
Tuesday, 21 April 2026
Cambodia Rejects Thai Territorial Claims in New Protest Note

Monday, 20 April 2026
Over 34,000 Cambodians Remain Displaced as Border Situation Persists
Thailand is replicating war crimes committed in the ME by their friend and ally Israel in SEA against innocent Cambodian civilians. Who displaced these people from their homes and villages in the first place, Thailand or Cambodia? Thailand's long range artillery barrage and rockets threaten communities well away from the immediate border regions, not to mention F-16 raids deep inside Cambodian territory.
It's ok to blame the Cambodian authorities for mismanagement of the war refugee crisis but Thailand's disregard for international and humanitarian laws does not help and remains the conflict's most defining contributing factor.
-Social media

Saturday, 18 April 2026
Hijacking the Peace: How Bangkok Uses Diplomatic Paralysis to Squat on Cambodian Soil
The article should instead be titled: ‘Sick man of SEA playing stalling tactics on his favoured platform of ‘bilateral talks’ without real talks.’ Anutin and his bosses in the army or palace have got what they want by attacking a neighbouring country so to then surrender their ill-gotten gains so soon thereafter would make them look like complete fools.
Bangkok’s moral decay, duplicity and reputation on the international stage is about as notorious and sleazy as that of Pattaya.
-Social media
Geopolitics Commentary | Cambodia Insights
05:17 PM, April 15, 2026
PHNOM
PENH, Cambodia (CI) – On April 11, the Thai government, through its
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, flatly rejected Cambodia’s diplomatic push
to expedite a Joint Border Commission (JBC) meeting. This dismissal came
merely days after Cambodia’s State Secretariat of Border Affairs
dispatched a renewed diplomatic note on April 7, urgently requesting a
special JBC session and the immediate deployment of a joint technical
team to conduct empirical, on-the-ground measurements. Bangkok’s
official rationale for this April 11 rejection, citing the recent
transition to a new administration and the bureaucratic necessity of
restructuring the Thai JBC delegation, offers a remarkably thin veil for
its diplomatic inertia. While administrative transitions are a reality
of governance, they cannot be perpetually invoked to suspend binding
bilateral obligations. Using cabinet reshuffles and internal committee
changes as a pretext to avoid empirical border measurements only
reinforces the perception that Thailand is deploying bureaucratic red
tape as a shield against legal accountability.
At
the heart of this stalling tactic is a fundamental fear of empirical
truth. The delimitation of the Cambodian-Thai border is not a mystery;
it is anchored firmly in established international jurisprudence, most
notably the Annex I map of the 1904 and 1907 Franco-Siamese Treaties,
which were resoundingly validated by the International Court of Justice
(ICJ) in 1962 and reaffirmed in 2013. By refusing to send a joint
measurement team to the physical border, Bangkok is deliberately
suppressing the very mechanism that would expose its territorial
encroachments. A joint, transparent measurement based on legally binding
maps would strip away the ambiguity Thailand relies upon, transforming
their presence from a "disputed claim" into an undeniable, documented
violation of Cambodian sovereignty.
Thursday, 16 April 2026
Bangkok’s Dangerous Gambit: Why Revoking MOU 2000 is an Act of International Bad Faith
As long as there are rogue states like Israel and Thailand around, neighbouring countries and peoples won't be able to sleep in peace for long especially when these latter show signs of vulnerabilities or are inadequately equipped to defend themselves against the former's violence and aggression.
Why would stronger, far more powerful states completely disregard international laws and existing dispute resolution mechanisms when they have issues with smaller, weaker opponents or states? Because ultimately they are of the belief that the world is still ruled by the law of the jungle; that it is a fractured world where laws and treaties can be interpreted or eschewed altogether to align with their interests and fait accompli often rule the day or where the actual victims may never find justice.
