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Is Thailand's conflict-hit economy running out of luck?

Is Thailand's conflict-hit economy running out of luck?

For days, the piercing whistle of Cambodian rockets sent 69-year-old Kantapong Prakaew scrambling for cover in his makeshift bunker – a frail fortification against the conflict in
Thailand 's Surin province.
He is one of the few elderly residents who refused to flee, holding out as artillery fire ravaged the fields and wrecked the livelihoods of a long underdeveloped region.
Across the borderlands, the recent flare-up of violence between Thailand and
Cambodia has claimed dozens of lives and displaced hundreds of thousands.
While a tentative truce appears to be holding, the scars of conflict are everywhere to see – from the torn-up fields where Kantapong once tended eucalyptus and rubber trees, to the anxious calculations of villagers forced to count the cost of a dispute they did not choose.
Bunkers to protect residents against shelling are seen in in Thailand's Surin province on Tuesday. Photo: AFP
'It's been very hard for all of us. We all have debts to pay,' said Kantapong, whose wife fled their village Surin's Phanom Dong Rak district for an evacuation centre while he stayed behind. 'We've wasted time and opportunities. Who will be responsible for our losses?'
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Stench of death hangs over Thai-Cambodian peace deal
Stench of death hangs over Thai-Cambodian peace deal

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Stench of death hangs over Thai-Cambodian peace deal

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During their July 24-28 cross-border battles, which both sides blamed the other for fomenting, Thailand bombed Cambodia with US-built F-16 warplanes and Swedish Gripen jets, spurring Bangkok's interest in purchasing more Gripen fighter planes to augment the Royal Thai Air Force. Thailand's Deputy Defense Minister General Nattaphon Narkphanit and Cambodia's Defense Minister General Tea Seiha signed the document on Thursday at a Thailand-Cambodia General Border Committee meeting. Officials from the US, China and Malaysia appeared as observers. 'There will be an observation team of ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) military attaches based in Thailand and Cambodia, led by Malaysia,' Nattaphon told reporters, describing how they will routinely inspect the zone from each side but not cross the frontier. The agreement did not include historic territorial disputes along the Thai-Cambodian border, which remain to be discussed. Expressions of shrill nationalism and militaristic jingoism have increased among the public and government throughout the fighting, empowering the heavily politicized armed forces in both countries and hyping the conflict. On July 26, US President Donald Trump demanded that the two Buddhist-majority nations agree to a ceasefire, threatening to impose 36% tariffs on Thai goods and 49% on Cambodian shipments if they did not come to an agreement. Both countries were handed 19% tariffs after the hostilities stopped. The two countries met on July 27 and signed a peace deal, which the August 7 document extends with additional details and promises. At least 43 people, military and civilian, perished during the battles, which caused more than 300,000 residents on both sides to escape to safer zones or cower in quickly dug, makeshift bomb shelters. Unofficial reports suggest Cambodia may have suffered dozens of more deaths from the Thai assaults, which included tank and artillery fire against the out-gunned Cambodians who mostly relied on dangerously unguided Soviet-era artillery and mortar rockets. Thailand holds 18 Cambodians as 'prisoners of war' and allowed the International Red Cross to visit them on August 5 at a Thai army detention center. Thai troops, residents, and Buddhist monks are meanwhile voicing concern about uncollected corpses – most purportedly Cambodian villagers and soldiers – hidden among the dense jungle, resulting in an acrid stench near homes and where soldiers patrol. 'We see the condition of these [dead] Cambodian soldiers lying in front of us every day during patrols,' Nattaphon said. 'So I repeat my serious request to the Cambodian defense minister for their quick retrieval.' 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Individuals, corporations and others also donated more than US$3 million in Thai currency to support stricken residents along the bomb-scarred frontier who need medical care, food, housing and other necessities. Hours before Thursday's agreement was signed, both sides probed the disputed, unmarked border to gain the upper hand, unrolling fresh spools of barbed wire and advancing toward high-ground positions near a handful of ancient Hindu stone temple ruins and jagged cliffs. Bangkok is currently considering whether or not to ask the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the Hague, Netherlands, to put Cambodia's de facto leader Senate President Hun Sen on trial for crimes against humanity and other allegations which Phnom Penh has denied. The ICC prosecutes individuals for alleged genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression. Phnom Penh, meanwhile, is asking for an international investigation into Thailand's alleged aerial bombardments of civilians near the frontier and its use of landmines, which Bangkok has denied. 'The Royal Thai Air Force deployed F-16 and Gripen fighter aircraft to conduct precision air strikes on hostile military targets that posed threats to Thailand's national security,' the Royal Thai Air Force said on July 29. 'The operations focused on neutralizing weapons depots and military active command centers. Missions were conducted both during day and night, and battle damages were assessed using integrated intelligence and modern surveillance technologies. 'Particular deployment of air power was carried out in full compliance with international law, based on the nation's inherent right to self-defense under Article 51 of the United Nations charter,' the air force said. 'The Royal Thai Air Force strictly adhered to the principles of proportionality, necessity, and clear distinction between military and civilian targets,' it said. Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based American foreign correspondent reporting from Asia since 1978, and winner of Columbia University's Foreign Correspondents' Award. Excerpts from his two new nonfiction books, 'Rituals. Killers. Wars. & Sex. — Tibet, India, Nepal, Laos, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka & New York' and 'Apocalyptic Tribes, Smugglers & Freaks' are available here.

Hong Kong lawmakers want pilot schemes aiding high-risk seniors expanded
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Deadly Thai-Cambodia border conflict ends with new ceasefire deal
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South China Morning Post

time6 hours ago

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