Latest news with #CambodianHumanRightsCommittee

Bangkok Post
03-08-2025
- Politics
- Bangkok Post
Thailand says Cambodian rights panel 'distorts' facts on border clash
Thailand has strongly rejected all accusations from the Cambodian Human Rights Committee (CHRC), saying its claims to the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights were 'distorted' and failed to reflect the facts surrounding recent clashes along the Thai-Cambodian border. In a statement issued on Sunday, the Thailand-Cambodia Border Ad Hoc Centre said the CHRC's letter misrepresented events and provided distorted information that was not consistent with the facts. It stressed that both sides had agreed to an immediate ceasefire at midnight on 28 July following talks in Putrajaya, Malaysia, facilitated by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, between Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and acting prime minister Phumtham Wechayachai. However, Cambodia violated the truce when its troops attacked Thai forces with small arms and grenades in the Phu Makhu area of Si Sa Ket province, continuing hostilities until the morning of 30 July. The detention of 20 Cambodian soldiers took place during renewed fighting triggered by Phnom Penh's ceasefire breach. The detention complied fully with international humanitarian law and should not be construed as a violation of the ceasefire or international law, the centre said. The statement said all detainees were treated humanely. On Aug 1, two Cambodian prisoners of war — one injured in the arm during combat and another suffering from combat-related mental health issues — were repatriated to Cambodia on humanitarian grounds, in line with the 1949 Geneva Conventions and long-standing International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) guidelines. The centre denied allegations of torture, insisting the arm injury was sustained in battle, not in custody. Medical examinations were conducted, and both detainees received initial treatment before their return. It said Thailand stands ready to cooperate with the international community in verifying the facts and has also invited representatives from the ICRC and the UN human rights office to visit the remaining Cambodian detainees.


Time of India
01-08-2025
- Time of India
Thailand returns 2 wounded soldiers to Cambodia but continues to hold 18 of their comrades
PHNOM PENH: Cambodia on Friday welcomed the return of two wounded soldiers who had been captured by the Thai army after the two sides had already implemented a ceasefire to end five days of combat over competing territorial claims. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Their repatriation comes amid accusations and bickering over whether either side had targeted civilians and breached the laws of war, and sharp nationalist feuding on social media. The rest of a 20-member group of Cambodian soldiers captured on Tuesday in one of the disputed pockets of land over which the two sides were fighting remain in Thai hands, and Cambodian officials are demanding their release. The two countries have given differing accounts of the circumstances of the capture. Cambodian officials say their soldiers approached the Thai position with friendly intentions to offer post-fighting greetings, while Thai officials said the Cambodians appeared to have hostile intent and entered what Thailand considers its territory, so were taken prisoner. Cambodian Defense Ministry Spokesperson Maly Socheata confirmed that the two wounded soldiers had been handed over at a border checkpoint between Thailand's Surin province and Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey province, and urged the Thai side to promptly repatriate the remaining personnel in accordance with "international humanitarian law." Thailand says it has been following international legal procedures and was holding the remaining 18 soldiers until it could investigate their actions. A statement issued Friday by Thailand's 2nd Army Region identified the two repatriated Cambodian soldiers as a sergeant with a broken arm and a gash on his hip, and a second lieutenant who appeared to be suffering from battle fatigue and needed care from his family. It said both men had taken an oath not to engage in further hostilities against Thailand. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Neither man nor the others in Thai custody have been made available for interviews by neutral third parties. The Cambodian Human Rights Committee, which is a government agency, released a letter addressed to the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights claiming that the two soldiers had been tortured and denied medical care. The letter, which offered no evidence to back up its claims, demanded among other measures an "impartial investigation by the United Nations or relevant international bodies" into its allegations. There were other peaceful activities on Friday on both sides of the border as both countries staged tours of the former battle areas for foreign diplomats and other observers, highlighting damage allegedly caused by the other side. The two countries continue to accuse each other of having violated the laws of war with attacks on civilians and the illegal use of weapons. More than three dozen people, civilian and soldiers, were killed in the fighting, which in addition to infantry battles included artillery duels and the firing of truck-mounted rockets by Cambodia, to which Thailand responded with airstrikes. More than 260,000 people in total were displaced from their homes. Under the terms of the ceasefire, military representatives of both sides are supposed to meet next week to iron out details to avoid further clashes. However, the talks are not supposed to cover the competing territorial claims that are at the heart of decades-long tension between the two countries. Partisans of both sides are also waging a war of words online, with Thailand accusing Cambodia of also carrying out malicious hacking. Both countries' professional journalism societies have accused each other of spreading false information and other propaganda.