Btw, one keeps hearing that Cambodia is a "jungle country" and so forth but, this derogatory label must surely be far more applicable to Thailand as a violent criminal state led by its unscrupulous politicians and savage military commanders? In any case, there isn't much of any real 'jungle' left in either country these days owing to destructive commercial deforestation!
Choose ‘peace’ but also find the practical realistic means to protect and defend it – just in case.
-Social media
Geopolitics Commentary | Cambodia Insights
Panhavuth LONG, Lawyer, PAN & Associates Lawfirm
05:10 PM, April 15, 2026
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (CI) – The prospect of Thailand revoking the Memorandum of Understanding regarding the Survey and Demarcation of Land Boundary (MOU 2000) would be a watershed moment in Southeast Asian diplomacy. This is not merely a procedural withdrawal or a domestic policy adjustment; it constitutes a direct abandonment of the December 27 Peace Declaration and a profound breach of international law.
As calls for revocation grow louder within certain political circles in Bangkok, it is imperative to analyze why such a move would be viewed by the international community as an act of profound "bad faith." The current peace rests on specific legal and strategic pillars that cannot be dismantled without collapsing the entire regional security architecture.
The Legal Shield: The "Intangibility" of Boundaries
Under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT), specifically Article 62, Paragraph 2, a state cannot invoke a "fundamental change of circumstances" to terminate or
withdraw from a treaty that establishes a boundary. Because MOU 2000 was signed, ratified, and deposited with the United Nations Secretariat as the definitive framework for boundary demarcation, it is legally "intangible." Any unilateral attempt by Bangkok to revoke it is a violation of pacta sunt servanda (agreements must be kept). In the eyes of international law, the MOU remains binding regardless of a state’s internal political "recommendations." To attempt an escape from these territorial obligations is to signal to the world that Thailand’s signature on a treaty is temporary and subject to the whims of populist sentiment.
Tuesday, 14 April 2026
ចិត្តស្នេហ៍បរិសុទ្ធ - Cover
On this auspicious occasion of the Khmer New Year, we wish all our readers and beloved Khmer people everywhere safety, health, prosperity and peace and above all, those unfortunate families and their beloved ones currently being displaced from their homes and villages due to foreign invasion and aggression and being made to remain in abject conditions.
We would like to also recall the immortal and benign words of one of our greatest kings - Jayavarman VII - who penned this memorable phrase: "It is not private afflictions but, public sorrows that make grief of kings". Perhaps, it is not so much the grand stone cities and monuments that he built that truly make him great but, more his love and devotion towards the well-being of his populace throughout his empire.
Sunday, 12 April 2026
The Patriot’s Paradox: Thailand’s Withdrawal From MOU 44, Cheap Nationalism, and Elite Interests

Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul’s recent election victory could spell trouble for Thailand-Cambodia relations. His electoral success and subsequent policy statement proposing Thailand’s withdrawal from the 2001 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU 44) — a framework for bilateral negotiations over disputed maritime areas between Thailand and Cambodia — represent a deep contradiction for Thailand: the use of cheap nationalism may advance elite interests at the expense of Thai national interests.
Cambodia and Thailand share a long land and sea border, much of which is disputed. The maritime dispute dates back to 1972, when Cambodian Prime Minister Lon Nol issued two presidential decrees using the Thai island of Koh Kut as the reference point for Cambodia’s territorial claims in the Gulf of Thailand. This Overlapping Claims Area (OCA) comprises some 27,000 square kilometres of maritime territory. On the one hand, it is estimated to contain natural gas reserves of around 311 billion cubic metres, as well as sizeable oil reserves. On the other hand, questions of territory inevitably fall within the bounds of sovereignty — one of the most sensitive issues for Southeast Asian countries. The future viability of MOU 44 has now come into question, re-intensifying territorial tensions between the two countries.
