
Thailand warns it may act in 'self-defense' after soldier hurt by a mine blast near Cambodian border
A statement from Thai Army spokesperson Maj. Gen. Winthai Suvaree said a sergeant was patrolling the border with seven other soldiers Tuesday morning when he 'stepped on an anti-personnel landmine covertly planted by the Cambodian side, resulting in severe injuries to his left ankle.'
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Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Baby Girl Survives Truck Plunge into 50-Foot Ravine Thanks to Mom's 'Final Act' of Wrapping Her in Pillows
A baby girl is lucky to be alive following a deadly car crash in Thailand. Footage obtained by the Associated Press showed the tense, late-night rescue, with first responders racing to free the girl, thought to be around 1 years old, from an overturned vehicle that had plummeted nearly 50 feet into a ravine in the Chiang Mai Province. According to local media outlet Bangkok Post, the crash took place on Saturday, Aug. 9. Rescue teams arrived on the scene at about 9 p.m. and found a truck that had landed upside down with its roof striking a rock directly upon impact, according to the outlet. They discovered that the passengers of the vehicle had been a family, including a mother and father, who were thrown from the vehicle. Solve the daily Crossword

Epoch Times
6 hours ago
- Epoch Times
State Department Spotlights Beijing's Global Repression in New Report
The State Department has called out the Chinese regime for intimidating and exacting reprisals against targets globally to advance its political goals. In its long-anticipated international human rights report, published on Aug. 12, the department noted the wide-ranging ways the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP's) campaign takes form, including assaults, harassment, hacking, anonymous threats, and bullying through proxies. Victims of the regime's long-arm tactics, often called transnational repression, are wide ranging, with the report listing ethnic Uyghurs, spiritual practitioners, dissidents, foreign journalists, and Chinese students and faculty members studying outside China as common targets. The department cited research by the D.C.-based nonprofit Freedom House, which found that the CCP is responsible for 'the most comprehensive and sophisticated' transnational repression campaign in the world, at times co-opting other countries' institutions to force targeted individuals back to China—where they're often in danger of persecution. One of the most prominent episodes took place during CCP leader Xi Jinping's visit to San Francisco for the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in late 2023. During the multi-day event, protesters arranged through Chinese foreign influence programs, attacked pro-democracy activists with flagpoles and chemical spray, the State Department's report said. There have been repercussions for these transnational acts of violent repression. In May, the Justice Department indicted two men for allegedly harassing and surveilling a victim by installing a tracking device on the victim's car and slashing their tires in an effort to stop them from protesting Xi's trip. The report noted the case of a former Chinese undercover agent who after defecting to Australia, revealed his 15-year-long involvement in targeting Chinese dissidents in several countries under orders from the CCP's secret police operating on foreign soil. The agent, Eric, in 2024 told The Epoch Times that his handler in 2021 asked him to locate a Thailand-based Falun Gong practitioner who had fled China to escape the CCP's persecution of his faith. The handler, in assigning him the job, gave him photos showing the name and location of the target's apartment, as well as several photos of the man and his family. The victim, Li Guixin, confirmed that one of these photos was never previously posted on the internet. Threats from the CCP have also been experienced by the international media. In June 2024, a French reporter and a French filmmaker received threatening phone calls from a China-based number, following the broadcast of their documentary about the attempted forced repatriation of a Chinese dissident, the State Department reports. According to Reporters Without Borders, an unidentified individual hacked into the journalists' group chat on an encrypted app, sending Chinese-language messages asking them not to release the film. Those reporters weren't alone in being hacked by agents of the CCP. The United States has, in recent years, identified a number of Chinese state-sponsored cyber attackers like Salt Typhoon and i-Soon—whose victims include The Epoch Times—that pilfer intelligence from Western governments, civil groups, and others deemed to suit the regime's interests. Crimes of transnational repression were highlighted in one major segment in the State Department report under 'Security of the Person,' as well as two other sections focused on 'Life' and 'Liberty.' The report also covered forced labor in China's northwestern region of Xinjiang, where over 1 million Uyghurs and other ethnic Muslim minorities are detained, with the regime suppressing dissident voices in their communities, with many cases of forced disappearances. The State Department also cited the