Friday, 31 October 2025

Turbulent Start for $2 Billion China-Built Airport Despite Trump Peace Deal



Published

Oct 29, 2025 at 07:48 AM EDT
Amir Daftari
By Amir Daftari
Newsweek
News Reporter


A handshake between U.S. President Donald Trump and the leaders of Thailand and Cambodia marked the signing of the Kuala Lumpur Peace Accords, promising calm in a volatile region and the prospect of economic liftoff for its neighbors.

For Cambodia, that hope is embodied in the Techo International Airport (TIA), a gleaming new gateway meant to anchor a tourism revival. Yet as the first planes touch down, the runway to success looks uncertain: Visitor numbers are falling, and the fate of the airport now rests as much on the durability of the peace deal as on passengers.

Newsweek has contacted Cambodia's Foreign Ministry for comment.

Why It Matters


TIA represents Cambodia’s boldest bet yet on tourism-driven growth. The nation’s economic strategy relies heavily on attracting millions of regional visitors, particularly from Thailand—a country with which it has only recently emerged from violent border clashes.

The peace accord builds on a fragile ceasefire brokered in July, which ended five days of fierce fighting that left more than 40 people dead and forced at least 300,000 from their homes. The accord Trump helped oversee isn’t just a diplomatic milestone; it is now an economic imperative. For Cambodia, the airport’s success depends on sustained stability. Without it, TIA risks becoming a monument to ambition while the travelers it was built to serve stay away.

 
An overview from outside the new Techo International Airport in Kandal province, Cambodia, on October 20. | Heng Sinith/AP Photo

Quote, unquote ...

May be a graphic of text that says "Philosophy Feels Feels The strength of a society is its commitment to justice and equality. John Locke" 

Thursday, 30 October 2025

After Prince Group Sanctions, Unanswered Questions for Cambodia’s Interior Minister

    

The country’s Ministry of Interior denies the hard evidence linking Deputy Prime Minister Sar Sokha to major Prince executives.

Jacob Sims
By Jacob Sims
October 28, 2025
Diplomat
 
After Prince Group Sanctions, Unanswered Questions for Cambodia’s Interior Minister 
Cambodian Interior Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Sar Sokha (center) sees off Prime Minister Hun Manet prior to his departure for the 47th ASEAN Summit in Malaysia, at Techo International Airport outside Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Oct. 25, 2025.
Credit: Facebook/Sar Sokha


On October 14, the United States and the United Kingdom (with South Korea now mulling joining in) took an historic action against the notorious Prince Holding Group and its chairman, Chen Zhi, a man long recognized as untouchable inside Cambodia’s political system. The coordinated moves seized $15 billion in crypto and $133 million in U.K. real estate; froze an untold fortune in offshore accounts; named dozens of Chen’s associates; and charged the Prince chairman with operating one of the world’s largest forced-labor and fraud networks in an unsealed indictment.

When coupled with the October 1 U.S. TIP Report naming Cambodia a state sponsor of human trafficking, it might seem that the walls are finally closing in on the Cambodian People’s Party (CPP)’s vast scam economy. Through a combination of assertive legislative, diplomatic, and enforcement initiatives, Washington and its partners are beginning to name and target not merely the symptoms of Southeast Asia’s scamming crisis but also the architecture of elite criminal power that sustains it.

Yet even as global accountability gathers momentum, a question lingers: how does the world respond to a ruling elite that built – and still benefits from – the very industry now under scrutiny? What accountability, if any, will reach the current and former prime ministers who each elevated Chen Zhi into Cabinet-level advisory roles? And what of the supposedly reform-minded deputy prime minister leading Cambodia’s “anti-scam” crackdown, who served as a named corporate director alongside infamous criminals now under sanctions spanning three continents?

PM Anutin apologised for confusion over his border comment...

Khmer Circle

Since the first Asean-initiated Cease Fire agreement to halt the five days of fighting in which scores of solders from both sides lost their lives, no one in the press or Thai media seems to find anything wrong - nay, despicable - over the reported kidnapping and continued detention of 18 Cambodian soldiers apparently in contravention of international convention relating to treatment of captured soldiers in time of war. The Cambodian side could have - and likely have had - easily captured and kept Thai soldiers as hostages and used them as bargaining leverages in maximising Cambodia's national self-interests. Yet, it is the Thais who find nothing reprehensible or inhumane about holding these soldiers under their custody even though there is no justifiable moral or political basis for continuing to do so despite the incalculable suffering and psychological torture all this experience is being inflicted upon the 18 soldiers as well as their families and loved ones.

This saga exploited for both domestic and political gains of Thailand and its politicians and military along with what had been deployed during the five days of clashes - F-16 bombing raids (classed as the heaviest or most lethal weapons in Thailand's military arsenal), poison gas (internationally banned), cluster bombs (internationally banned), broadcasting high pitch sounds aimed at civilians and villagers living near the disputed region, including the most vulnerable among them such as babies, pregnant women, the elderly and those with disabilities. 

This episode also reminisces what happened in the wake of the ICJ's 1962 verdict over the Preah Vihear case when Thailand was ordered by the court to vacate the temple and its immediate vicinity. Instead of peacefully and gracefully withdrawing Thai troops from the area in question the Thais reportedly used elephants to pull down several standing columns of the temple's structure in apparent showing of displeasure at the verdict and ultimate act of giving heed to vengeance.      

