Wednesday, 10 June 2026
Khmer Sbai carved in stone
In 2025, archaeologists at Cambodia’s Angkor temple complex uncovered the torso of a sandstone Buddha statue dating to the 12th–13th century. The discovery proved especially remarkable because the torso perfectly matched a head found at the same site in 1927 and preserved in Cambodia’s National Museum for nearly 100 years. Using modern technology, researchers confirmed that the two pieces once formed a single statue, allowing one of the finest surviving examples of Khmer art to be reunited after almost a century apart.
Saturday, 6 June 2026
Thai Scholar Warns Anutin Risks Another ICJ Defeat

BANGKOK, June 5, 2026 — Prominent Thai security and geopolitical analyst Surachart Bamrungsuk has warned that Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul’s recent position on the Cambodia-Thailand border dispute could place Thailand at risk of repeating past legal setbacks before international courts.
In an article titled “Cambodia’s Trap! Is Anutin Leading Thailand Toward Another Defeat at the International Court?”, published on June 1, Surachart cautioned that Thailand should be careful not to undermine legal principles that have previously shaped rulings against Bangkok in territorial disputes.
The warning followed remarks made by Anutin on May 27, when the Thai prime minister stated that Thailand would only recognize the 1:50,000-scale map in border discussions and that if Cambodia continued to rely on the 1:200,000-scale map, there would be no need for further talks.
According to Surachart, the statement immediately raised concerns among Thai academics and policy analysts, who warned that such a position could expose Thailand to legal vulnerabilities under international law.
He argued that previous rulings by the International Court of Justice (ICJ), particularly in the Preah Vihear Temple case, were not determined solely by map scales but by broader legal principles, including treaty obligations, state conduct and historical acceptance of boundary documents.
Thursday, 4 June 2026
The Cartographic Temper Tantrum: Anutin’s Post-Paris Panic and Thailand's Lawless Diplomacy
Guest Writer: Panhavuth LONG, Lawyer, PAN & Associates Law Firm
06:12 PM, June 3, 2026
This sudden, erratic pivot is not a demonstration of sovereign strength. It is an exposure of an administration struggling to reconcile its political ambitions with binding treaties, begging a question that reverberates through diplomatic corridors: What exactly did Anutin learn in France that forced such a hasty retreat from historical evidence?
Imperial Archives and Inconvenient Truths
In the realm of international law and statecraft, a leader cannot unilaterally erase a map simply because it fails to serve political convenience. The Annex I map is not merely a dusty colonial artifact; it is the foundational document validated by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in its landmark 1962 Preah Vihear ruling. If the Prime Minister genuinely sought "clarification" from President Emmanuel Macron and French authorities, the archives almost certainly offered an inconvenient truth: the historical record is immutable. France cannot, and legally would not, retroactively alter early 20th-century treaties to accommodate modern Thai political objectives. Realizing that the French archives would only reinforce the legitimacy of the very maps Thailand wishes to contest, Anutin chose to abandon the legal framework rather than engage with the rules of international jurisprudence. A state does not ask a question on the global stage if it is unprepared to handle the answer. To inquire, and then immediately declare the subject non-existent when the answer proves unfavorable, is a departure from established diplomatic norms.
Wednesday, 3 June 2026
Anutin Says the 1:200,000 Scale No Longer Counts. Surachart Bamrungsuk Tells Him the 2000 Treaty Names No Scale at All.
In hindsight colonial France should have demanded more than those returned three Khmer provinces to Cambodia. This episode only serves to remind all Khmers and their ruling administration alike that making land concessions to the Thais "in exchange for peace" only invites further Thai encroachments and no guarantee of lasting peace.
-Social media
Anutin Charnvirakul told Thai media on 27 May, on the sidelines of a trade exhibition at Impact Muang Thong Thani, that the 1:200,000-scale Franco-Siamese map Cambodia cites for its border claims no longer counts for his government, and that any party meaning to rely on that scale need not come to the table at all. He told The Nation the older scale “no longer exists” for Thailand, while allowing that his government would accept transparent technical verification of the line.