Filling the void: MOU 44
Signed by Cambodia and Thailand in June 2001, MOU 44 reflected two primary points of interest. First, it marked a triumph of diplomacy between the two Southeast Asian countries. As the second in a pair of boundary agreements — following MOU 43 (2000), which focused on land borders — MOU 44 addressed maritime territory and provided a framework for bilateral negotiations. At the time, neither country had yet become a signatory of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), leaving no prior framework for conflict resolution. Together, the twin MOUs represented a ‘golden age’ of cooperation between the two countries, when mutually beneficial outcomes were the primary philosophy guiding their relations.
Friday, 10 April 2026
Wednesday, 8 April 2026
Cambodia Proposes April Talks to Resolve Border Disputes

PHNOM PENH, April 7, 2026 — Cambodia has called on Thailand to urgently resume joint border talks and field surveys, while reiterating its rejection of any unilateral changes to the boundary line. In a statement, the State Secretariat of Border Affairs said it had repeatedly proposed convening a special meeting of the Cambodia–Thailand Joint Boundary Commission (JBC), but that the Thai side had delayed participation, citing internal procedures.
The Cambodian side renewed its proposal through a diplomatic note dated April 7, urging both sides to hold a special JBC meeting in Siem Reap between April 17 and 22. It also called for the deployment of joint survey teams to resume demarcation work and the installation of temporary markers along several contested border segments, including areas in Banteay Meanchey and Battambang provinces. Further proposals include replacing previously agreed boundary pillars and conducting additional surveys in key zones such as O Smach and other sensitive areas, in line with existing bilateral agreements. Cambodia also suggested holding follow-up technical and operational meetings in early May to advance the process.
The statement reaffirmed Cambodia’s “firm stance” against what it described as illegal occupation and violations of its territorial integrity, while rejecting any boundary changes resulting from the use of force. It stressed that the border must be respected in accordance with international law, historical treaties and previously agreed maps and documents. Phnom Penh said it remains committed to resolving border issues peacefully through established mechanisms, while urging Thailand to engage constructively and adhere to prior agreements.
Sunday, 5 April 2026
Saturday, 4 April 2026
France Visit Offers Cambodia Chance to Press Border Case
PHNOM
PENH, April 4, 2026 — Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Manet is set to
visit France next week for high-level talks and a global summit, with
analysts suggesting the trip could be used to advance Phnom Penh’s
position on its border dispute with Thailand.
Hun
Manet will travel to Paris and Lyon from April 6 to 9 to attend the One
Health Summit, where he is scheduled to meet French President Emmanuel
Macron, according to Cambodia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
International Cooperation.
The
visit, made at Macron’s invitation, will also include bilateral meetings
with French officials and other world leaders aimed at strengthening
ties and expanding cooperation across multiple sectors, the ministry
said.
The One Health Summit, a
flagship event under France’s 2026 G7 presidency, will bring together
heads of state, international organisations, scientists and development
partners to address links between human, animal and environmental
health.
Analysts say the visit
provides an opportunity for Cambodia to highlight its stance on the
ongoing border issue with Thailand, including efforts to secure access
to historical documents from the French colonial era that could support
legal processes related to boundary demarcation.
Kin
Phea, director of the International Relations Institute at the Royal
Academy of Cambodia, said the trip offers a platform to clarify
Cambodia’s position and reinforce international legal principles.
“Cambodia
can use this opportunity to reaffirm international legal conventions,
bilateral treaties and historical records that underpin its territorial
integrity,” he said.
He added
that Phnom Penh has consistently pursued a peaceful approach,
emphasising dialogue and legal mechanisms over confrontation.
Hun Manet will be accompanied by Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn and other senior officials, as well as his spouse Pich Chanmony.
Cambodia
and Thailand have long-standing border disputes in several areas,
though both sides have committed to resolving differences through
diplomatic channels and established bilateral frameworks.
Friday, 3 April 2026
Cambodia Says Thai Forces Deployed Armor at O Smach
The Thais have evidently chosen short term gains over pursuing long term, lasting path of peace and stability both in the region and for themselves. It is far too naive to resort to that medieval mindset of their blood-thirsty, rapacious ancestors in these days and age when they were taking advantage of a fractious, declining kingdom of Cambodia or the Khmer Empire.