A Western observer once noted that the Vietnamese - Cambodia's predators to the East - maybe deceitful and treacherous, but the Thais are much more insidious or cunning in the same regard! 

This detail in the current border tension and conflict also thus serves to highlight the moral distinction, character and mindset of both neighbouring countries and cultures.  

^^^   

May be an image of text that says "N THE nation Anutin apologises for border remark, says Thai Thai-Cambodian fence up to military @thenationthailand" 

PM Anutin apologised for confusion over his border comment, clarifying both Thailand and Cambodia will act under the joint declaration; military to handle fence issue.

He said both Thailand and Cambodia are complying with the terms of their peace agreement, and what he had referred to earlier was a “claimed area” still under negotiation between the two countries.

“It’s an area under dispute, and both sides must continue talks to make things clear. If my words caused confusion, I apologise. My intention was to say both countries must act according to the agreement,” Anutin explained.

He added that he had told Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet that Thailand is ready to proceed once Cambodia fulfils the four agreed conditions, which Phnom Penh has pledged to accelerate.

Anutin said Thailand also stands prepared to return all 18 detained Cambodian soldiers once the military confirms readiness, with health checks conducted beforehand to ensure transparency and humane treatment.

The Nation, Thailand.  

Wednesday, 29 October 2025

After 29 years, RFA is on pause


From the executive editor: funding uncertainty is driving RFA’s remaining teams to stop delivering the news for now.

By Rosa Hwang
2025.10.29

Illustration  
Illustration (RFA)


The newsroom is dark. The microphones are off. Broadcasts have been silenced. Publishing is paused. On social media. On our websites.

Due to uncertain funding, Radio Free Asia is not delivering news to our audiences for the first time in our history.

For RFA journalists who sacrificed so much in defying powerful and malignant forces, it’s an excruciating moment. And make no mistake, authoritarian regimes are already celebrating RFA’s potential demise.

When RFA Uyghur journalists first exposed the violent repression and mass detainment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, China harassed and arrested their family members. Still, our journalists bravely continued the work of uncovering atrocities. With the world’s only independent Uyghur-language news service shuttered, China’s propaganda will fester without a potent and effective accountability check.

Without RFA Tibetan journalists, China’s campaign of forced assimilation and erasure of Tibetan culture and language will be underreported. As will China’s regime of intimidation and suppression of pro-democracy activism in Hong Kong, which RFA Cantonese journalists regularly exposed at great risk to their own personal safety. Without RFA Mandarin, WHYNOT and Asia Fact Check Lab, independent reporting and fact-checking in the most widely spoken of all Chinese dialects is severely diminished.

Monday, 27 October 2025

សរកុលាបស្រី- សុីន សុីសាមុត

What’s in the Thai-Cambodia peace agreement and can it hold?


Trump oversees the peace deal and trade agreements in a flash visit to Malaysia – but what is in the pact on the border dispute?


 
Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, left, and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet shake hands during the signing of a ceasefire on the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on October 26, 2025 [Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters]

By Yashraj Sharma
Published On 27 Oct 202527 Oct 2025
AJ



United States President Donald Trump has kicked off his weeklong, high-stakes diplomatic tour of Asia in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, by presiding over the signing of a peace declaration between Thailand and Cambodia.

Trump had flown to Malaysia to attend the summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), where he also signed separate trade deals on Sunday with Cambodia, Thailand and Malaysia as well as agreements on critical minerals with Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur.

The highlight of his appearance was a peace declaration between Cambodia and Thailand that expanded on a ceasefire agreement reached in July, which brought deadly border clashes to a halt.

The agreement was signed by the prime ministers of the ASEAN neighbours, Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet, and was overseen by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim of Malaysia, which currently chairs ASEAN.

While the regional leaders hailed the ceasefire as “historic”, the differences between them run deep with decades-long disputes over their border and temples claimed by both sides.

So what’s in the deal and can the ceasefire really hold?
 

Thailand, Cambodia pull heavy weapons from border after signing pact

May be an image of text that says "October 27, 2025 Thailand, Cambodia pull heavy weapons from border after signing pact IRRAWADDY . CND 학 2 ΓA" 


October 27, 2025
The Irrawaddy 
 
Cambodia has begun withdrawing heavy weapons from disputed border areas following the signing of a peace agreement with Thailand, Thai media reported.
 
The move, monitored by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Observation Team, saw both countries relocate artillery and military equipment from contested zones back to their original bases, according to Cambodian outlet Fresh News.
 
The withdrawal followed a ceasefire and peace accord signed in Malaysia by Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet. The ceremony was witnessed by US President Donald Trump and the ASEAN chair, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.
 
The agreement formally ends years of deadly border clashes and comes after nearly six months of heightened tensions, including a five‑day armed conflict in July. Observers described it as a historic step toward restoring normal diplomatic ties and rebuilding trust between the two neighbors.
 
Both governments pledged to coexist peacefully and to promote stability and prosperity along the border. Cambodia reaffirmed its commitment to fully implement the deal and said it would work closely with Thailand to ensure lasting peace and tangible benefits for both peoples.

Sunday, 26 October 2025

រដ្ឋាភិបាលក្រៅប្រទេសអាចមានភាពស្របច្បាប់ប្រឆាំងនឹងរដ្ឋាភិបាលកម្ពុជាដែរឬទេ?