The scale Anutin set aside is not the term on which the governing instruments turn. The Memorandum of Understanding the two governments signed on 14 June 2000, and which Thailand registered with the United Nations in 2011, commits them in its first article to survey and demarcate the land boundary in accordance with the 1904 Franco-Siamese Convention, the 1907 Treaty and its annexed delimitation Protocol, and the maps that resulted from the Commissions of Delimitation. The article lists those documents and fixes no scale. That framework is still running: under its Joint Boundary Commission the two sides have located most of the 73 colonial-era markers, leaving the contested segments where the present argument sits.
Losing in Court, Thailand's Military Throws a Tantrum at the Border

The timing is telling. Thailand is reeling from legal and diplomatic defeats. And for observers of Thai-Cambodian border affairs, the June 2 incident follows a damning pattern: Bangkok signs a peace accord, then swiftly engineers a fresh confrontation.
Since the July 2025 ceasefire, Thailand has repeatedly leveled landmine accusations against Cambodia – each time, notably, immediately after a peace deal was sealed. A ceasefire was brokered on July 28, 2025, following clashes near Preah Vihear. Just twelve days later, Bangkok alleged three soldiers were injured by a mine. Cambodian verification later exposed that Thai troops had crossed the ceasefire line. On October 26, another peace agreement was inked. Fifteen days later, Thailand again reported a mine strike and blamed Phnom Penh, prompting Prime Minister Anutin to suspend the accord. The June 2 provocation is not an anomaly – it is the modus operandi.
Cambodia initiates action with UN agency to force conciliation of maritime dispute with Thailand
Posted: Jun 2, 2026 / 08:38 AM EDT
Updated: Jun 2, 2026 / 08:38 AM EDT
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Cambodia’s government has filed notice under a U.N. agreement on maritime law for compulsory conciliation of a sea border dispute with neighboring Thailand, Prime Minister Hun Manet said Tuesday.
At issue is territory claimed by both that is believed to contain large, exploitable amounts of natural gas and other hydrocarbons.
The decision to take the matter to the the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, or UNCLOS, comes after Thailand last month terminated a 25-year-old memorandum of understanding with Cambodia meant to resolve overlapping maritime claims.
Thailand unilaterally revoked the agreement in May after relations between the countries worsened last year after major armed clashes over their land border.
Last year’s fighting with Cambodia spurred nationalistic fervor, putting political pressure on Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul to abrogate the pact.
In a live broadcast on TVK state television, Hun Manet said that his government had delivered formal notice to Thailand and to the U.N. secretary-general to begin compulsory conciliation proceedings under UNCLOS rules.
“Cambodia has never violated the sovereignty of other states,” he said.
“At the same time, we are unwaveringly determined to defend Cambodia’s sovereignty. Today, we continue to honor that responsibility, not through force, but through international law; not through unilateral action, but through peaceful engagement.”
Cambodia launches UN-backed process to settle maritime dispute with Thailand
By Reuters
June 2, 20265:11 AM GMT+1Updated June 2, 2026

Summary
Cambodia invokes UN conciliation process after Thailand ended 2001 maritime pact
Disputed maritime area estimated to hold $300 billion in oil and gas resources
Thailand has 21 days to appoint conciliators under UN process, Cambodia says
The move follows a Thai government decision last month to unilaterally terminate a 2001 agreement with Cambodia that provided a framework for negotiations over the disputed area in the Gulf of Thailand where the two countries' maritime claims overlap.
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"We have taken this step to protect Cambodia's sovereignty and maritime rights in accordance with international law," Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet said.
Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, who made the cancellation of the 2001 pact part of his February election campaign, said he was not aware that Cambodia had initiated the conciliation process.
"Thailand has not yet determined when it will proceed further," he told reporters.