As Albert Einstein once said, peace cannot be achieved through force or coercion; it can only be attained through understanding. A war or conflict of this kind does not in itself put a permanent stop to further conflicts or their emergences in future time just because one side has lost a battle or two and this outburst of military aggression will have only planted certain seeds of further protracted retaliations and reactions even if the present Cambodian leadership is not equipped to meet that aggression.
It is both a folly of the mind and an illusion on the grandest scale to imagine that seizing villages and lands with armoured vehicles and tanks and erecting border-markers with shipping containers, sand bags and barbed wires and, lest one forgets, doing all this on the backs of the sufferings and anguish of hundreds of thousands of innocents who have been violently forced off their homes, lands and villages. That's not exactly how one mends one's fences with one's neighbours.
-Social media
Thursday, 2 April 2026
Cambodia Says Thai Move to Cancel MOU Violates International Law
PHNOM
PENH, March 26, 2026 — Cambodia has rejected calls by a Thai Senate
panel to revoke a long-standing border agreement, warning that such a
move would violate international law and undermine efforts to maintain
peace along the border.
In a
statement, the State Secretariat of Border Affairs said it “firmly
rejects and entirely dismisses” recommendations to cancel the 2000
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU 43), describing them as unfounded and
politically motivated.
The MOU,
signed by both countries and registered with the United Nations, serves
as a legal framework for resolving border issues through the Joint
Boundary Commission (JBC).
Cambodia
said Thailand cannot unilaterally revoke the agreement under
international law, citing the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.
Officials
added that the JBC has made progress in demarcation work, including
identifying boundary pillars and conducting joint surveys.
Phnom
Penh reaffirmed its commitment to resolving disputes peacefully and
warned that revoking the agreement would hinder stability and
cooperation along the border.
Tuesday, 31 March 2026
Sunday, 29 March 2026
Friday, 27 March 2026
Thursday, 26 March 2026
A 1,000-year-old cliff-top temple lies battered after Cambodia-Thailand border clashes
Cambodian police officers walk past a temple damaged during border clashes with Thailand, at Preah Vihear province, Cambodia, Saturday, March 14, 2026, (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)
By SOPHENG CHEANG Updated 10:38 AM GMT, March 24, 2026 Leer en español Comments 1
PREAH VIHEAR, Cambodia (AP) — It’s been three months since a ceasefire ended bitter border fighting between Cambodia and Thailand, but signs of combat are cut deep in this 11th-century Hindu temple atop a 525-meter (1,722-foot) cliff in the Dangrek Mountains. The neighboring Southeast Asian countries have been fighting over Preah Vihear temple on and off for decades, and that’s putting the ancient holy site in danger. Built by the same Khmer Empire that constructed Angkor Wat 160 kilometers (100 miles) southwest, the temple, which is dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva, was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2008 and is held as an important cultural relic by Cambodians. The empire was Hindu, but gradually converted to Buddhism, the state religion of modern Cambodia. But after two rounds of major combat last year, much of the structure is damaged and Cambodian officials say that parts of the temple may be in danger of collapse.
There’s lots of wreckage, but no tourists
Where tourists once admired the weather-beaten structure’s elaborate carvings and a magnificent view over the Cambodian plains, there is now stone debris, along with artillery craters and the ashes of burned vegetation.
“The temple has turned quiet, and its beauty looks so sorrowful because of the tragedy,” Hem Sinath, archaeologist and deputy director-general of the National Authority for Preah Vihear, told Associated Press journalists visiting earlier this month.