A 'peace deal'? Thailand's foreign minister won't go that far

 

Khmer Circle: 

What are the reasons for Thailand's insistence upon seeking resolution to the dispute via "bilateral talks" while declining offers of international mediation? Why would Thailand fear the possibility of the dispute with a small country being "internationalised"? 

Would a criminal want to 'settle' his victim's grievances with the court or the police?  

^^^ 

Jonathan Head
BBC South East Asia Correspondent

A wide shot of Donald Trump on screen at the summitImage source, Getty Images

After the ceremony, the Thai Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow refused to call it a peace agreement, sticking instead to their own preferred title 'Joint Declaration by the Prime Ministers of Thailand and Cambodia on the outcomes of their meeting in Kuala Lumpur', which doesn’t exactly trip off the tongue.

“I would call it a pathway to peace,” was as far as Sihasak was willing to go - a far cry from Trump’s expansive claims for it.

Cambodia has been a lot more enthusiastic, but then it has always sought to internationalise its dispute with Thailand, referring it to the International Court of Justice, something Thailand does not agree with.

At the ceremony, Prime Minister Hun Manet gushed with praise for the US president, reminding him that his government had nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul was more circumspect, mindful of nationalist pressure back home not to be giving too much away to Cambodia.

Thailand has always insisted the dispute should be resolved bilaterally, with no outside mediation. It says it "appreciates" President Trump’s support, and describes the US and Malaysia only as "facilitating" this agreement.


Trump flaunts 'peace deal' while trade talks with China rumble onpublished at

 

Adam Goldsmith

BBC News

Donald Trump with Scott Bessent in backgroundImage source, Getty Images

US President Trump declared today that he had presided over the signing of a "historic" peace deal between Thailand and Cambodia.

But as our South East Asia correspondent writes, historic differences between the two countries remain despite Donald Trump's superlatives.

Thailand's foreign minister even refused to call it a peace agreement, preferring instead to term it "a pathway to peace".

We've got a full rundown on what was said on all sides, as Trump told reporters making peace deals is a "hobby" while gathering praise from the Cambodian prime minister for his "decisive leadership".

For Trump, trade deals have become a useful diplomatic tool to pressure countries into peace deals, our reporter at the summit writes.

And, while Trump presided over the so-called "peace deal" signing ceremony, his trade representatives have been gearing up for business talks with China's Xi Jinping in coming days. They told reporters that the "final details" of a trade deal have been thrashed out.

Before that, the US president will fly to Tokyo for the next phase of his diplomatic tour around Asia - here's a look ahead to the rest of his itinerary.

That brings our live coverage to a close, but you can find further details in our latest news story.

This live page was written by Tessa Wong in Kuala Lumpur, with Adam Goldsmith and Nabiha Ahmed in London. It was edited by Emily McGarvey and Jack Burgess.

Trump witnesses Thailand, Cambodia sign peace expansion months after brokering ceasefire
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul signed the expanded ceasefire

Landon Mion By Landon Mion Fox News
Published October 26, 2025 1:31am EDT 
Fox News

Cambodia and Thailand on Sunday signed an expanded ceasefire deal on Sunday that President Donald Trump helped broker over the summer, ending their border conflict.

Trump threatened higher tariffs against both countries to push them into agreeing to end the fighting, which left dozens of people dead and hundreds of thousands displaced.

The president watched as Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul signed the expanded ceasefire at the annual summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

CAMBODIA TO NOMINATE TRUMP FOR NOBEL PEACE PRIZE FOR ROLE IN ENDING COUNTRY'S CONFLICT WITH THAILAND
 
U.S. President Donald Trump walks with Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim as he arrives at Kuala Lumpur International Airport 

U.S. President Donald Trump walks with Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim as he arrives at Kuala Lumpur International Airport
 

Friday, 24 October 2025

Thailand, Cambodia, and a Competition Over Territory and History

 

Far from a bilateral crisis, the border clashes have implications for the region and world.

Thailand, Cambodia, and a Competition Over Territory and History

A statue of the Buddhist goddess Preah Thorani at Wat Prasat Ta Moan is riddled with bullet holes and shrapnel damage inflicted by the Thai air force during the pitched battles fought in late July 2025. As of October 2025, a pitched stand-off continues in the area between the Cambodian and Thai militaries.

Credit: Luke Hunt

The recent conflict between Thailand and Cambodia is not new, insignificant, or localized. Unless this conflict is resolved appropriately – and soon – the impact has the potential to reverberate across the region and the world.

In many ways, the renewed clashes represent the next iteration of a centuries-old Thai nationalist demand to reclaim territory believed to be unfairly lost to Cambodia and Western colonialism. This Thai nationalist sentiment is rooted in the history of the shifting borders between Cambodia and Thailand.

For centuries, the areas of Battambang, Svay Sisophon, and Siem Reap were controlled by the Kingdom of Cambodia. In 1795, these areas came under the control of Siam (modern day Thailand) as a result of infighting within Cambodia’s Khmer nobility. As a consequence of Cambodia’s weakness, and in exchange for placing a Cambodian prince on the throne, Siam absorbed these areas of Cambodia.