Tuesday, 2 June 2026
BREAKING: Cambodia Formally Notifies Thailand, UN to Initiate UNCLOS Compulsory Conciliation Process

Monday, 1 June 2026
A 1908 Treaty Document Holds Against Anutin's 1:200,000 Erasure

OP-ED: The Clown Poses as the Crown: Anutin Is the Real Sick Man of Asia — Goes to France, Rejects French Map
Friday, 29 May 2026
Cambodia says Thai actions at border temples breach international law
Tuesday, 26 May 2026
Friday, 22 May 2026
កុំជឿជាក់ពេកថៃកុំអួតពេកគេមិនទាន់ប្រើអោយអស់ពីសម្ថភាពទេ
Reform, develop and modernise. Without reforms there cannot be development and modernisation as institutional corruption siphons off state resources from national spheres including defence into private pockets and corrupt, incompetent officials mismanage public affairs, including military officials appointed through bribes or nepotism rather than actual experience and knowledge earned through battles.
Take a former KR military commander named Y Chean who had had his military training in China and shown his credentials during his defence of the pivotal KR stronghold of Pailin which none of Hun Sen's men had been able to breach after several attempts. He was subsequently transferred to the Ministry of Interior where he probably still remains as Hun Sen more than likely perceives him as a threat.
-Social media
Wednesday, 20 May 2026
Former Thai Foreign Minister Urges Talks; Cambodian Academic Says Troops Must Withdraw First
There's a reason why the Thais are shy of peaceful resolutions through internationally recognised binding treaties and legal procedures. Wasn't Piromya himself serving as Thailand's FM under Vijjajiva between 2008 and 2011 when Thailand also attacked Cambodia? New faces, same treacheries? They would rather cower themselves under the cloak of diplomacy - even via third parties like China or Bangladesh - when under attack from Iran or Myanmar... than deploying their mighty F-16s.
Cloak and dagger tactic?
-Social media
Tuesday, 19 May 2026
Cambodia Reiterates Firm Stance Against Unilateral Thai Maps
Sunday, 17 May 2026
The deeper layer behind "Sihasak rejects Cambodia media claim Thailand agreed to UNCLOS compulsory conciliation"
Sihasak's posturing, bullying rhetoric and arrogance more than anything else perfectly encapsulate the Gang of Three - i.e. Palace, Government, Army or Four if one includes their media mouthpieces and Thailand's cyber army of trolls online! - and their dealings vis a vis Cambodia since their initiated attacks last year.
Envisage a situation where a man violently raped a girl next door (his neighbour's wife or daughter) at her most vulnerable moment. After the deed he held a knife at her, threatening to kill her and her family members and take more of her properties such as house, lands etc. unless she kept her silence about her ordeal. He also added for good effect that it was moreover in her interest and honour as a girl/woman to keep it between him and her!
Well, that is exactly what this Gang of Three are treating Cambodia at this moment. That’s what the term ‘bilateral’ really means to the Thais and in reality even though they have just unilaterally torn up the MOU with Cambodia which was the only practical bilateral framework or mechanism on offer for resolving overlapping maritime boundary claims!
-Social media
After the Thai Cabinet terminated the 2001 Memorandum of Understanding (MoU 44), Cambodia began shifting the maritime dispute from a stalled bilateral framework into the more structured arena of international maritime law by announcing its move toward UNCLOS compulsory conciliation.
During a trilateral sideline meeting facilitated by Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and attended by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, Thailand reportedly acknowledged Cambodia’s position to pursue compulsory conciliation under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) regarding overlapping maritime claims, according to a high-ranking official.
However, on 11 May 2026, Thai Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow rejected Cambodian media reports claiming that Thailand had already agreed to UNCLOS compulsory conciliation. The response also appeared intended to counter Cambodian media narratives, such as Fresh News and Khmer Times, etc.
Beyond Cambodian media, Khaosod English also reported on 6 May that Prime Minister Anutin confirmed a move toward a common legal framework after Cambodian leader Hun Manet announced plans to use compulsory conciliation.
Notably, Foreign Minister Sihasak used very careful wording. He did not state in absolute terms that Thailand would never enter UNCLOS compulsory conciliation with Cambodia. Instead, he attempted to reposition Thailand as the actor controlling the diplomatic process by emphasizing that “the process must begin with sincere bilateral talks.”
