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Thailand, Cambodia trade blame in worst border fighting in years

Thailand, Cambodia trade blame in worst border fighting in years

Canada News.Net4 days ago
SURIN, Thailand: Tensions between Thailand and Cambodia escalated sharply this week as armed clashes along their shared border left at least 14 people dead—most of them civilians—and forced the evacuation of thousands. The violence marks one of the most serious confrontations in years between the two Southeast Asian nations, both members of ASEAN.
On July 24, fighting broke out in at least six locations along the border following a land mine explosion the previous day that injured five Thai soldiers. In response, Thailand expelled Cambodia's ambassador and withdrew its own from Phnom Penh. Thai forces, according to Defense Ministry spokesperson Surasant Kongsiri, responded with small arms fire, artillery, rockets, and airstrikes.
The following morning, July 25, Cambodian authorities reported renewed clashes near the ancient Ta Muen Thom temple in Oddar Meanchey province. General Khov Ly, the province's top official, said four civilians were wounded in the fighting and more than 4,000 people had been displaced to evacuation centers. Many fled their homes with families and belongings piled onto makeshift tractors, seeking safety deeper within Cambodia.
In Thailand, Acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai said the violence had spread across four provinces. The Interior Ministry ordered evacuations of civilians living within 30 miles of the border. Thailand's Public Health Ministry confirmed 14 fatalities, including a Thai soldier and 13 civilians, among them children. An additional 14 soldiers and 32 civilians were injured. Public Health Minister Somsak Thepsuthin condemned the attacks on civilians and a hospital, calling them violations of international humanitarian law and the Geneva Conventions.
Despite repeated calls for restraint, both nations have traded blame. In Bangkok, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Nikorndej Balankura warned that Thailand was "prepared to intensify our self-defense measures" if Cambodia continued what he termed "armed aggression" and encroachments on Thai sovereignty.
In Phnom Penh, Cambodian Defense Ministry spokesperson Lt. Gen. Maly Socheata said the country had no choice but to defend itself against "Thai threats," asserting that Cambodian strikes targeted only military positions. Prime Minister Hun Manet appealed to the United Nations Security Council for an emergency session, accusing Thailand of initiating aggression.
The conflict has triggered a diplomatic and humanitarian crisis. Thailand has closed all land border crossings with Cambodia and urged its citizens to leave the country. Seven Thai airlines have reportedly agreed to assist with repatriation flights for those wishing to return.
This outbreak of violence is the most intense since a similar border dispute in 2011 that resulted in 20 deaths. Though Thailand and Cambodia have a history of friction along their 800-kilometer (500-mile) frontier—especially near disputed temple sites—most past confrontations were brief and rarely involved heavy weapons or airstrikes.
However, bilateral relations have frayed significantly in recent months. A deadly incident in May that left a Cambodian soldier dead appears to have deepened the mistrust, setting the stage for the July 24 clashes.
From an evacuation site near Samrong town in northern Cambodia, 45-year-old Tep Savouen, a mother of four, recounted the terror of waking to gunfire around 8 a.m. "We ran with what we could carry," she said. "The children were crying. We just wanted to survive."
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, through spokesperson Farhan Haq, urged both sides to show "maximum restraint" and resolve disputes through dialogue. But with both governments hardening their rhetoric and military deployments ongoing, the path back to peace remains uncertain.
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Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The terrorists fire off a few more rounds into the man's body, and then walk into the kibbutz. They creep past rows of single-story white homes, mostly silent. On the GoPro footage they are collecting, they can be heard whispering to each other: 'Where did they go?' They are looking for Jews to kill. At another kibbutz, security camera footage shows a man running out of his house, a boy in his arms, another boy rushing ahead of them. They had woken to the sounds of gunshots and screams, so they are in their underwear. They run into a fortified concrete bomb shelter. The shelter — like most of the shelters in Israel — doesn't have a door that locks from the inside. A minute or two later, a Hamas terrorist appears and throws a hand grenade into the shelter. The father is killed. The boys stagger back into their house, covered in blood, crying out for their father. The younger one says he can't see. 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This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. There are many, many bodies. One video shows a girl, perhaps six or seven, her tiny frame covered in blood and dirt. She is wearing Mickey Mouse pyjamas. Hamas has killed her. There is the bloodied body of another girl, this one younger. She is still in a sun dress with little blue butterflies on it. At a bus stop in Sderot, which isn't far from the border with Gaza, a video shows piles of bodies of senior citizens. They had been on a sightseeing tour, and the terrorists killed them all. Their bodies are lying sprawled on the ground, among the canes and walkers and the dirt. There are glimpses of the bodies of women and girls, unclothed from the waist down, their legs bloody and spread wide. One has smoke rising from her genitals. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. There's audio, as well. There's intercepted phone calls to and from Hamas terrorists. 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