Under pressure from the French, who took Cambodia under their colonial protection in the 19th century, these areas were returned to Cambodia in 1907, and between 1907 and 1941, France managed these areas as part of the Cambodian territory of French Indochina. In the same year that Cambodia reclaimed its northern and western provinces from Siam, Cambodia suffered what was reported as Thai-sponsored banditry in the Battambang and Anlong Veng regions. These attacks, which might be characterized today as “gray zone warfare,” arguably foreshadowed modern-day Thailand’s long struggle to recover what it perceives as its territory – territory that contains many ancient religious temples and cultural sites dating from the Khmer Empire.

How to save Cambodia from extinction...


 

Reader's comment:

 

To strengthen Khmer solidarity, Hun Sen must first abandon his stupid ambition of keeping the power for his son, his grandson, and his Hun family.

Notice that a big part of Cambodia’s current problems stemmed from Hun Sen’s thirst for power.

Next, Hun Sen must release all political prisoners and let them participate freely in this next election. Hun Sen needs to reinstate the CNRP party and establish a free and fair election. The loser transfers peacefully the power to the winner. This social justice from free and fair election will consolidate Khmer solidarity and empower Khmer people to bravely face any foreign aggression.


However, when push comes to shove, if Hun Sen refuses to adopt a free and fair election, Khmer people will have no choice but to rise up to remove Hun Sen. It is time for Hun Sen to go if he continues depriving Khmer people’s right. Coward people don’t deserve to have a country. Khmer people have to wake up.


Khmer youth should learn from the mistake in Veng Sreng’s brutal crackdown. This time, they must not back down or run and ready to sacrifice their life for Cambodia’s survival. Their ultimate sacrifice will be engraved in Khmer history and in Khmer people’s mind forever as Khmer national heroes who saved Cambodia from extinction. Just remember that presently Cambodia is under the process of the Vietnamization of Cambodia implemented by Vietnam and executed by Hun Sen – a Vietnam’s puppet.

Thursday, 23 October 2025

Cambodian police arrest 57 South Koreans over alleged links to online scams


Cambodian police say they arrested 57 South Korean nationals over alleged links to an online scam organization in the Southeast Asian country

BySOPHENG CHEANG Associated Press
October 23, 2025, 7:09 AM

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Cambodian police said Thursday they arrested 57 South Korean nationals over alleged links to an online scam organization in the Southeast Asian country.

The arrests happened on Wednesday as police raided a building on the outskirts of the capital, Phnom Penh. Police found 86 people working at the complex, including 57 South Koreans and 29 Chinese, according to a statement Thursday by Cambodia's Secretariat of the Commission for Combating Online Scams.

A visiting group of South Korean lawmakers accompanied the raid. The delegation, led by Kim Seok-ki, arrived in Cambodia on Tuesday as part of an on-site parliamentary inspection into reports of alleged employment scams, illegal confinement and torture of South Korean nationals in Cambodia.

It is the second recent delegation from South Korea to visit Cambodia after a group last week led by Vice Foreign Minister Kim Jina.

On Friday last week, Cambodia repatriated about 50 South Koreans who had been formally arrested on accusations they worked for online scam organizations.

Sam Rainsy declares formation of ‘Independent Cambodian Government’ on Paris Peace Accord anniversary


Sam Rainsy declares formation of ‘Independent Cambodian Government’ on Paris Peace Accord anniversary 
 
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2025
Sam Rainsy declares formation of ‘Independent Cambodian Government’ on Paris Peace Accord anniversary

Exiled Cambodian opposition leader Sam Rainsy declares ‘Independent Cambodian Government’ on the 34th anniversary of the 1991 Paris Peace Accords

Exiled opposition leader Sam Rainsy, former head of the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), announced the formation of the “Independent Cambodian Government of October 23”, marking the 34th anniversary of the 1991 Paris Peace Accords.

In a statement issued from France under the name of the Cambodia National Resistance Council (CNRC), Rainsy said the new government aims to restore democracy, protect national sovereignty, and combat state-protected organised crime under the current Phnom Penh regime.

He accused the Hun family of colluding with criminals, declaring that the Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) must remove the Huns from leadership “if it does not wish to be branded a party of thieves.”

The CNRC’s statement reaffirmed its origins in the CNRP, which had won overwhelming popular support in 2013 and 2017 before being dissolved by Hun Sen’s government, which feared a democratic uprising. The CNRC insists that both Hun Sen and Hun Manet’s administrations lack legitimacy for “destroying the people’s will expressed through elections.”

Wednesday, 22 October 2025

Thailand Braces for $3.1 Billion Hit From Dispute With Cambodia

Anutin Charnvirakul 

Anutin Charnvirakul

Photographer: Dario Pignatelli/Bloomberg

Bloomberg 

Takeaways by Bloomberg AI

  • Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul’s government predicts losses could total 100 billion baht from disruptions to cross-border trade with Cambodia.
  • Thai businesses have lost an estimated 15 billion baht per month following the closure of border crossings between the two countries.
  • The Trump administration has imposed 19% tariffs on Thai exports, though the Thai government wants to negotiate a lower rate.

Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul’s government predicts losses could total 100 billion baht ($3.1 billion) from disruptions to cross-border trade with Cambodia, after a longstanding territorial dispute erupted into armed conflict earlier this year.

Following the closure of border crossings between the two countries, Thai businesses have lost an estimated 15 billion baht ($458 million) per month, according to minutes of last week’s economic committee meeting seen by Bloomberg News. Total losses could reach 100 billion baht if the situation persists through the end of the year, the minutes showed.