Wednesday, 25 March 2026
My perspective and recommendations about the Thai Aggression against Cambodia
One wonders how much of all this Thai aggression has been planned and predetermined by what Thai people and school children have been indoctrinated by the Thai elite's falsified and concocted accounts of history. Even today despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary most Thais still believe it is Cambodia who encroached on Thai territory; Cambodians fired first, Cambodia planted the landmines that Thai soldiers stepped on, Cambodians used ancient sacred temples as "military bunkers" thus are legitimates targets of Thai attack and destruction, Cambodians "copy" traditional Thai dress ... In fact a public survey recently revealed most Thais - around 60% or more - want Thailand to sever all ties with their Cambodian neighbours.
As a human being I don't want to see anyone or any people harmed just because they belong to a certain nationality or geography, but equally I strongly detest how the strong bully the weak or disadvantaged. Some Thai xenophobes and politicians label the Khmers as "crocodiles" or ungrateful, pointing to the refuge provided by Thailand to many of them in the 1980s having created the second Killing Field by forcing thousands of Cambodian refugees off the steep cliffs of the Dang Rek mountain and under pressure from the international community to shelter these unfortunate civilians. Most of these refugees were in fact camped just inside Cambodian territory along the border where they risked real harm from armed groups and bandits from all sides at the time such as rape, beating, extortion or human trafficking.
These were the people who had been deeply traumatised by what they had experienced under the Pol Pot regime earlier. Other refugee camps that were inside Thai territory also situated just across the border in close proximity to the ones over the border under control of Cambodian resistance factions, including the KR whom Thailand tacitly backed as a buffer against Vietnam's presence along Thailand's provinces. Many Thai towns along with communities along this border such as Aranyaprathet experienced economic boom virtually overnight as a result of the presence of the UN supervised refugee camps whom the Thai government refused to recognise as war refugees, preferring instead to designate them as "displaced people" as this designation meant less pressure on the Thais to comply with international laws and conventions on refugees. The Thai would have also seen the presence of these Cambodians scattered along the border effectively serving as human shields each time the Vietnamese army launched their attack against the Cambodian resistance groups.
The presence of unexploded anti-personnel mines had been laid there during this war by mostly the China backed KR who was functioning as Thailand’s ally. It is along this stretch of land inside Cambodian territory that the Thais are now brutally evicting Cambodian villagers in the hundreds of thousands, most of who are still squatting in make-shift tents in squalid conditions with barely adequate amenities or essentials needed for human survival.
If the term 'crocodile' applies to any people or group in the region it is perhaps the Thais/Siamese nation itself who had historically been the one to have been sheltered and fed by the Khmers and their kings as this sub-Sino group drifted into the territory of the Khmer empire. Once the T'ai or Siamese grew in strength and numbers they turned against their benefactors - the Khmers - taking over territories and population that we still see today.
The modern day Thais are in fact standing entirely on former Khmer territory so without Cambodia to begin with all of what we call 'Thailand' would not have existed. The villages and territories along the border that Thailand have seized since the start of the recent armed invasion by its military and where shipping containers and barbed wires are being placed to stake Thai claims are the latest additions to Thailand's incessant, continued historical annexation of Cambodia's rightful existential space and home in the most literal sense.
