
Thailand-Cambodia peace talks begin in Putrajaya amid rising border tensions
Published on: Mon, Jul 28, 2025
By: Bernama Text Size: PUTRAJAYA: The special meeting between Thailand and Cambodia, aimed at securing an immediate ceasefire and halting hostilities along the disputed border, began in Putrajaya on Monday. The special meeting, brokered by Malaysia and Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim in his capacity as the current ASEAN Chair, is being held to de-escalate rising tensions and restore stability along the conflict-hit border areas. Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai arrived at Seri Perdana, the venue of the meeting, which is the official residence of the Malaysian prime minister, at about 2.51 pm followed shortly after by Cambodian leader Hun Manet. They were welcomed by Anwar. Also attending the meeting were US Ambassador to Malaysia Edgard Kagan and Chinese Ambassador to Malaysia Ouyang Yujing, who are participating as co-facilitators. Last Friday, Anwar had called Phumtham and Manet separately, appealing for both leaders to seek an immediate ceasefire and return to dialogue to resolve their dispute. Anwar had said that Malaysia stands ready to assist and facilitate the process in the spirit of ASEAN unity and shared responsibility. The two Southeast Asian neighbours have a long history of diplomatic rows over an 817-kilometre undemarcated stretch of their shared border. Tensions between Thailand and Cambodia have been simmering since May 28 following a skirmish between their troops near the disputed Preah Vihear border area, which claimed the life of a Cambodian soldier. The latest round of hostilities erupted on July 24. Armed clashes have been reported along Cambodia's northern border region, with fatalities on both sides. To date, more than 20 people have been reported killed on the Thai side, while Cambodian authorities have confirmed the deaths of 13 people, including five soldiers in the conflict. Thousands of civilians on both sides of the border have been forced to evacuate. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available.
Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia
Hashtags

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


New Straits Times
an hour ago
- New Straits Times
Rubio, Mohamad discuss Thailand-Cambodia tensions
WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan discussed tensions between Thailand and Cambodia, State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said on Wednesday. "Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with Malaysian Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan to thank the Malaysian government for its role in deescalating tensions between Thailand and Cambodia and successfully facilitating a ceasefire agreement over the ongoing border dispute," Bruce said in a statement, reported Sputnik/RIA Novosti. Rubio reiterated the US desire to reach peace and a ceasefire, she added. "The United States supports future discussions on ceasefire implementation in order to ensure peace and stability between Thailand and Cambodia," Bruce added. The escalation of the border conflict between Thailand and Cambodia turned into an armed confrontation on July 24. After clashes in the border area, the sides exchanged artillery fire, with Cambodia using Grad multiple rocket launcher systems, including against civilian targets in Thailand, while Thailand carried out an airstrike on Cambodian military positions. Both sides reported casualties, including civilians. On July 27, US President Donald Trump said that the US could not negotiate tariffs with countries in armed conflict and called on Thailand and Cambodia to immediately enter into ceasefire negotiations. On Monday, Thailand and Cambodia agreed to establish a ceasefire starting at midnight. On Tuesday, Thailand's acting prime minister said that Cambodia was systematically violating the ceasefire along the border. The Cambodian Defence Ministry denied the allegations. - Bernama-Sputnik/RIA Novosti


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Wednesday (July 30, 2025)