The first official estimate of the damage comes as Anutin, who came to power after his predecessor was dismissed over her handling of the border dispute, looks for ways to revive the economy ahead of elections early next year. Nationalist feelings over the contested area have been running high and US President Donald Trump has threatened to withhold trade agreements from both Southeast Asian countries.

Tuesday, 21 October 2025

Trump’s Thailand-Cambodia peace prize play puts Asean in a precarious position


Malaysia, as summit host, finds itself caught between a US president hungry for a Nobel and a key trading partner in China

Reading Time:4 minutes
scmp 
Thai soldiers conduct mine clearance operations in Sa Kaeo province near Thailand’s border with Cambodia on Friday. Photo: EPA
Aidan Jonesand Joseph Sipalan
 
The camouflage-clad soldiers who patrol the rice fields around Wichien’s village are a daily reminder that peace along Thailand’s border with Cambodia is perilous, despite the recent truce.
For the Thai farmer, the prospect of a lasting settlement is welcome. But US President Donald Trump’s involvement is not.

“Trump isn’t here seeking peace, he’s only after recognition … a Nobel Prize. It’s about serving his own ambitions, not helping us,” said Wichien, who asked to be identified by only one name during such anxious times.

“We’re fully capable of resolving our issues with Cambodia on our own.”

Trump’s White House sees things differently. It claims credit for ending July’s bloody five-day border conflict that left at least 48 people dead on both sides.

Now, he wants to crown his intervention with a symbolic peace signing ceremony in Malaysia of a document diplomats have already dubbed the “Kuala Lumpur Accord”.

A Nobel obsession

While it was Malaysia that brokered a ceasefire that came into effect on July 28, Washington says it was Trump’s use of trade pressure – rewarding both countries with US import tariffs of 19 per cent, among the lowest in Southeast Asia – that brought the two warring parties to the negotiating table.

Cambodia’s No.2 delivers fiery speech attacking Thailand at global IPU forum

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2025

The Nation 

Cambodia’s No.2 delivers fiery speech attacking Thailand at global IPU forum  

Ouch Borith, Cambodia’s Second Vice President of the Senate, attacks Thailand at IPU Assembly, citing treaties, maps, and ICJ ruling to back claims.

At the 151st Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) Assembly in Geneva, Ouch Borith, Second Vice President of the Cambodian Senate and the country’s second-highest-ranking leader after Hun Sen, launched a fiery attack on Thailand over the ongoing border dispute, accusing it of psychological warfare and violations of international law.

Ouch spoke during the General Debate session on October 21, 2025, at 10am local time, at the Geneva International Conference Centre, after being absent from all previous sessions — including the first day’s debate on October 20, where Wan Muhamad Noor Matha, President of the Thai House of Representatives, delivered his address as the 17th speaker in List A.

Ouch, listed under List B as a deputy presiding officer, used his address — as anticipated by the Thai delegation — to criticise Thailand and present Cambodia’s border position using selective and self-serving narratives.

Cambodia’s No.2 delivers fiery speech attacking Thailand at global IPU forum
Citing treaties and legal rulings

He began with formal pleasantries, thanking the Thai delegation for participating in the Assembly and reaffirming bilateral ties. However, he quickly shifted focus to claim that the humanitarian situation along the Thai–Cambodian border represented serious rights violations.

“Cambodia seeks no enemies and urges Thailand, our neighbour, to acknowledge this issue,” Ouch said.

Monday, 20 October 2025

[រឿងខ្លី] ស្រុកដ៏ក្សាន្តត្រាណ | The Warmness of Home ការជួបជុំដ៏កក់ក្តៅន...

South Korea seeks to arrest dozens of online scam suspects repatriated from Cambodia


Korean authorities said they seeking to formally arrest 58 of the 64 South Koreans repatriated from Cambodia for allegedly working for online scam organizations in Cambodia

ByHYUNG-JIN KIM Associated Press
October 20, 2025, 5:12 AM
abc News


SEOUL, South Korea -- SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Authorities are seeking to formally arrest most of the 64 South Koreans repatriated from Cambodia for allegedly working for online scam organizations in Cambodia, police said Monday.

The 64 South Koreans were detained in Cambodia over the past several months and were flown to Korea on a charter flight Saturday. Upon arrival in South Korea, they were detained while police investigated whether they voluntarily joined scam organizations in Cambodia or were forced to work there.

Online scams, many based in Southeast Asian nations, have risen sharply since the COVID-19 pandemic and produced two sets of victims: the tens of thousands of people who have been forced to work as scammers under the threat of violence, and the targets of their fraud. Monitoring groups say online scams earn international criminal gangs billions of dollars annually.

State prosecutors have asked local courts to issue arrest warrants for 58 of the 64 returnees at the request of police, the Korean National Police Agency said in a statement. Police said the people they are seeking to place under arrest are accused of engaging in online fraud activities like romantic scams, bogus investment pitches or voice phishing, apparently targeting fellow South Koreans at home. The courts are expected to determine whether to approve their arrests in coming days.

The police agency said that five people have been set free, but it refused to disclose the reasons for their releases, saying investigations are still under way.

Sunday, 21 September 2025

ប្រជាជនរាប់មុឺននាក់ជិះឡានឥតគិតថ្លៃទៅស្រុកកំណើតនារដូវបុណ្យភ្ជុំ/ Pchum Be...

