logo
Thailand and Cambodia plan border visits for diplomats as violence eases

Thailand and Cambodia plan border visits for diplomats as violence eases

Independent4 days ago
Thailand and Cambodia separately planned border visits for foreign diplomats to observe damages from the nearly weeklong clash, as violence that continued after a ceasefire appears to have eased.
The ceasefire reached in Malaysia was supposed to take effect midnight Monday, but it was quickly tested as Thailand and Cambodia continued to accuse each other of violating the truce agreements.
Thailand's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Thursday it is organizing a trip to the border for military attachés of foreign missions and the media on Friday to show the impact of the clashes on the ground.
Cambodia is also organizing a border visit for foreign diplomats on the same day. It held a similar trip on Wednesday attended by representatives from 13 countries, including the U.S. and China.
Thailand's government spokesperson Jirayu Houngsub said Thursday that there had been no new clashes reported overnight Wednesday.
But tensions on other fronts continue to simmer. Officials in Thailand's border province of Surin, one of the critical locations of the conflict, on Thursday cautioned evacuees against returning home as they were surveying affected areas for any ammunition that might still pose a risk.
A spokesperson for Cambodia's Defense Ministry Maly Socheata said Thursday that Cambodia has received the body of one of its soldiers from Thailand.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet said the military is now in contact with its Thai counterparts to facilitate the return of about 20 other soldiers captured by Thai forces.
'I hope that the Thai Army will return all our soldiers who are currently in the custody of the Thai Army to Cambodia as soon as possible,' he said.
Thai foreign minister Maris Sagniampongsa said the Cambodian soldiers were being well taken care of and would be sent back once Thailand is confident they no longer pose a threat. He said security officials would determine when the return would be.
Hun Manet and Thailand's acting prime minister, Phumtham Wechayachai, agreed Monday to an 'unconditional' halt in the fighting which has killed at least 41 people.
The fighting began last week after a land mine explosion along the border wounded five Thai soldiers.
The peace talks were hosted by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. He called the ceasefire a 'vital first step towards de-escalation and the restoration of peace and security.'
The ceasefire was brokered with U.S. pressure as President Donald Trump said he would not move forward with trade agreements if the conflict continued.
But both countries continued to blame at each other and Thailand accused Cambodia of launching new attacks on Tuesday and Wednesday after the agreement took effect.
Cambodia's Maj. Gen. Chan Sopheaktra of the Preah Vihear province said Wednesday that the Cambodian military has been strictly adhering to the ceasefire agreement and that there had been two ceasefire violations by Thai forces since the agreement took effect. He did not elaborate on the violations.
Cambodia and Thailand have clashed in the past over their 800-kilometer (500-mile) border.
Tensions had been growing since May when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a confrontation that created a diplomatic rift and roiled Thailand's domestic politics.
___
Sopheng Cheang reported from Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Netanyahu to instruct Israeli military on next steps in Gaza after ceasefire talks collapse
Netanyahu to instruct Israeli military on next steps in Gaza after ceasefire talks collapse

Sky News

timean hour ago

  • Sky News

Netanyahu to instruct Israeli military on next steps in Gaza after ceasefire talks collapse