Saturday, 16 May 2026
Prak Sokhonn Holds Talks With Senior US Diplomat on Thailand Border Issue

Thursday, 14 May 2026
WITHOUT A FREE AND FAIR ELECTION, THERE WILL BE NO KHMER SOLIDARITY
Opinion by Anonymous
Khmer people should stop crying and complaining about Hun Sen. They have to fight for social justice. The first step is fighting for free and fair elections by peacefully marching in 2027 to demand that the government free all political prisoners, reform the National Election Committee (NEC), and reinstate the CNRP. If Khmer people are afraid to do this peaceful demonstration, they must stop crying and continuing to live under this ignorant Hun Sen's foot.
Khmer people must select a JUST CAUSE and THE RIGHT TIME to fight.
How to transfer the power peacefully and successfully in Cambodia?
Hun Sen was installed by Vietnam to execute the Vietnamization of Cambodia policy. Hun Sen never hesitated to do whatever was necessary to please his master Vietnam and maintain his grip on power.
Many Khmer people have lamented that we cannot win through a general election. This has been true when we have allowed Hun Sen to do whatever he wanted.
For example, in 2017, we allowed Hun Sen to dissolve the CNRP without facing any consequences
To overcome this major obstacle, we must pick a just cause and the right time to fight for.
Notice that the commune election will be held in 2027 and the general election in 2028.
We should take the following steps to achieve our goal.
In early 2027, the Khmer people should stage a peaceful demonstration to demand the release of all political prisoners, NEC reforms, and the reinstatement of the CNRP.
AOT Under Philippines Leadership Launches First Mission at Preah Vihear
According to a statement issued by Cambodian Defence Ministry spokesperson Maly Socheata, the mission marked the first deployment of the Head of Mission of the ASEAN Observer Team under the Philippine chairmanship of ASEAN.
The Cambodian Liaison Group facilitated the visit at around 8:40 a.m., with the team tasked with observing, verifying and reporting on the border situation around Preah Vihear Temple in Choam Ksan district.
The mission also aims to assess recent developments in the area surrounding the UNESCO World Heritage site, which Cambodia said suffered severe damage during military attacks by Thai forces in 2025.
Cambodian authorities said the observer team's role in monitoring implementation of the ceasefire was intended to improve transparency, accountability and mutual trust between Cambodia and Thailand.
The statement said the initiative was aimed at supporting a return to normal conditions and promoting long-term peace, stability and security along the border.
Cambodia also expressed support for strengthening the observer team’s role and mandate in future peace efforts.
The Royal Government and Ministry of National Defence reaffirmed what they described as a firm commitment to fully implementing the Joint Statement of the third Special General Border Committee meeting signed on Dec. 27, 2025, the Cambodia-Thailand Peace Agreement signed on Oct. 26, 2025, and other related agreements.
Officials said the measures were intended to accelerate recovery and restore security and stability for communities living along the border areas of both countries.
The Diving Game and the "Talk and Take" Strategy: The Reality Behind the Veil of Friendship and Cambodia’s Legal Readiness
Opinion | Cambodia Insights
Guest Writer: Panhavuth LONG, Lawyer, PAN & Associates Law Firm
4:06 PM, May 12, 2026
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (CI) – In the chess game of regional geopolitics, nothing happens by chance. The return of Thaksin Shinawatra and the exploitation of the "brotherhood" bond, occurring exactly when the Bangkok government faces internal economic pressures and mounting tensions over the 2001 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU44), is not merely a matter of sentiment. It is a sharp, calculated strategy that demands Cambodia to analyze the situation with pragmatism, independence, and an absolute readiness in the realm of international law. Although the "diving game" metaphor suggests that Cambodia currently holds the upper hand and a longer breath than its counterpart, we must not forget a fundamental law of politics: "A cornered beast always reacts most dangerously."
