logo
Cambodia ex-leader Hun Sen and Thailand's prime minister make separate visits to tense border areas

Cambodia ex-leader Hun Sen and Thailand's prime minister make separate visits to tense border areas

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Cambodia's powerful former leader Hun Sen and Thailand's prime minister, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, on Thursday made separate visits to border areas as the two countries remain locked in an ongoing dispute that has resulted in strict land crossing restrictions and several economic boycotts.
Hun Sun and Paetongtarn didn't meet. Relations between the neighboring nations have deteriorated following an armed confrontation on May 28 in which one Cambodian soldier was killed in contested territory along their border.
While the two sides have agreed to de-escalate their dispute, they have continued to implement or threaten measures that have kept tensions high.
Hun Sen posted on his social media after the visit that more troops and weapons have been mobilized to several border areas between Cambodia and Thailand after the clash. He said that soldiers 'are constantly prepared to defend the territory in case of any invasion by the Thai army.'
He did not elaborate on when exactly the reinforcement happened, or how many soldiers and what kinds of weapons were deployed. But days after the dispute erupted, several videos of tanks and armed forces were filmed and posted on social media as they moved past Phnom Penh.
Hun Sen, who ruled Cambodia for nearly four decades, was seen wearing a military uniform, shaking hands with military commanders and government officials who waited to greet him as he got off a military helicopter. It was the first time that he paid a visit to the border since the latest conflict was triggered. Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet visited the troops and civilians at the border on Monday.
Hun Sen remains powerful although he stepped down as Cambodia's prime minister in August 2023 and handed over power to Hun Manet, his oldest son. Hun Sen continues to hold several major positions in the country, including Senate president.
Thai regional army commander Boonsin Padklang, who's in charge of the area where the clash happened, told reporters earlier this week that he was aware of Cambodia's reinforcements along the border, and that the Thai forces were also ready to secure the border situation if necessary. He didn't say whether Thailand had also deployed more troops and weapons to the border.
The Thai army this week imposed heightened restrictions at border checkpoints with Cambodia following an order from Paetongtarn to allow only students, medical patients and others with essential needs to enter or leave Thailand. That also makes it impossible for thousands of tourists to cross between the two countries.
Paetongtarn on Thursday made a visit to the border town of Aranyaprathet, a major trade hub between Thailand and Cambodia that has felt much of the impact from retaliatory measures from both sides. She met with troops and local authorities, and visited a school to discuss the effects of the new restrictions
Cambodia's government has accused Thailand of escalating tensions with new land crossing restrictions. Cambodia has boycotted some Thai internet services, banned Thai fruits and vegetables, and blocked electricity and fuel supplies from Thailand in response to the border dispute. Prior to the boycott, Cambodia imported 30% of its gasoline and other fuel from Thailand.
Last week, a leaked phone call between Paetongtarn and Hun Sen set off political turmoil in Thailand, shattering Paetongtarn's already fragile coalition government and triggering a string of investigations that could lead to her removal.
There is a long history of territorial disputes between the two countries. Thailand is still rattled by a 1962 International Court of Justice ruling that awarded Cambodia the disputed territory where the historic Preah Vihear temple stands. There were sporadic though serious clashes there in 2011. The ruling from the U.N. court was reaffirmed in 2013.
Cambodia said that it's seeking a ruling for several border dispute areas again from the ICJ. Thailand has said that it doesn't accept the jurisdiction of the ICJ and called for Cambodia to resolve the conflict through existing bilateral mechanisms.
Officials from the two countries have scheduled a joint committee meeting for September to resolve the border tensions. Both sides met earlier this month, but failed to achieve any major breakthrough.
___
Jintamas Saksornchai reported from Bangkok.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A New Carbon Credit Standard Brings New Hope To The Market
A New Carbon Credit Standard Brings New Hope To The Market

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

A New Carbon Credit Standard Brings New Hope To The Market

There has been controversy surrounding the forest carbon credit market. Some project developers have been seen as cheating the system by overreporting the amount of carbon sequestered, which allowed them to earn greater revenue from carbon credit sales. We take for granted that nations have to destroy their forests to develop, but carbon credits offer another way. Countries need money to build energy infrastructure, roads and bridges, fund hospitals and universities, and with programs funded by carbon credits, they can develop without destroying their countries. Carbon Credits offer alternative revenues to the government and local communities. This allows a country to develop without destroying its natural resources. Deforestation in Cambodia. Densely canopied forest is destroyed in the pursuit of economic ... More development. This is how carbon credits work: they are coupons that represent some amount of carbon that has been stored in a patch of forest. Corporations can buy these coupons to help them achieve their net-zero commitments. Governments of developing nations can sell carbon credits and earn revenues to develop sustainably. The forest carbon credit market has been heavily criticized, saying that corporations who buy carbon credits are only greenwashing their image. Some criticism has been fair. We acknowledge that there have been enough projects with flawed baselines to justify scrutiny from the press. Some project developers have applied the methodologies in a sloppy way, prompting heavy scrutiny. There have been enough examples of poor integrity in carbon accounting to have delegitimized the wider system in the eyes of many. This led to cynics believing that everyone was overstating how much carbon they actually sequestered. This is unfortunate because pragmatically, carbon credits are our best hope of preserving our remaining forests. The Amazon rainforest being cleared for soybean planting. Mato Grosso state in western Brazil, Oct. ... More 4, 2015 Up until now, there have only been a few accrediting firms in the carbon market. The limited selection of accrediting bureaus has made it such that when a bureau gets criticized, all the associated projects are tainted in the eyes of the carbon credit purchasers. Until now, Verra has maintained a de facto monopoly on the market, but a new firm has been announced and it will be accrediting projects by 2026. As a project developer, I'm very excited. We will have a new standard, Equitable Carbon Standard (ECS) and a new accrediting body, Equitable Earth, which lessens our dependence on Verra and gives more hope to carbon credit buyers. Equitable Earth has stricter requirements for counting carbon, and has a methodology that provides greater empowerment to Indigenous and local people. The new system aims to resolve the lack of trust that the corporate buyers have for project developers. There have been concerns that the amount of carbon being reported did not match the reality on the ground. Separately, there have been complaints that some projects have harmed local people by taking their land away. In the new standard, indigenous people will play a bigger role in project management and benefit sharing. Their elevated position in decision making will hopefully allay some of these anxieties about their wellbeing. Carbon credits are the best, pragmatic way to preserve the forests. Land conversion, clearing forests so that they can be replaced by agriculture, industrial development, or urban expansion, is the biggest driver of deforestation. Deforestation across the Tropical Belt as of 2022. Green shows remaining forests. Carbon Credits ... More offer developing nations a meaningful alternative to the deforest to develop trajectory. Compiled with data from various sources. Global climate commitments include ending deforestation by 2030 and reaching net-zero emissions by 2050. This won't be done by reducing emissions alone. Even with the emerging technologies and strategies that will lower the amount of carbon released into the atmosphere, we still need to absorb and sequester the balance to maintain net-zero emissions. Our forests, and the carbon credits that protect them, offer the most effective way to accomplish this imperative.