-Social media
ស្ត្រីម្នាក់ត្រូវបានតុលាការផ្ដន្ទាទោស២ឆ្នាំ ដោយសារបង្ហោះសាររឿងជម្លោះព្រំដែនកម្ពុជា-ថៃ
ប្ដីរបស់កម្មការិនីរោងចក្រម្នាក់ស្នើឲ្យលោកនាយករដ្ឋមន្ត្រី ហ៊ុន ម៉ាណែត ជួយអន្តរាគមន៍ទៅតុលាការដោះលែងប្រពន្ធឲ្យមានសេរីភាពវិញ ដោយថាប្រពន្ធ របស់លោកគ្មានកំហុសដូចការចោទប្រកាន់ឡើយ។ សំណើនេះ ធ្វើឡើងបន្ទាប់ពីតុលាការផ្ដន្ទាទោសកម្មការិនីរោងចក្រ លោកស្រី ហ៊ុល មុន្នីសាមន ឲ្យជាប់ ពន្ធនាគារ ២ឆ្នាំ និងពិន័យជាប្រាក់ ៤ លានរៀល ពាក់ពព័ន្ធនឹងការបញ្ចេញមតិ រឿងជម្លោះព្រំដែនកម្ពុជា-ថៃ។
ប្ដីរបស់កម្មការិនីរោងចក្រ អះអាងថា លោកនឹងប្ដឹងជំទាស់ចំពោះសេចក្ដីសម្រេច របស់សាលាដំបូងរាជធានីភ្នំពេញ ទៅសាលាឧទ្ធរណ៍បន្តទៀត ដោយលោក ចាត់ទុកការ ផ្ដន្ទាទោសប្រពន្ធរបស់លោក ឲ្យជាប់ពន្ធនាគារ ២ ឆ្នាំ ពីបទ«ញុះញង់ និងប្រមាថ» ពាក់ព័ន្ធនឹងការបញ្ចេញមតិថា ជារឿងអយុត្តិធម៌។
ប្ដីរបស់កម្មការិនីរោងចក្រ លោកស្រី ហ៊ុល មុន្នីសាមន គឺលោក ឆេង ចន្ទធា ប្រាប់ទូរទស្សន៍អាស៊ីសេរី នៅថ្ងៃទី២៤ ខែមីនា ថា ប្រសិនបើប្រពន្ធរបស់លោក បញ្ចេញមតិទៅខុសឆ្គង គួរធ្វើការអប់រំ ពីព្រោះប្រពន្ធរបស់លោក គ្រាន់តែជា កម្មការិនីរោងចក្រ ហើយមានជំងឺជាប់ខ្លួនទៀត។
លោក ឆេង ចន្ទធា៖ «គេអ្នកខ្លះគ្រោះថ្នាក់ចរាចរណ៍បុកដល់ស្លាប់ដល់អី ហើយគាត់ គ្រាន់តែនិយាយលើបណ្ដាញសង្គម គាត់ជាប្រជាពលរដ្ឋមួយរូប គ្រាន់តែនិយាយ ប៉ុណ្ណឹង គាត់មានទោសដល់ជាប់គុក ជាប់ច្រវាក់។ សំណូមពរទៅខាងអាជ្ញាធរ សំណូមពរទៅខាងតុលាការ ដោះលែងគាត់ ដើម្បីយកគាត់មកព្យាបាល នៅខាងក្រៅវិញ»។
លោក ឆេង ចន្ទធា ទទូចឲ្យលោក ហ៊ុន ម៉ាណែត ជួយអន្តរាគមន៍ទៅតុលាការ ដោះលែងប្រពន្ធឲ្យមានសេរីភាពវិញ ដោយថា ប្រពន្ធរបស់លោកគ្រាន់តែ ជាពលរដ្ឋសាមញ្ញប៉ុណ្ណោះ។
Tuesday, 24 March 2026
Monday, 23 March 2026
Japan Provides $17 Million to Support Cambodians Affected by Border Conflict

ក្រសួងវប្បធម៏ ថៃ ចង់ដាក់ឈុតសម្លៀក បំពាក់ ដើម. កំណើត ថៃ ភាគខាងត្បូង តំណាងជាតិថៃ
It's not really Thai people's fault - the common people that is - that they reject their own true historical and cultural roots because their rulers have for centuries plundered and adopted Khmer cultural expressions and riches and claim these things as their own. For hundreds of years the T'ai or Siamese had been a subjugated ethnic minority subsisting in the shadow of the more dominant and enviable Khmer civilisation. In fact, the earlier Siamese adopted just about everything that were Khmer including architecture, writing system, language, religious rituals, greeting, royal court customs and etiquettes etc. not only traditional dress.