1. The "Friendship" Card and the Danger of a Cornered State
When a country faces a severe economic crisis and urgently needs energy resources from the Overlapping Claims Area (OCA), it may resort to any strategy necessary. Using personal relationships and calling for peaceful negotiations is merely the initial "soft power" maneuver. If this persuasion fails to sway the firm stance of Cambodia’s leadership, the other side is likely to shift its strategy toward economic pressure, border provocations, or unilateral legal interpretations.
2. Brotherhood Bond vs. National Ideals: Cambodia Puts Sovereignty First
In the realm of politics and diplomacy, personal sentiments or a "brotherhood bond" can only serve as a lubricant to ease the atmosphere of communication; they can never replace or stand above national ideals. Any attempt to leverage private affection as a tool for psychological coercion in determining a nation's destiny is a gross underestimation of the other state's will and sovereignty. For Cambodia, the choice is clear and irreversible: regardless of how valuable a personal friendship may be, Cambodia will always choose to stand firmly on the principle of defending its sovereignty and territorial integrity first and foremost. National interests, legal authority, and the survival of a sovereign state are not commodities to be traded at the negotiation table under the pressure of the word "brotherhood."
Phnom Penh Calls Thai Temple Registration ‘Illegal and Baseless’
PHNOM PENH, May 13, 2026 — Cambodia’s Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts has strongly protested Thailand’s decision to register several ancient temple sites along the disputed border in Thailand’s national register of monuments, calling the move illegal and a violation of Cambodian sovereignty.
In a statement issued on Wednesday, the ministry rejected Thailand’s registration of the Tamone Temple Complex, Ta Krabey Temple, K’Nar Temple and other archaeological sites that Cambodia says are situated within its sovereign territory.
The ministry said the unilateral action was “illegal, null, and without legal effect,” adding that such registration could not serve as evidence of territorial sovereignty or border delimitation.
Cambodia stressed that border demarcation issues between the two countries must be resolved in accordance with international law, including the 1907 Franco-Siamese Treaty and existing bilateral mechanisms such as the 2000 Memorandum of Understanding, the 2003 Terms of Reference and the Joint Boundary Commission process.
The ministry described Thailand’s registration effort as an unlawful attempt to create “an artificial legal appearance” over cultural sites located in Cambodian territory.
“This action constitutes a violation of Cambodia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and undermines the spirit of peaceful dialogue and mutual respect between the two countries,” the statement said.
The Cambodian government called on Thailand to immediately withdraw the registration and refrain from further unilateral actions that could undermine efforts toward a peaceful settlement of border issues.
Cambodia also reaffirmed its commitment to resolving all outstanding disputes peacefully and in full respect of international law and bilateral mechanisms.
The statement comes amid heightened diplomatic tensions between Cambodia and Thailand over border and maritime disputes in recent weeks.
Wednesday, 13 May 2026
Tuesday, 12 May 2026
Rare Dolphin Family Spotted in Cambodia’s Kampot Marine Conservation Area

KAMPOT, May 10, 2026 — A rare family of Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins has been spotted in protected coastal waters in Cambodia’s Kampot province, in what conservationists say is another positive sign of improving marine biodiversity.
Drone footage captured the dolphins swimming together in the waters of the Prek Tnaot fishing community, showing two adult dolphins gently touching snouts while a juvenile circled nearby, according to local conservation officials.
Researchers identified the animals as Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin, a species considered vulnerable in many parts of Asia due to habitat loss, pollution and fishing activity.
Officials said the sighting reflected the strong social bonds and peaceful behaviour of the dolphins within a protected marine conservation area.
Cambodia’s Fisheries Administration, under the Ministry of Agriculture, has been working with Marine Conservation Cambodia and local authorities to strengthen marine conservation efforts along the country’s coastline.
As part of the programme, authorities have deployed artificial reef structures made from stone blocks across several conservation zones to create habitats for marine biodiversity.
Conservation officials said the artificial reef initiative, launched in 2023, has contributed to increasing fish stocks and marine species populations while supporting sustainable fisheries for local communities.
