
Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire terms discussed at GBC meeting in Seremban
'A permanent ceasefire agreement has been reached. We are now at the stage of outlining the terms of reference, which were discussed today at the technical committee level. We hope both parties can agree to the proposed terms,' Mohamad said. He emphasised the importance of forming an ASEAN Monitoring Team to oversee compliance with the ceasefire, ensuring stability and reconnection between border communities.
Speaking to reporters after attending the Negeri Sembilan State Assembly sitting, Mohamad noted that while both sides presented additional suggestions, he remained confident that major disagreements would not derail the process.
Tensions along the Thailand-Cambodia border escalated into armed conflict on July 24, following an initial skirmish on May 28.
The ceasefire was brokered during a special meeting in Putrajaya chaired by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim as ASEAN Chair. - Bernama
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The Star
4 minutes ago
- The Star
Ceasefire, terms of reference main topic of Thai-Cambodia talks, says Defence Force chief
KUALA LUMPUR: The ceasefire agreement and terms of reference (TOR) were the main agenda of the secretariat-level discussions between Thailand and Cambodia, which entered its second day on Tuesday (Aug 5), says Chief of Defence Force Gen Tan Sri Mohd Nizam Jaffar. He said both matters needed to be finalised first to ensure both parties understand and abide by them, including in terms of monitoring implementation by the Asean Defence Attaché Monitoring Team (AMT). The AMT would play a role in ensuring Thailand and Cambodia complied with the ceasefire agreement reached by both nations' leaders on July 28. "What is happening now is a joint working group prior to the actual GBC (General Border Committee). The important matters to be discussed and finalised are the ceasefire agreement and the simplified TOR. "This TOR is crucial to ensure both parties understand and comply with it. It also covers matters relating to the AMT," he told Bernama. The secretariat-level meeting involving 54 representatives from Thailand and Cambodia is being held at Wisma Perwira here, ahead of the Extraordinary GBC meeting. On Monday (Aug 4), Mohd Nizam said Malaysia was not participating in the three-day secretariat meeting and only served as a facilitator before the Extraordinary GBC meeting. Thailand and Cambodia had agreed to implement a ceasefire effective midnight on July 28 through a special meeting in Malaysia that brought the two South-East Asian neighbours to the negotiation table following escalating tensions. The meeting, chaired by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim at the Seri Perdana Complex in Putrajaya, saw Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai agreeing to the ceasefire following several weeks of mounting tensions between the two countries. The 817km-long undemarcated points along the border have long been a sensitive issue between the two nations and has sparked tensions on multiple occasions, affecting diplomatic ties. Tensions peaked on May 28 when fighting erupted in the disputed Preah Vihear area, resulting in the death of a Cambodian soldier. – Bernama


The Star
34 minutes ago
- The Star
Bangkok seeks sustainable ceasefire ahead of high-level GBC talks
BANGKOK: (Bernama) Thailand is hopeful that this week's General Border Committee (GBC) meeting with Cambodia in Malaysia will result in a breakthrough and lay the foundation for a sustainable ceasefire and peaceful resolution, said Foreign Ministry spokesperson Nikorndej Balankura. The secretary-level GBC meeting is currently underway in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, ahead of the extraordinary GBC session scheduled for Thursday (Aug 7). Speaking to reporters on Tuesday (Aug 5), Nikorndej, the Director-General of the Department of Information at the Thai Foreign Ministry, said various issues were discussed at the ongoing meeting, including the draft agenda for implementing the ceasefire agreement. "Thailand is participating in this GBC meeting with the ultimate goal of ensuring the effective implementation of a sustainable ceasefire,' he said, adding that Thailand also views the meeting as a significant step in bringing Cambodia back to the negotiating table over its ongoing border dispute. He said that acting Defence Minister General Nattaphon Narkphanit will lead Thailand's delegation to the GBC meeting on Aug 7. Meanwhile, Nikorndej said Thai Foreign Minister Maris Sangiampongsa received a phone call on Monday from Malaysian Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan, who extended an invitation for a trilateral consultation between the foreign ministers of Thailand, Cambodia and