Thai online users shared edited report about Cambodia landmine incident
Thai online users shared edited report about Cambodia landmine incident

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Thai online users shared edited report about Cambodia landmine incident

As border tensions between Thailand and Cambodia continued to simmer following a deadly clash in May 2025, social media users shared a news segment with an altered news chyron falsely claiming it shows a Cambodian soldier injured after stepping on a landmine. But the original news clip shows a Thai woman who was hurt in a landmine explosion in 2023. "Cambodian soldiers planted a mine, but one stepped on it himself and was seriously injured," reads a Thai-language X post shared on July 14, 2025. The post includes a 14-second video that shows several uniformed personnel helping someone lying on the ground, with a chyron that reads: "Shocking! Cambodian soldier steps on their own landmine, loses leg". The posts emerged as a long-standing border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia escalated into a deadly clash in May 2025, killing one Cambodian soldier (archived link). The incident soured relations between Phnom Penh and Bangkok -- causing the closure of border crossings as Cambodia banned fuel and gas imports from Thailand (archived link). Cambodia media reported that as the border dispute heats up, its army trained border soldiers in mine detection and demining techniques (archived link). The country remains littered with mines, discarded ammunition and other arms from decades of war starting in the 1960s. It had aimed to be mine-free by 2025, but the government pushed the deadline back by five years because of funding challenges and new landmine fields found along the Thai border (archived link). The same claim has also been shared in an X post and on TikTok. But the original news segment shows officials tending to an injured Thai woman two years ago. A reverse image search on Google led to a longer YouTube video published by Thai broadcaster Channel 7 News on May 28, 2023 (archived link). The footage matches the video in the false post at the 1:18 mark. The original headline reads: "Officials rush to help Thai woman in Sa Kaeo after stepping on a landmine -- severed foot, heavy bleeding." Corresponding news reports by local media say the 46-year-old Thai woman was injured by a landmine while foraging in the Thai-Cambodian border area, losing her left foot (archived here and here). AFP observed the Thai-language news chyron in the clip contained misspellings and formatting inconsistencies, indicating it was digitally manipulated. The original text was replaced to suggest the incident involved Cambodian forces. Khmer Times also reported that a Cambodian soldier was also injured while trying to save the Thai woman in the same incident (archived link). AFP has debunked other misinformation related to the Cambodia-Thailand border dispute.

Trump Locks In 19% Tariff Deal with Indonesia--Boeing Wins Massive Jet Order
Trump Locks In 19% Tariff Deal with Indonesia--Boeing Wins Massive Jet Order

Yahoo

time15 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Locks In 19% Tariff Deal with Indonesia--Boeing Wins Massive Jet Order

Indonesia may have just scored one of its biggest trade wins in years. President Prabowo Subianto confirmed he reached a deal with Donald Trump to cap US tariffs at 19%, down from the 32% that had been floated earlier. In return? A potential $15 billion in US energy imports, $4.5 billion in agriculture purchases, and a 50-plane order from Boeing (NYSE:BA) to upgrade Garuda Indonesia's aging fleet. The announcement, made after direct talks between the two leaders, gives Indonesia the second-lowest US tariff rate in the regiononly Singapore is lower. Prabowo called the negotiations tough, but fair, and suggested a follow-up trip to Washington this fall. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 6 Warning Signs with BA. Investors now have one less thing to worry about. The trade deal could give Indonesia's labor-heavy sectors like textiles and palm oil a shot in the arm. These exports only account for ~2% of Indonesia's GDP, but the jobs they support matter a lot more politically. Local officials are calling the outcome a huge win, and while 19% is still a tough rate, it's a far cry from where things were headed. Boeing's involvement adds another layerGaruda's fleet needs replacing, and US plane makers are clearly back in play. The surprise in all this isn't just the numbersit's the fact that a deal got done, when so many expected more delay. Still, plenty of fog remains. Indonesia's central bank moved quickly, cutting interest rates just hours before the announcement, and signaling it's ready to ease further if needed. The government recently trimmed its growth outlook to 5% for the year, citing trade risks. While the tariff news helps stabilize sentiment, analysts say it's too early to gauge the full macro impact without knowing when the purchases will materializeor how the US might respond in an election year. For now, though, the market got what it wanted: less noise, more clarity, and a signal that Indonesia can still play the geopolitical game when it counts. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio

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