Thai military chiefs decide to close Cambodia border indefinitely



PUBLISHED : 19 Sep 2025 at 16:46

WRITER: Online Reporters

Chiefs of the Thai armed forces attend a meeting at the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters in Bangkok on Friday to discuss the tense situation along the Thai-Cambodian border. (Photo: Pattarapong Chatpattarasill)   

Chiefs of the Thai armed forces attend a meeting at the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters in Bangkok on Friday to discuss the tense situation along the Thai-Cambodian border. (Photo: Pattarapong Chatpattarasill)


Commanders of the Thai armed forces have unanimously voted to indefinitely shutter Thailand's border with Cambodia until the neighbouring nation is no longer deemed a threat, as well as to erect fencing.

The decision was made during the fifth meeting of the committee of armed forces chiefs held at the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters in Bangkok.

The meeting was attended by both serving and new commanders of the armed forces, who all voted uniformly to close all Thai-Cambodian border checkpoints indefinitely.

The chiefs agreed that all permanent checkpoints and trade crossings should remain shut down until a de-escalation of the situation between Thailand and Cambodia, which they deemed a threat to national security.

Gen Songwit Noonphukdi, Chief of the Defence Forces, began the meeting by asking all attendees to observe a moment of silence for 15 soldiers and civilians who perished in recent clashes along the border.

Friday, 19 September 2025

ទូក​នេសាទ​ថៃ​រាប់រយគ្រឿងត្រូវ​បានរកឃើញនៅ​ក្នុង​ដែន​ទឹក​កម្ពុជា

កងកម្លាំងថៃបាញ់ឧស្ម័នបង្ហូរទឹកភ្នែកនិងគ្រាប់កាំភ្លើងជ័រលើព្រះសង្ឃនិងពលរដ្ឋខ្មែរ


ព្រះសង្ឃ ទាហាន និងពលរដ្ឋខ្មែរជាច្រើននាក់បានរងរបួស បន្ទាប់ពីក្រុមទាហាននិងប៉ូលិសថៃ ប្រើគ្រាប់បែកផ្សែងបង្ហូរទឹកភ្នែក គ្រាប់កាំភ្លើងជ័រ និងគ្រាប់ជំពាម បាញ់ប្រហារមកលើក្រុមពលរដ្ឋខ្មែរ ដែលលើកគ្នាតវ៉ារារាំងការរាយបន្លាលួសជាថ្មីនៅភូមិព្រៃចាន់ ឃុំអូរបីជាន់ ស្រុកអូរជ្រៅ ខេត្តបន្ទាយមានជ័យ នៅថ្ងៃទី១៧ ខែកញ្ញានេះ។

Thai police fired rubber bullets on Cambodians protesting to prevent more barbed wire in Prey Chan village in Cambodia’s Banteay Meanchey province on Sep 17, 2025.
ប៉ូលិសថៃ បានបាញ់គ្រាប់កាំភ្លើងជ័រ មកលើក្រុមពលរដ្ឋខ្មែរ ដែលតវ៉ារារាំងការរាយបន្លាលួសជាថ្មីនៅភូមិព្រៃចាន់ ឃុំអូរបីជាន់ ស្រុកអូរជ្រៅ ខេត្តបន្ទាយមានជ័យ នៅថ្ងៃទី១៧ ខែកញ្ញា ឆ្នាំ២០២៥។ (រូបភាពពីបណ្ដាញសង្គម)

ក្រុម​ពលរដ្ឋ​ខ្មែរ​មួយ​ចំនួន​ដែល​សន្លប់​បាត់​ស្មារតី​ដោយសារ​ត្រូវ​ផ្សែង​បង្ហូរ​ទឹក​ភ្នែក និង​ទាហាន​ខ្មែរ​ម្នាក់​ដែល​របួស​ធ្ងន់​ត្រង់​ភ្នែក​ដោយសារ​ត្រូវ​គ្រាប់​កាំភ្លើង​ជ័រ ត្រូវ​បាន​បញ្ជូន​តាម​រថយន្ត​សង្គ្រោះ​ទៅ​កាន់​មន្ទីរពេទ្យ បន្ទាប់ពី​ការ​បង្ក្រាយ​ដោយ​ហិង្សា​ពី ក្រុម​ទាហាន​ថៃ​ប្រដាប់​ដោយ​អាវុធ អម​ដោយ​ក្រុម​ប៉ូលិស​ថៃ​បង្ក្រាប​បាតុកម្ម​ប្រដាប់​ដោយ​ខែល និង​ដំបង។

កងកម្លាំងថៃបាញ់ឧស្ម័នបង្ហូរទឹកភ្នែកនិងគ្រាប់កាំភ្លើងជ័រលើព្រះសង្ឃនិងពលរដ្ឋខ្មែរ ពលរដ្ឋខ្មែរជាច្រើននាក់បានរងរបួស បន្ទាប់ពីក្រុមទាហាននិងប៉ូលិសថៃ ប្រើគ្រាប់បែកផ្សែងបង្ហូរទឹកភ្នែក គ្រាប់កាំភ្លើងជ័រ និងគ្រាប់ជំពាម បាញ់មកលើក្រុមពលរដ្ឋខ្មែរ។