Marine researchers have in recent months also reported growing numbers of vulnerable marine species, including seahorses, in Cambodia’s coastal waters, which they say indicates improving ecosystem stability in protected areas.
Monday, 11 May 2026
Cambodians struggle with displaced lives amid tense ceasefire with Thailand
Families displaced by recent border war fear renewed clashes with Thailand, say their children’s education among areas most affected by conflict.

Published On 9 May 20269 May 2026
Preah Vihear/Siem Reap provinces – When asked how she spends her day, 11-year-old Sokna rattled off a list of chores.
She first fetches water, then washes dishes and sweeps the leaves and dust from around the blue tarpaulin tent her family now calls home, in the grounds of a Buddhist pagoda in northwestern Cambodia.
Sokna and her sister have stopped attending school, their mother Puth Reen said, since moving to this camp for people displaced by the recent rounds of fighting between Thailand and Cambodia.
The two sisters are among more than 34,440 people who remain in displacement camps in Cambodia – 11,355 of whom are children – as of this month, according to the country’s Ministry of Interior.
“I tried to tell them to go to school, but they don’t go,” Puth Reen told Al Jazeera, explaining how precarious life had become since returning to live in Cambodia after fleeing neighbouring Thailand, where she had worked for many years, as the fighting started.
Thursday, 7 May 2026
ការឆ្លើយតបទៅកាន់ ព័ត៌មានសៀម នឹង បុគ្គលពា/ល
How this obnoxious person currently becomes the national icon of Thailand and its attacks against Cambodia is beyond me. His actions in the course of the border conflict reveal the ugliest, most reprehensible face of Thai ultra-nationalism, not least the use of raw sewage (or the intent to do so) and the playing on loud speakers of high pitch sounds directed at Khmer villagers including the elderly, pregnant women and minors. I would say that your ability to communicate directly to Thai audience in their language is one of your greatest weapons in this war through defence of truth.
I would encourage you and others as well as the Cambodian government to also target the ethnic Khmers or Khmer-speaking population in Thailand by relaying online messages to them directly. The Cambodian government should set up a specialist unit whose mission is dedicated to enlisting and galvanising the hearts and minds of these Khmer brothers and sisters in Thailand. If the Thais have managed to win them over to their side despite not sharing the same bloodline or ancestry then the possibility to win them over to the side of their actual mother land and brothers and sisters should be a much more realisable aim. Winning them over to Cambodia's side would represent half the battle won.
-Social media
Wednesday, 6 May 2026
Cambodia Could Overtake Thailand Economically and Demographically Within 75 Years, Expert Says
Tuesday, 5 May 2026
Hun Manet Announces UNCLOS Action Following Thai Withdrawal
Cambodia to pursue compulsory conciliation under UNCLOS if Thailand revokes MoU
National
04 May, 2026Raksmey Hong
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In a special interview broadcast on state-run Television of Cambodia (TVK) on May 3, secretary of state at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Kung Phoak expressed “deep disappointment” over reports that Bangkok is preparing to unilaterally terminate the 2001 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU 2001).
He explained that the framework has underpinned maritime negotiations between the two countries for more than two decades.
“We are very disappointed that the Thai side is considering unilaterally withdrawing from the MOU 2001,” he said, describing the agreement as “the only bilateral framework that both parties have relied upon for more than two decades” to manage overlapping claims in the Gulf of Thailand.
Monday, 4 May 2026
Saturday, 2 May 2026
Cambodia Says It Will Keep Raising Border Issues Until Violations Stop

Friday, 1 May 2026
If a larger country can simply decide a smaller neighbor’s border no longer exists, is any country truly safe?…
All these Western embassies in Phnom Penh must be fully aware of what is happening and yet are apparently turning the other way for some reasons? Even countries within ASEAN are effectively in hiding. The likes of Singapore were once most vociferous in protesting Vietnam's invasion and occupation of Cambodia but today where are they?
This is about more than the leadership of Cambodia or whether this leadership is palatable to the world community or not; more than whether Thailand is occupying a few hectares of Cambodian territory or several km squares. It's about a most basic, fundamental principle governing a peaceful, civilised world being grossly violated in broad daylight. This is an unashamed reversion to feudal times when Siam was terrorising Cambodia and other weaker nations at will and without punitive repercussions.