Malaysia * King, Queen grace Warriors' Day prayers at National Mosque * Govt scraps plan to impose luxury goods tax * No plans to form special economic or financial zone at Malaysia-Thailand border, Parliament heard * No gender bias in PR approval rates for foreign spouses, says Saifuddin * 139 M'sians stranded abroad due to job scams, Parliament told * LRT3 project costs RM9.72bil less than initial price tag, says Loke * Mother of murdered six-year-old attempts suicide amid ongoing investigation * Former university manager fined RM35,000 for forging student recruitment documents * 14-year-old student nabbed for punching, threatening teacher * Firefly to move jet operations from Subang Airport to KLIA, effective Aug 19 * Sombre mood as relatives, friends arrive for Tishant's funeral * New AI powered immigration system to be launched next year * Malaysia moving closer to adopting nuclear energy, says Chang Lih Kang * RM11.3bil in manufacturing investments operational under Madani govt - Tengku Zafrul * PM Anwar to table 13th Malaysia Plan in Parliament tomorrow * Medicine price display rule to proceed on Aug 1, says Health Minister * Govt mulls law reform to support Reset strategy against private healthcare inflation * Sabah polls: Decision to collaborate with Pakatan was not made unilaterally, says Hajiji * LHDN flags 5,800 taxpayers for failure to submit income tax forms * KTMB adds ETS trips for holiday rush, sales start July 31 * Jempol religious school teacher gets six years in jail, caning for sexually assaulting pupils * 14-year-old student pleads guilty to punching teacher * Sabah to develop EU-standard fishing port in KK, says Hajiji * School gardener sentenced to five years for sexually assaulting student * Chong Wei adds 'Datuk Seri' to his list of honours * JB medical practitioner loses over RM8mil to investment scam * Body of woman found under Klang River bridge believed to be missing college student * Man loses RM5,500 to scammer posing as Michael Chong's aide * High Court to decide on SRC International's RM19.5mil lawsuit against Umno on Oct 24 * Federal Court upholds self-employed man's 30-year jail, whipping sentence for drug trafficking * Level One hot weather alert issued for parts of Perak, Pahang and Sarawak * Bill to protect local industries from unfair trade practices tabled at Dewan Rakyat * Two cops remanded over case involving RM635,000 bribe * Dr Wee demands clarity on STPM student intake data * Insurance agent claims trial to charges of stalking, defaming ex-wife * Teenager seeking treatment for gastric revealed her father raped her * Focus on the people, not just politics, Pahang Ruler urges elected reps * Amendments to the Education Act passed, secondary school education now compulsory * Calls for legislation to tackle rise in bullying cases in schools * Anwar receives 13MP document for tabling in Parliament tomorrow * KL Immigration raids three-storey spa offering sex services * Nation will always remember sacrifices of warriors, says Anwar Singapore * Singapore keeps monetary settings unchanged as trade tensions ease * Singapore prepared to recognise State of Palestine in principle; goal is to reach peace, two-state solution * Domestic helper jailed for abusing Singapore employer's one-year-old son more than 20 times * Jail, fine for Myanmarese man linked to case involving three bank accounts that received over US$531mil in total * Man jailed for stealing debit cards, cash aboard Scoot flight to Singapore * Man charged with having 320 vape pods and over 70 vapes meant for sale in car at Singapore's Bugis mall * Singapore's Bukit Panjang LRT to shut on two Sundays to facilitate tests; some upgrading work nearing completion * 2,400 vapes, related components found in Singapore-bound lorry at Tuas Checkpoint Indonesia * Jakarta boosts Air Force with Turkish jet contract * Indonesia issues tsunami warning after Russian quake * Indonesia to raise tax rate on crypto transactions * Police find no elements of crime in Indonesian diplomat's death * Employers call on Indonesian government to stem layoffs, boost competitiveness Thailand * Calm returns to disputed border * Thailand accuses Cambodia of 'flagrant violation' of truce * Tribute to brave Thai soldier "Sergeant Toe" who died defending hundreds of fellow soldiers * Thailand and Cambodia trade accusations but fragile truce holds * Thai court gives Paetongtarn until Aug 4 to submit defence in dismissal case * Thai court set to rule if Thaksin dodged jail with hospital stay * Over 81,000 inmates granted royal clemency on Thai King's birthday anniversary * Thai-Cambodia border clash threatens 181 billion baht economic loss as ceasefire holds * Royal Thai Army to present evidence of Cambodia's deliberate attacks on civilians to the international community * Thailand fireworks factory blast kills nine Philippines * Philippines sees US$1.7bil in retirement fund with new push * Camarines Sur folk in Philippines urged to stay alert after tsunami warning * Philippine President Marcos' trust, performance ratings up; VP Sara Duterte's decline — survey Vietnam * Flash floods take five lives, dozens evacuated * Exporters urge VAT exemption for Vietnam's green coffee beans and