ប្រធាន​អង្គភាព​អ្នកនាំពាក្យ​រដ្ឋាភិបាល​កម្ពុជា​លោក ប៉ែន បូណា បាន​លើកឡើង​នៅ​សន្និសីទ​សារព័ត៌មាន​ថា ក្រុម​ទាហាន​និង​ប៉ូលិស​ថៃ បាន​ប្រើ​គ្រាប់​បែក​ផ្សែង​បង្ហូរ​ទឹក​ភ្នែក ជំពាម​បាញ់​គ្រាប់​ឃ្លី និង​គ្រាប់​កាំភ្លើង​ជ័រ រួម​ទាំង​ប្រើ​ឧបករណ៍​បំពង​សំឡេង​ដែល​ធ្វើ​ឱ្យ​ប៉ះពាល់​ត្រចៀក​និង​ខួរ​ក្បាល ដើម្បី​បង្ក្រាប​មក​លើ​ក្រុម​ពលរដ្ឋ និង​ព្រះសង្ឃ​ខ្មែរ ដែល​លើក​គ្នា​តវ៉ា​រារាំង​ការ​បន្ត​រាយ​បន្លា​លួស​រំលោភ​យក​ដី​ខ្មែរ​នៅ​ភូមិ​ព្រៃចាន់។ លោក ប៉ែន បូណា បាន​បន្ត​ថា ពលរដ្ឋ និង​ព្រះសង្ឃ​ខ្មែរ រួម​ទាំង​កង​កម្លាំង​ចម្រុះ​ខ្មែរ​ដែល​គ្មាន​អាវុធ​ក្នុង​ដៃ​បាន​ឈរ​ពាំង​ការពារ​ពលរដ្ឋ បាន​រង​របួស​សរុប​២៤នាក់ ដោយសារ​ការ​បង្ក្រាប​ពី​ក្រុម​កង​កម្លាំង​ប្រដាប់​អាវុធ​របស់​ថៃ។ លោក​បាន​អំពាវនាវ​ឱ្យ​ភាគី​ថៃ​គោរព​បទ​ឈប់​បាញ់ និង​ដោះស្រាយ​បញ្ហា​ព្រំដែន​ដោយ​សន្ដិវិធី ស្រប​តាម​ច្បាប់​អន្តរជាតិ និង​ការ​ព្រមព្រៀង​គ្នា​រវាង​រដ្ឋាភិបាល​ទាំង​ពីរ នៅ​ក្នុង​កិច្ចប្រជុំ​ពាក់ព័ន្ធ​នឹង​បញ្ហា​ព្រំដែន​នាពេល​កន្លង​មក។

អ្នកនាំពាក្យ​រដ្ឋាភិបាល​កម្ពុជា​សូម​ថ្កោលទោស​ចំពោះ​អំពើ​ហិង្សា​របស់​សមត្ថកិច្ច​ថៃ​មក​លើ​ប្រជាពលរដ្ឋ និង​ព្រះសង្ឃ​ខ្មែរ ព្រម​ទាំង​អំពាវនាវ​ឱ្យ​អាជ្ញាធរ​ថៃ បញ្ឈប់​ទង្វើ​ឈ្លានពាន និង​អំពើ​ហិង្សា​ទាំង​អស់​នេះ​ជា​បន្ទាន់។

—  លោក ប៉ែន បូណា

Thai security forces clash with Cambodian protesters at disputed border

 

Tear gas and rubber bullets threaten a fragile truce reached in July.

This image released by Agence Kampuchea Presse shows Cambodian people confronting Thai police and soldiers at the disputed Thai-Cambodia border in Banteay Meanchey province, Sept. 17, 2025.
This image released by Agence Kampuchea Presse shows Cambodian people confronting Thai police and soldiers at the disputed Thai-Cambodia border in Banteay Meanchey province, Sept. 17, 2025. (Agence Kampuchea Presse via AFP)

Thai security forces fired tear gas and rubber bullets as they clashed with Cambodian protesters on Wednesday in a disputed border area. It’s the most significant escalation since they declared a ceasefire to end a deadly five-day conflict in July.

The clash took place at a disputed frontier settlement, which Thailand says is part of its Ban Nong Ya Kaew village in Sa Kaeo province, but Cambodia says is part of Prey Chan village in Bantheay Meanchey province.

On Wednesday, Cambodia’s information minister Neth Pheaktra accused Thai officials of encroaching across the border, and said they used “tear gas, rubber bullets and noise-making devices against Cambodian civilians.”

According to Cambodian government spokesperson Pen Bona, Thai forces used violence to suppress unarmed Cambodian civilians and monks who were protesting peacefully.

Cambodian officials said more than two dozen Cambodians were injured in the clash.