-Social media
Cambodia deports more than 600 Thais linked to cyberscams: minister
Thu, April 30, 2026 at 12:49 PM GMT+1
2 min read
(TANG CHHIN Sothy/AFP/AFP)
Cambodia deported more than 600 Thais allegedly involved in online scams on Thursday, the information minister said, part of a crackdown against the multibillion-dollar illicit industry that has ballooned in the country in recent years.
Cambodia has emerged as a hub for crime syndicates running fake romantic relationship and cryptocurrency investment schemes in which scammers -- some willing, others trafficked -- defraud internet users around the world.
Operated out of hotels, casinos and fortified compounds around the region, the global cyberscam industry has reached "industrial proportions", with estimates of its annual revenues as high as $64 billion, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.
Cambodian Information Minister Neth Pheaktra told AFP "635 Thai nationals involved in illegal online business operations and transnational criminal networks were deported to Thailand" through a border checkpoint on Thursday.
Leader of Cambodia's defunct opposition loses appeal against treason conviction, lawyer says
By Reuters
April 30, 20265:28 AM GMT+1Updated 14 hours ago
Summary
Kem Sokha gets additional 5-year travel ban added to 27-year term
Crackdown wipes out Cambodia's opposition, ruling CPP uncontested
Western embassies disappointed, urge Cambodia to create space for opposition
PHNOM PENH, April 30 (Reuters) - A Cambodian appeals court on Thursday upheld a 27-year sentence for former opposition leader Kem Sokha for his treason conviction, his lawyer said, another blow to an opposition decimated by the ruling party's long-running crackdown.
Kem Sokha, 72, co-founder of the defunct Cambodia National Rescue Party, has been held under house arrest since he was found guilty of treason in March 2023. He was accused of conspiring with a foreign power to topple then-premier Hun Sen.
The court upheld that verdict and banned Kem Sokha from leaving Cambodia for five years once his term ends, his lawyer said.
"We regret this decision," Pheng Heng told reporters. "Under this circumstance, the government ruled by the Cambodian People's Party should seek national reconciliation and today's decision is not as expected."
Kem Sokha's case was among the most prominent in a sweeping crackdown on opponents of the CPP, which has ruled the Southeast Asian country for more than four decades. The United States said at the time that his conviction was based on "fabricated conspiracy theories".
China–Cambodia 2+2 Dialogue Is a Strategic Turning Point
On April 22, Cambodia's Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn (2nd R) and Defence Minister Tea Seiha (R), together with China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi (2nd L) and China's Defence Minister Dong Jun (L), co-chaired the First Meeting of the “2+2” Strategic Dialogue between the Ministers of Foreign Affairs and Ministers of National Defence of Cambodia and China, in Phnom Penh. Photo: MFA
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Defense Minister Dong Jun visited Cambodia for the first "2+2" strategic dialogue, meeting top leaders including Acting Head of State Hun Sen, Prime Minister Hun Manet, Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn and Defense Minister Tea Seiha.
On April 22, China and Cambodia inaugurated their first "2+2" Strategic Dialogue in Phnom Penh. The meeting involved foreign and defense ministers and aimed to deepen political and security ties and bilateral cooperation.
There are reports that this framework may expand to a "3+3" structure, adding interior ministers from both countries. This would signify deeper, more institutionalized cooperation between China and Cambodia.
Through this new diplomatic initiative, China is demonstrating an intention to expand its engagement with Cambodia beyond economic issues, shifting toward a partnership also focused on political and security collaboration.
FM Wang Yi told reporters that China is willing to develop the mechanism into a “strategic platform” for enhancing political and defense security cooperation.
He described the 2+2 strategic engagement with Cambodia as a key instrument for cementing mutual assistance and solidarity and advancing the construction of a China-Cambodia “community with a shared future”.
Myanmar’s former leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been transferred to house arrest