seven-year sentence given to former Chinese state media editor and columnist Dong Yuyu on espionage charges, arrests of citizens for sharing political views or facts reflecting public concerns, detention and disappearance of journalists—including Swedish publisher Gui Minhai and Australian journalist Yang Hengjun, both of Chinese descent—and acts of aggression to undermine foreign and local reporting. The report named dozens of political prisoners: pastors, a Catholic bishop, Falun Gong practitioners, Tibetans, Uyghurs, rights lawyers, scholars, and others. The report covers the 2024 calendar year before the Trump administration began. The text underwent revisions in March, which the department said was made to improve readability and better align with the legislative and presidential mandates of the new administration. It pared down the volume of content focused on abuses based on gender identity. Regarding the 'China' section of the report, Nina Shea, who has served on the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom for over a decade, said the information only 'scratches the surface of the Chinese Communist Party's human rights atrocities and violations.' 'I understand the need not to duplicate the annual reports on religious freedom and human trafficking but that leaves a big hole in this report, since religious communities across the board are the largest CCP targets today,' she told The Epoch Times. She said the report 'would benefit with stand alone sections on China's surveillance system as a method of control and limitation on individual freedom, as well as ones on the CCP's social credit system, ideological indoctrination measures, forced ethnic assimilation, and one on forced organ harvesting and other coerced bio- and medical interventions.' The report should also expand sources to include the various Justice Department cases against CCP agents and spies in the United States, who have targeted Chinese American members of religious and political groups that the regime has labelled the 'five poisons' to the CCP, she said, calling the omission a 'major oversight' in the transnational repression section. 'A fuller picture is needed to accurately describe the totalitarian suppression of human rights under CCP rule today,' she said. The China report was part of the department's set of Country Reports on Human Rights Practices delivered annually to Congress.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Video shows hornbills in southern Thailand, not 'vultures feeding on soldiers' bodies'
Following deadly border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia, a video was shared in posts falsely claiming it shows vultures gathering in large numbers to feed on the unrecovered bodies of Thai soldiers. The clip was shared days before the latest violence, and in fact shows hornbills in southern Thailand, hundreds of kilometres from the Thai-Cambodian border. "Many vultures and crows are tearing at the corpses of (Thai) soldiers," reads part of the Khmer-language caption of a Facebook video shared on August 5, 2025. "Please, Thai soldiers, come and take the bodies away. Stop harming your own people. They have families to look after!" The video, which has been viewed over a million times, shows birds densely perched on a tree. The same footage was also shared in similar Khmer-language posts on Facebook, YouTube and TikTok. It emerged after Thailand and Cambodia agreed a truce that came into effect on July 29, following five days of clashes that killed at least 43 people on both sides and drove more than 300,000 from their homes (archived link). The clashes -- the latest eruption of a long-standing border dispute -- also kicked off a disinformation blitz as Thai and Cambodian partisans sought to boost the narrative that the other was to blame (archived link). Following the truce, Thailand's deputy defence minister Nattapon Narkphanit called on Cambodia to retrieve the bodies of its fallen troops at the border and Cambodian social media users also claimed the corpses of Thai soldiers had been left at the frontier (archived here and here). The circulating video, however, predates the latest border clashes and does not show "vultures and crows". Flock of hornbills A reverse image search using the keyframes from the falsely shared video led to a higher-quality version posted by Thai photographer Somchai Choosiri on Facebook on July 21 (archived link). Its caption reads: "A large group of plain-pouched hornbills flock and sleep closely together." The video was labelled as having been filmed in Phatthalung, a province in the south of Thailand -- hundreds of kilometres from the Thai-Cambodian border. A watermark -- reading "Somchai Choosiri" and "Photographer" -- is also visible at the bottom of both the falsely shared clip and the original video. The sight of migrating plain-pouched hornbills was also covered by local news reports and wildlife authorities (archived here and here). According to their entry in a database run by conservation alliance Birdlife International, plain-pouched hornbills have a varied diet, mainly comprising fruit but also invertebrates and small vertebrates (archived link). AFP has previously debunked other misinformation related to the conflict between Cambodia and Thailand. Solve the daily Crossword