rice * Vietnam doctors perform nine-hour surgery to remove tumour and reconstruct face of ethnic girl * Vietnam receives 85 citizens from Cambodia following online scam crackdown Myanmar * Myanmar rice mills go solar, boosting sustainability, global market appeal * Myanmar junta mandates prison sentences for election critics Cambodia * Cambodia migrant workers count costs of conflict after fleeing Thailand * Cambodian employment agency, ILO link 3,000 Battambang employees with employers * Observers to be deployed to monitor Cambodia-Thailand border ceasefire Laos * Flood alert for Vientiane as Mekong nears danger mark Brunei * Young Brunei student heads to Osaka expo for prize presentation Aseanplus * World leaders laud Anwar's efforts in brokering peace * M'sian team seeks to end Thai-Cambodia tensions * PM: Ceasefire highlights Asean's growing diplomatic clout * Assam actress Nandini Kashyap arrested in hit-and-run case that killed polytechnic student * Cricket-India head coach Gambhir clashes with ground staff during pitch inspection * Australia widens teen social media ban to YouTube, scraps exemption * Gunmen involved in Kashmir attack killed * 'Rain trap' kills at least 30 * Business groups say swift ceasefire will prevent disruptions * Beijing offers childcare subsidies to boost fertility * N. Korea: No deal on nukes * Eighteen pilgrims perish in road crash * Teen's murder sparks reckoning * Huge quake rocks Russia's Far East, triggering tsunami warnings around Pacific * How 'KPop Demon Hunters' became the surprise hit of the summer * Bursa sees further profit-taking ahead of US tech earnings, Fed decision * Johor MB becomes ninth Malaysian to be conferred Lee Kuan Yew Exchange Fellowship * Ringgit opens little changed against US$ ahead of FOMC meeting * Workers at stricken Fukushima nuclear plant evacuate after tsunami warning: Operator * Markets mixed as China-US talks end, eyes on tech earnings * Tourists win with Malaysia-China mutual visa exemption deal * Two former China football officials sentenced for corruption * Tsunami expected to hit parts of eastern China: Warning centre * No tsunami threat to Malaysia from powerful Russia quake * Malaysians in Japan urged to stay alert following tsunami warning * Shanghai relocates more than 280,000 people due to tropical storm * FBM KLCI remains negative amid investor jitters * YouTube to be included in Australia's teen social media ban * Tea-loving Nepal is warming up to coffee * 'Squid Game,' Park Bo-gum and K-pop: Korea continues to attract tourists with K-content * Russia quake among strongest ever recorded * Cabinet to decide Malaysia's stance on calling Hamas to disarm in Gaza, says Fahmi * Intimate no more? Japan clamps down on 'host clubs' * 'Marathon at F1 speed': China bids to lap US in AI leadership * Lingling is Malaysia's first female K-pop idol and she is leading new girl group Kiiras * Over 356,000 people ordered to evacuate in Japan amid tsunami threat: Reports * Gobind: Malaysia secures RM2.97bil digital investments from China * In Japan, tsunami warning resurfaces memories of Fukushima disaster * Mountain tales and wild mushrooms: High on life in China's Lijiang * Fuel prices July 31-Aug 6: RON97 down four sen, RON95 and diesel unchanged * K-idols Park Bo-gum, Blackpink's Jennie named South Korea's tourism ambassadors for 2025 * Seven foreign men charged with kidnapping Bangladeshi businessman * Japan sees new record high temperature of 41.2 deg C * Cricket-Injured Stokes ruled out of final test v India, Archer rested * South Korea's ramyeon makers vie to acquire suppliers for flavour 'soupremacy' * Ringgit ends slightly lower against US dollar ahead of Fed rate decision * AKPS nabs 13 foreigners at KLIA 2, prohibits them from entering the country * Actress Barbie Hsu's husband DJ Koo seen sitting by her grave, reportedly visits her daily * Massive Russian earthquake struck on 'megathrust fault' * 10 confirmed dead in north China bus accident: state media * Typhoon Co-May makes landfall in Zhoushan, China * Malaysia's Jeneath Wong fired up for Royal Porthcawl links test at AIG Women's Open, her third appearance in a Major this year * Shanghai evacuates 283,000 people as typhoon hits * steps up mass production of robotaxis, targets overseas expansion * 1.3m flood wave reaches Japan following 8.8-quake off Russia * Two men arrested for trying to smuggle 1,550 litres of petrol to neighbouring countries * Cricket-Bumrah not ruled out of fifth test, says India captain Gill * Malaysia's heavy metal boys are back - legendary group XPDC aims to rock it up in the 'MetalKestra' concert on Nov 8 * Motor racing-Piastri returns as leader to scene of first F1 win * HK actor Will Or, 33, reveals he has stage 4 lung cancer: 'I will be OK'