Thailand Military is now using VIOLENCE AGAINST VILLAGERS

Wednesday, 17 September 2025

មន្ត្រីបក្សប្រឆាំងថា ទាហានថៃនឹងងាយស្រួលចូលឈ្លានពាន បើកម្ពុជាឯកភាពដោះមីននៅតំបន់ជម្លោះ

 

មន្ត្រីបក្សប្រឆាំងបានលើកឡើងថា ទាហានថៃនឹងកាន់តែងាយស្រួលចូលឈ្លានពានទឹកដីកម្ពុជា ជាពិសេសនៅប្រាសាទតាក្របី ប្រសិនបើរដ្ឋាភិបាលកម្ពុជាបានឯកភាពជាមួយថៃ ដោះមីននៅតំបន់ព្រំដែនជម្លោះដែលមិនទាន់ឯកភាពគ្នា។ ការលើកឡើងនេះ ក្រោយពេលរដ្ឋមន្ត្រីក្រសួងការពារជាតិកម្ពុជាប្រកាសថា កម្ពុជា-ថៃ បានឯកភាពគ្នាដោះមីនមនុស្សធម៌។

A Thai soldier lost his leg after stepping on a landmine at Ta Krabei Temple.
ទាហានថៃបានរបួសដាច់ជើង បន្ទាប់ពីជាន់គ្រាប់មីននៅជិតប្រាសាទតាក្របី នៅថ្ងៃទី២៧ ខែសីហា ឆ្នាំ២០២៧។ (បណ្ដាញសារព័ត៌មានថៃ)

អតីត​តំណាងរាស្ដ្រ​គណបក្ស​សង្គ្រោះជាតិ​លោក អ៊ុំ សំអាន បាន​ប្រាប់​វិទ្យុ​អាស៊ីសេរី​នៅ​ថ្ងៃ​ទី១៦ ខែកញ្ញា​ថា ប្រសិនបើ​កម្ពុជា​បាន​ឯកភាព​ជាមួយ​ថៃ ដោះមីន​នៅ​តាម​តំបន់​ព្រំដែន​ដែល​មិន​ទាន់​មាន​ការ​វាស់វែង​និង​ឯកភាព​គ្នា ដូច្នេះ​ការ​ដោះ​មីន​ខាង​មុខ​នេះ នឹង​ជួយ​ឱ្យ​ទាហាន​ថៃ​កាន់​តែ​ងាយស្រួល​ចូល​រាយ​បន្លា​លួស​រំលោភ​យក​ដី​ខ្មែរ​បន្ថែម​ទៀត ជាពិសេស​នៅ​តំបន់​ប្រាសាទ​តាក្របី ដែល​ទាហាន​កំពុង​ព្យាយាម​ចូល​កាន់កាប់។

ពីព្រោះ តំបន់​ខ្លះ ថៃ​អត់​ហ៊ាន​ចូល​មក ដោយសារ​មាន​មីន ហើយ​សូម្បី​ប្រាសាទ​តាក្របី​ហ្នឹង មេទ័ព​ថៃ​ក៏​សារភាព​ដែរ​ថា នៅ​ពេល​បាញ់​គ្នា​ហ្នឹង គឺ​មិន​អាច​យក​ប្រាសាទ​តាក្របី​បាន ដោយសារ​មាន​មីន​ច្រើន​ពេក ហើយ​មីន​ហ្នឹង គឺ​សល់​ពី​សម័យ​សង្គ្រាម​នា​ទស្សវត្ស​ទី​៨០។

—  លោក អ៊ុំ សំអាន

ការ​លើកឡើង​ពី​មន្ត្រី​គណបក្ស​ប្រឆាំង​នេះ បាន​ធ្វើឡើង​បន្ទាប់ពី​ស្ថានទូត​បរទេស​​មួយ​ចំនួន​នៅ​កម្ពុជា រួមមាន​ស្ថានទូត​អង់គ្លេស និង​ស្ថានទូត​បារាំង​ជាដើម បាន​បង្ហោះ​សារ​លើ​ទំព័រ​ហ្វេសប៊ុក​ស្វាគមន៍​ការ​សម្រេច​ចិត្ត​របស់​ភាគី​កម្ពុជា​និង​ថៃ ដែល​រួម​គ្នា​ដោះ​មីន​នៅ​តាម​ព្រំដែន។

ការ​ស្វាគមន៍​របស់​ស្ថានទូត​បរទេស​ទាំង​នោះ បាន​ធ្វើ​ឡើង​បន្ទាប់​ពី​រដ្ឋមន្ត្រី​ក្រសួង​ការពារ​ជាតិ​កម្ពុជា​លោក ទៀ សីហា បាន​លើកឡើង​នៅ​ក្នុង​សេចក្ដី​ប្រកាស​ព័ត៌មាន​ថា នៅ​ក្នុង​កិច្ច​ប្រជុំ​ពិសេស​លើក​ទី១ របស់​គណៈកម្មាធិការ​ព្រំដែន​ទូទៅ (GBC) កាល​ពី​ថ្ងៃ​ទី១០ ខែកញ្ញា ភាគី​កម្ពុជា-ថៃ បាន​ឯកភាព​ចាប់​ផ្ដើម​កំណត់​តំបន់​សាកល្បង​សម្រាប់​ការងារ​ដោះ​មីន​នៅ​តាម​ព្រំដែន ដើម្បី​រួម​ចំណែក​ជួយ​ដល់​ការ​អភិវឌ្ឍ​សេដ្ឋកិច្ច​និង​សង្គម រួមទាំង​ការពារ​អាយុ​ជីវិត​ពលរដ្ឋ។ ប៉ុន្តែ​សេចក្ដី​ប្រកាស​ព័ត៌មាន​នេះ​មិន​បាន​បញ្ជាក់​ថា ការ​ដោះ​មីន​សាកល្បង​នោះ នឹង​ធ្វើ​ឡើង​នៅ​តំបន់​មិន​ទាន់​ឯកភាព​គ្នា​ឬ​យ៉ាង​ណា​នោះ​ទេ។