Malaysia to help resolve the border issue. "While he (Maris) is agreeable to such a meeting, his priority at the moment is to await the outcome of the GBC meeting concerning the implementation of the ceasefire,' he said. "Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan expressed his understanding and agreed with Thailand's approach,' he said, adding that Maris expressed appreciation for Malaysia's constructive role as Asean Chair. Thailand and Cambodia have long been engaged in a dispute over their 817-kilometre shared border. The latest flare-up began with a brief skirmish on May 28 and escalated into armed clashes on July 24. Both nations agreed to an immediate ceasefire on July 28 following a special meeting in Putrajaya hosted by Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, the current Asean Chair. - Bernama

Malay Mail
4 hours ago
- Malay Mail
Malaysia hosts two rivals caught in a century-old dispute: On the Thai and Cambodian brickbat — Phar Kim Beng
AUGUST 5 — Although the latest ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia offers a moment of relief, the roots of their territorial conflict run deep — stretching back more than a century to the 1907 Franco-Siam Treaty. That agreement, drawn up between France and Siam (Thailand's predecessor), attempted to demarcate boundaries based on colonial-era cartography, primarily relying on the rivers and natural terrain that separated local communities. At the time, borders were not defined by digital coordinates or satellite images, but by how rivers meandered through mountains, bushlands, and remote hinterlands. These riverine boundaries served a functional purpose in the early 20th century but were never intended to be permanent, especially not in a region where rivers shift over time due to seasonal floods, erosion, and sediment buildup. This historical reality has returned with renewed urgency, as the General Border Committee (GBC) between Thailand and Cambodia has now convened to try and resolve the dispute. The Committee's work is cut out: unless both sides acknowledge the shifting nature of rivers and the evolving grounds on which their maps are based, any legal or political solution will remain brittle. Cambodia continues to uphold the French-era 1:200,000 scale map from 1907, while Thailand insists on the more precise 1:50,000 version developed by its Royal Survey Department, with technical inputs from the United States. These incompatible cartographic instruments are more than just maps — they are political declarations of historical legitimacy. Yet, maps drawn in a colonial century cannot anchor peace in the contemporary world unless both sides reconcile their differences. As the GBC proceeds in earnest between August 4–7 2025 in Kuala Lumpur, it must do more than compare technical data. It must foster mutual recognition that natural borders — particularly rivers — are never static. People gather at Sisowath Quay riverfront in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, August 1, 2025. — Reuters pic The notion that mud sediments and altered watercourses can shift the basis of border lines must be internalised by both countries. Without such a pragmatic approach, violations along the contested border will recur time and again, despite diplomatic gestures or ceasefire agreements. Malaysia's role as host of the ongoing negotiations places it at the centre of ASEAN's peace-building efforts. As the Chair of ASEAN in 2025, Malaysia is not merely offering a venue. It is offering a vital space for diplomacy, restraint, and forward-looking cooperation. By bringing Cambodian and Thai officials together in Putrajaya, Malaysia is facilitating more than just talks — it is enabling the region's collective commitment to peace under the ASEAN Treaty of Amity and Cooperation. This process, however, cannot be rushed. The technical, legal, and emotional layers involved in redrawing or reaffirming national borders require patience, scientific consultation, and political courage. What matters now is that the GBC meetings stay focused on results: a harmonised understanding of maps, agreement on verification mechanisms, and a joint protocol to prevent and de-escalate future incidents. The war of maps must not return to a war of bullets. Malaysia is not just hosting two rivals — it is hosting a historic attempt to end one of ASEAN's oldest bilateral disputes. The challenge now is to turn this moment of convergence into a blueprint for durable peace. For if this opportunity is squandered, the region risks slipping back into cycles of conflict that no summit or ceasefire can contain. * Phar Kim Beng PhD is Professor of Asean Studies, International Islamic University of Malaysia and Director of Institute of Internationalisation and Asean Studies (IINTAS). ** This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.