Benjamin Netanyahu has said he will convene his security cabinet to discuss how to instruct Israel's military to proceed in Gaza to meet all of his war goals. "We must continue to stand together and fight together to achieve all our war objectives: the defeat of the enemy, the release of our hostages, and the assurance that Gaza will no longer pose a threat to Israel," the Israeli prime minister told his cabinet. It came after indirect ceasefire talks with Hamas, which had aimed to agree on a US-backed proposal for a 60-day truce, during which aid would be flown into Gaza and half of the hostages Hamas is holding would be freed in exchange for Palestinian prisoners jailed in Israel, fell apart. Mr Netanyahu is believed to be leaning towards expanding the offensive in Gaza and seizing the entire enclave, according to Israel's Channel 12, which cited an official from his office. He will convene his cabinet on Tuesday to make a decision, Israeli media reported. Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak told Sky News chief presenter Mark Austin the war in the last several months has been "a war of deception". "It's nothing to do with the security in Israel, and it has nothing to do with the future of the hostages. It's basically a war to hold together the coalition and to save Netanyahu from the day of reckoning that will come inevitably when the war stops, when these criminal court cases of corruption will be accelerated. Basically, it's totally unjustified." A group of around 600 retired Israeli security officials have written to Donald Trump to urge the US president to pressure Israel to bring the war to an immediate end. "It is our professional judgement that Hamas no longer poses a strategic threat to Israel," the letter said. "Your credibility with the vast majority of Israelis augments your ability to steer Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu and his government in the right direction: End the war, return the hostages, stop the suffering." 9:06 Meanwhile, at least 40 Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire and airstrikes in Gaza on Monday, including 10 seeking aid, local medics said. Another five died of starvation, they added. Aid groups say Israel's latest measures to allow aid into the besieged enclave are not enough. Several hundred Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire since May as they headed towards food distribution sites and aid convoys, according to witnesses, local health officials and the UN human rights office. Israel's military says it has only fired warning shots and disputes the number killed. Several countries have been airdropping aid to Gaza, though the UN and aid groups warn such drops are costly and dangerous for residents, and deliver less aid than trucks. COGAT, the Israeli military agency that coordinates aid, said during the past week, more than 23,000 tons of humanitarian aid in 1,200 trucks had entered Gaza, but hundreds had yet to be driven to aid distribution hubs by UN and other international organisations. Palestinian and UN officials said Gaza needs around 600 aid trucks to enter each day to meet its humanitarian requirements - the number Israel used to allow in before the war. The war began when Hamas-led militants killed 1,200 people and took 251 hostage in an attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023. Israel's offensive has since killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-backed health ministry, which does not differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count.

Spotlight on Keir Starmer's recognition of Palestine
Spotlight on Keir Starmer's recognition of Palestine

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Spotlight on Keir Starmer's recognition of Palestine

I'm puzzled by the conditions Keir Starmer has set for Israel to meet, failing which he'll recognise Palestine as a state (UK to recognise state of Palestine in September unless Israel holds to a ceasefire, 29 July). Why does recognition depend on Israel's actions? Surely it should depend on Palestine's: commitments to abjure terrorism, disarm Hamas, hold democratic elections and, of course, to release the hostages. As for Israel, UK policy should be to impose draconian sanctions: if Israel continues to act like a pariah state, let it be treated as one. Without sanctions, there would probably still be an apartheid regime in South Africa. The UK must act now, not half-heartedly in September; thousands of children in Gaza can't wait until MaughanDunblane, Perthshire Like so many people in the UK, I thought that my despair and shame over the situation in Gaza could not be deepened. Keir Starmer achieved that. How like this prime minister to obfuscate further and kick any sense of decisiveness into the long grass of contingency. One might think that Britain has some special responsibility for recognising the state of Palestine, whose population it abandoned to the predations of its neighbour in 1948. What will be left of Gaza, the West Bank and its people by September? A genocide? A diaspora? The UK doesn't negotiate with terrorists, just with war Prof Graham MortLancaster University Soon after the atrocities of 7 October 2023 I heard someone on the radio say, with respect to Israel's imminent invasion of Gaza, 'Beware of being goaded by your enemy into doing what your enemy wants you to do.' Nearly two years on, the Israeli government seems hell-bent on creating a moral equivalence between itself and Hamas. If you become like your enemy, then your enemy has won. Thus, despite what it says about recent moves to recognise a Palestinian state, the Israeli government, more than any other, is 'rewarding' Hamas for its terrorist actions. The Rev Rob KelseyBerwick-upon-Tweed, Northumberland It is impossible for us to know the depth of despair Palestinians must feel to hear western nations pontificating that we will not recognise them as a nation if their oppressors stop killing them. It seems this is the ultimate acknowledgment that they have no rights except those we deem to give them. We have expelled them from the land in which they lived to ensure that Europe didn't have the problem of resettling the thousands displaced by a European war. They are being attacked in Gaza and the West Bank with weapons supplied by western governments. They are being starved in Gaza to keep their oppressor-in-chief in office. And now our governments are praised for condescending to recognise the fact that they are a nation (that has existed for more than 1,000 years). How can we think we have any integrity left in our dealings with the oppressed?Michael McLoughlinWallington, London What will give greater weight to the call for a two-state solution is outlining the building blocks for establishment of a Palestinian state: for example, Gaza would be placed under UN control to allow for demilitarisation, the physical reconstruction and drawing up a basic law to guide the development of a constitutional WeirCape Town, South Africa Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

