of our countries face. They are just a needless waste of life and treasure." O'Neill also said Thailand should not lend legitimacy to the military government in its neighbor Myanmar. He said the State Department's position was not to encourage Myanmar to hold "sham" elections the military was looking to hold in the autumn. "If confirmed, I would encourage Thailand not to recognize an election that does not include the participation of over 50% of the country, while most of the opposition leaders are in prison," he said. REUTERS

First direct flight from Pyongyang lands in Moscow
First direct flight from Pyongyang lands in Moscow

Straits Times

time11 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

First direct flight from Pyongyang lands in Moscow

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The Boeing 777 aircraft, operated by Russia's Nordwind Airlines, had already flown from Moscow to Pyongyang on July 27. MOSCOW - A passenger plane from Pyongyang landed at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport on July 29, the first direct flight from the North Korean capital to Moscow in decades as the two countries deepened ties. The Boeing 777 aircraft, operated by Russia's Nordwind Airlines, had already flown from Moscow to Pyongyang on July 27. It landed back in the Russian capital at 0750 GMT on July 29, completing its first round trip on the route, according to the website of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport. The 440-seater plane was 'completely full', with most of the passengers being North Korean, Russia's state RIA news agency reported. Russian diplomat Matvei Krivosheyev, who was also on board, was quoted as saying it was the first such flight in almost three decades. 'We are confident that this flight will be in demand both by Russian tourists and by Korean comrades,' he told the RIA news agency. Russia and North Korea have forged closer ties in recent years, with Pyongyang supplying troops and weapons for Russia's military operations in Ukraine. The two countries signed a mutual defence pact last year, when Russian President Vladimir Putin visited the reclusive state. North Korea confirmed for the first time in April that it had deployed a contingent of its soldiers to the frontline in Ukraine, alongside Russian troops. AFP

Displaced Cambodians return home after Thailand truce
Displaced Cambodians return home after Thailand truce

Straits Times

time41 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Displaced Cambodians return home after Thailand truce

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox KOUK KHPOS, Cambodia - As Cambodia and Thailand's ceasefire held on July 29, Lat Laem hared back home – one of the first evacuees to return to the frontier since deadly cross-border clashes sent more than 300,000 people fleeing. The territorial conflict, which ignited into open combat on July 24, stems from an obscure cartographical dispute dating back decades, and the truce was sealed after interventions from world leaders including US President Donald Trump. Back in his Cambodian village of Kouk Khpos – about 10 kilometres from the Thai border – 30-year-old farmer Lat Laem is grateful for his homecoming, and more quotidian concerns. 'I feel happy to be back to my newly built home so I can clean the floor,' he told AFP, after a two-hour trip trailing his family home on a tractor through shuttered villages and empty streets. Lat Laem said he was working in his rice field when the first blasts broke out, heralding the start of fighting that was waged with artillery, rockets, jets and ground troops. At least 43 people have been killed on both sides in the deadliest clashes in years over a scattering of ancient contested temples on Thailand and Cambodia's 800-kilometre border. The truce came into effect at midnight on July 28, and while Thailand accused Cambodia of violating the pact with skirmishes, peace has generally prevailed. Hope intact When the strikes started raining down around his home, Lat Laem says he took refuge in his brother's bunker – built because border residents are accustomed to sporadic strife. He was initially reluctant to abandon his simple white home, so recently constructed that he has yet to hold a house-warming. When the drumbeat of blasts became too much to bear, he fled – joining around 140,000 others in Cambodia, and 180,000 more in Thailand who were forced to quit their homes. He left with his wife and daughter, his sister-in-law and her children on a tractor-drawn wagon known locally as an 'iron cow' – piled with a few scant belongings including cooking gear and a fan – and headed to a shelter 50 kilometres away. While they were gone the border was scarred by destruction, as both sides traded fire and allegations about the use of cluster bombs, the targeting of civilian homes and even of hospitals. Evacuated far from his prized property, Lat Laem was consumed by anxiety it would be claimed by the conflict. 'I was worried that my house that I spent all that money to build might be damaged – that would upset me,' said Lat Laem. 'I could not sleep.' But pacing the perimeter of his own patch of land back near the contested frontier he confirms it is free of shrapnel scars – totally undamaged by the turmoil. 'It was not hit, it is intact,' he marvelled. 'Now I am happy that it is all good.' AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store