The ancient Khmers had also absorbed and adopted ideas and cultural influences from India and integrated these into their own indigenous Khmer-Mon mainstream culture including within the sphere of religious worship and belief without jettisoning or rejecting their own Khmer-Mon roots. Nowhere is this more evident than in the practice of Khmer Buddhism today which is an amalgamation of Khmer indigenous animism, Indian Brahmanism and Buddhism. This process of integration and adoption of foreign influences is known as 'acculturation' in anthropology.
It’s not hard to see why the Siamese rulers would want to rewrite and teach the Siamese people a completely distorted version of history unlike the Khmers who acknowledge ancient Indian influences with pride and dignity. Moreover, unlike the Siamese and modern day Thais the ancient Brahmans and India did not invade and plunder the Khmer empire or Cambodia with swords, cannons or F16s but rather with religious texts, knowledge, literature, science and cosmology and their undeniable influence and historical footprints can still be seen today across South East Asia.
It’s not farfetched to surmise that these Siamese rulers would rather hide from their populace and descendents truths and facts that were uncomfortable, ignoble, characterising their deeds throughout their violent conquests and mistreatment of the Khmers than the truth of their savage and demonic past – not too dissimiliar to what the world is witnessing today through their illegal invasion and mistreatment of Cambodian people who have neither the desire for war nor military might to match theirs.
-Social media
Sunday, 22 March 2026
Saturday, 21 March 2026
When Faith Meets Conflict on the Border

Photo: Thai Press
By: Chanroeun Pa
March 21, 2026, 7:00 PM
cambodianess
Recent reports of monks taking part in land clearing and building religious structures such as Buddha statues along the Cambodia-Thailand border have raised concerns that go beyond politics.
This has happened especially in Preah Vihear and Oddar Meanchey where disputes remain unresolved. They touch on something deeper: our shared values, our faith, and our responsibility to one another.
Cambodia and Thailand are not just neighbours. We are connected through a long and rich Buddhist tradition that has shaped how we think, live and relate to each other.
This shared heritage is something we should protect carefully. It reminds us that what we do — especially in the name of religion — should bring people closer, not pull them apart.
When Good Intentions and Merit Need Careful Reflection
Buddhism teaches us about compassion, loving-kindness and right action. These are not just ideals we talk about. They are principles we are meant to live by, especially in difficult situations.
Spain’s PM Calls to Abolish UN Veto Power — ‘The World Can’t Be Controlled by a Few Nations!
Spain’s
Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez, has made a bold call for sweeping
reforms within the United Nations, urging the abolition of veto power in
the UN Security Council.
In an
interview with El Diario, Sánchez argued that the veto mechanism often
blocks critical decisions, especially during urgent global crises.
According to him, this system allows a handful of powerful nations to
stall international action based on their own political interests.
He
also questioned the legitimacy of permanent seats held by countries
like Russia and the United States, particularly given their involvement
in ongoing conflicts such as in Ukraine and Iran.
Sánchez
emphasized that reform is no longer optional, but essential. Without
it, the UN risks remaining ineffective and overly influenced by a small
group of global powers, rather than serving as a fair and representative
body for the international community.
“We must abolish the veto power within the UN.”
He
warned that without fundamental changes, global governance will
continue to face deadlock—while conflicts and humanitarian crises
persist without meaningful resolution.
Friday, 20 March 2026
Wednesday, 18 March 2026
Heritage Under Attack: The Evidence Emerging from Preah Vihear…
Barbarians and brutes have no comprehension, regard or appreciation for cultural heritage that is recognised of universal value for civilised humanity. Indeed, they even filmed themselves cheering their "precision" rocket attacks on these historical sites, telling lies to the world that these are 'military bunkers' even though the temples situate inside Cambodia's territory as defined by the Franco-Siam Treaties of 1904 and 1907 and the lightly armed Cambodian guards were there for protective purposes.
In fact, the physical evidence of damages to the temples - Ta Krobey and Preah Vihear - indicate that it was the temples themselves rather than the guards that were the targets of their co-ordinated precision attacks. They could have chosen any other locations along the 800 km plus border to launch their offensive and senseless destruction. But, that would not have been as gratifying, would it for these well-armed vandals and psychopaths? You know a tree by the fruits it bears...