New Straits Times
2 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Brokering Cambodia-Thailand ceasefire is not about vainglory
WHAT did they say about trust being like a vase, which once broken, will never be the same again? So, do we leave it in tatters, or try to fix it back to form? This could well describe the state of play between Cambodia and Thailand sharing a border which has long been an unruly frontier, where old maps, national pride and political survival intersect. The trust deficit between the two considerably outweighs the cultivated goodwill, leaving no illusion that whatever peace struck on the anvil of diplomacy will be ironclad. Thus, the brokering of a ceasefire between the two following recent clashes is a reminder that diplomacy's true measure lies not in sweeping settlements, but in holding the line against worse outcomes. Tensions that began simmering in May erupted as Cambodian and Thai troops exchanged fire in disputed territory along the Dangrek mountains. Thanks to the trust shortfall, what began as a familiar border clash escalated sharply when Cambodia deployed multiple launch rocket systems that hit a hospital, among other targets, prompting Thailand to respond with F-16 jet strikes, possibly the first time its air force had fired in anger since a brief border war with Laos in 1987. Tens of thousands fled to makeshift camps. The fighting was the most intense in more than a decade. On July 28, Cambodia and Thailand agreed to halt hostilities from midnight. Meeting in Putrajaya under Malaysia's chairmanship of Asean, both prime ministers accepted an immediate and unconditional ceasefire. The agreement was the product of painstaking, unglamorous but by no means lacklustre facilitation by Malaysia, with the United States playing a consequential, parallel role. US President Donald Trump added urgency by warning that tariff negotiations with both countries would not proceed until "fighting stops". China, present as an observer, lent additional weight to the talks — particularly important for Cambodia, which counts Beijing as its most dependable backer. The optics mattered: the message was that de-escalation was in everyone's interest, and that Malaysia's convening role was part of a wider diplomatic effort, not an exercise in rivalry. Reaching the ceasefire was never a foregone conclusion as, not surprisingly, the two sides took diametrically opposed approaches to handling the dispute. Phnom Penh sought to internationalise the issue, reviving old appeals to the International Court of Justice and casting itself as the aggrieved party. Bangkok insisted on tackling it bilaterally, out of the global spotlight and far from anything that might invite international arbitration. Neither could be seen to back down. Into this maelstrom stepped Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, who engaged both Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai with care but never so much as to box either side in. By bringing the two leaders to Putrajaya and offering to coordinate observers, Malaysia showed that an Asean chair willing to act and quick on the draw could still shape events. The ceasefire was framed as an initial measure to halt the fighting and stabilise the situation, not even as a prelude to dispute resolution. Follow-up arrangements rely largely on bilateral mechanisms between Cambodia and Thailand, with Asean in a supporting role. That was by design. A heavier Asean role might have triggered resentment and made the arrangement harder to sustain. But this doesn't preclude Anwar, in his personal capacity, from doing the nudging and cajoling to both parties, more as Asean family members than as chair sitting in council. All said, while the crucial role of political leaders is undeniable, a lasting pause will require more than cabinet orders. It will need continued discipline from commanders of both sides on the ground. Anwar stressed that point to members of the Asean diplomatic corps during an interface session in Jakarta, on the sidelines of his visit to Indonesia. Complaints that Asean failed to resolve the dispute swiftly miss the point entirely. There was never any prospect of conjuring fantasy settlements overnight, a standard at which no international body performs any better. For Malaysia, this is not a pursuit in vainglory. The role of Asean chair is designed to be facilitative, not proprietorial. Asean works best when the chair is willing to act, not by trying to foist solutions, but by creating the space and opportunity in which they might one day emerge.