Keir Starmer could recognise a Palestinian state with Hamas still in power - despite PM facing fresh backlash after terror group praises his move
Keir Starmer could recognise a Palestinian state with Hamas still in power - despite PM facing fresh backlash after terror group praises his move

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Keir Starmer could recognise a Palestinian state with Hamas still in power - despite PM facing fresh backlash after terror group praises his move

Sir Keir Starmer could recognise a Palestinian state with Hamas still in power, Downing Street suggested today. The Prime Minister last week announced Britain would recognise Palestinian statehood in September, ahead of the UN General Assembly. This is unless Israel meets certain conditions, such as allowing more aid into Gaza, ending the annexation of land in the West Bank, agreeing to a ceasefire, and signing up to a long-term peace process. But Sir Keir has continued to face questions over whether he will push ahead with recognition of a Palestinian state while Hamas remain in power, or while the militants still hold hostages. No10 refused to be drawn on either issue on Monday, which came as the PM faced a fresh backlash after Hamas praised his move on Palestinian statehood. Ghazi Hamad, a senior Hamas member, was reported to have claimed the 'fruits' of October 7 - when the terror group launched its brutal attacks on Israel - had caused the world to 'open its eyes to the Palestinian issue'. Mike Tapp, the Labour MP for Dover and Deal, told The Times that Hamas's claim of vindication 'demonstrates why there is such fear in the Jewish community'. 'The Government must urgently make clear that UK recognition of a Palestinian state can only happen after the genocidal terrorists of Hamas release the hostages and lay down their arms,' he added. Noam Sagi, a London-based psychotherapist whose mother Ada Sagi, 75, was taken hostage on October 7, said the PM should urgently rewrite the conditions of statehood. He said: 'This announcement tells Hamas and every terrorist group on earth that mass murder works - that slaughter and kidnapping is rewarded. Britain should lead with moral courage, not appease evil.' Asked on Monday whether recognising a Palestinian state without a ceasefire could embolden Hamas to hold onto Israeli captives, Sir Keir's official spokesman said the Government would assess the situation in September. 'The PM has been absolutely clear that, on October 7, Hamas perpetrated the worst massacre in Israel's history,' he said. 'Every day since then that horror has continued… as the Foreign Secretary (David Lammy) said over the weekend, Hamas are rightly pariahs who can have no role in Gaza's future.' Asked whether a Palestinian state could be recognised while Hamas are still holding hostages, the PM's spokesman said that 'we'll make an assessment ahead of the UN General Assembly on how far the parties have met the steps that we've set out'. 'We've been very clear that Hamas can have no role in the future governments of Gaza… We've also been clear that they must disarm, must release all the hostages,' he added. On whether the step could be taken while Hamas remain in power, the spokesman said the Government was clear that 'Hamas are not the Palestinian people'. 'It is the inalienable right of the Palestinian people to have recognition along the lines and the steps that we've previously set out,' he said. 'We've also been very clear it cannot be in the hands of Hamas, a terrorist group, to have a veto over recognition of Palestine.' Videos released by militant groups Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad last week appeared to show Israeli hostages in a visibly fragile state. No10 condemned the images as 'completely abhorrent'. Mr Hamad reportedly told the Al Jazeera news outlet: 'The initiative by several countries to recognise a Palestinian state is one of the fruits of October 7.' About 1,200 people were killed by Hamas militants in the 2023 attack on Israel that sparked the war and another 251 were abducted. Israel's retaliatory military offensive has killed more than 60,800 Palestinians, according to Gaza's health ministry.

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