-Social media
Monday, 16 March 2026
យើងត្រូវការបណ្ឌិតនិយាយការពិតបែបនេះដើម្បីកែសង្គមជាតិ
Neighbouring states like Vietnam and Thailand know just what Cambodia's weaknesses and disadvantages are and time their strikes at the right moments to drive home their advantages with complete confidence and certainty.
In recent years alone Cambodian leadership has been given ample opportunities to reform and modernise its military, namely in 2008 and 2011 over the same 'dispute' that flared up again of late. Even the relatively recognised disparities in military strengths on statistics possessed by the two nations do not reflect the real or actual gap in the two nations' armed forces because statistics and figures on paper never reveal the actual number of soldiers officially assigned to every unit or battalion owing to widespread and endemic corruption in the military itself. Hence, the phenomenon of "ghost soldiers".
On the other hand, having a robust and adequate military strength does not necessarily imply that a state, especially, smaller ones such as Cambodia, prefers going to war to solve international disputes over peaceful means like dialogue and diplomacy. It is simply a means of deterrence in the last resort; an insurance posture that makes your enemy think twice and hard before committing to violence over peaceful resolutions or means. This failure to reform the military institution and heed repeated warnings given by Thailand's aggressions is precisely why the Thais feel embolden to attack Cambodia whilst disregarding international laws and border treaties the two countries have signed.
Moreover, it is somewhat dangerously naive to assume that all states abide by international laws or treaties and this reality is reflected by the elites in both countries in terms of their behaviours internally where power, wealth and personal interests often dictate their respective ambitions and agendas.
In the east, anyone who traverses the border areas would be able to see civil and police structures right by the international boundary line; these are homes, farm settlements, border police stations, district and community centres etc. built to cement claims over territories after having forcibly evicted tens of thousands of Khmer families and villagers off their ancestral lands. In the west, the Thais have viewed all this with keen interest and want their pieces of Cambodian land too.
-Social media
Friday, 13 March 2026
Cambodia Refutes Thai Allegations, Urges to Resume Joint Border Survey Work
Monday, 9 March 2026
BREAKING: Cambodian Observer Warns Against Risks in New Thailand Peace Proposal 🇰🇭⚠️
Since the Ceasefire agreement was signed, it appears only Cambodia has been repeatedly asking for resumption of JBC talks and dialogues whilst Thailand has kept delaying such meetings, citing one excuse after another. In the mean time Thailand has moved in bull dozers and shipping containers to mark off more of Cambodia's territory and destroyed civilian homes and forests as well as erecting illegal structures on occupied lands in violation of the same ceasefire agreement.
The Thais are not only shy of seeking resolutions through independent international legal forums and arbitrators such as the UN Security Council (where their FM defamed and painted Cambodia the actual victim as the aggressor) or the ICJ because they know full well that Thailand has no case to answer or defend but, Thailand's blatant unilateral territorial claims rest on no firm legal grounds, frameworks, treaties or international laws. Indeed, their unilateral actions in this regard completely make a mockery of these conventions and treaties and show their undisguised contempt for both Cambodia as a neighbour as well as towards international legal norms that place diplomacy and dialogue above and before violence.
In fact, Thailand's preference for and arrogance over its unilateral position or claims have not changed since its illegal occupation of Preah Vihear temple in the 1960s and this stance is further reflected in its preference for "bilateral" talks or dialogues since the 'bilateral' works to protect and shield the "unilateral" in any case, keeping Cambodia's legitimate grievances out of international legal scrutiny and allowing Thailand to force its terms and conditions down Cambodia's throat. The Thais' thinking and methods would be childish and embarrassing in the extreme were it not also fiendish and gross for the other innocent party to the conflict. Yeah, much like what we read and hear from their vicious critics here online since day one....
-Social media
The New York Editorial
