logo
Cambodia, Thailand wage tit-for-tat as border rift widens

Cambodia, Thailand wage tit-for-tat as border rift widens

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.
Cambodia on Tuesday blocked imports of Thai vegetables and fruit, and Thailand banned its nationals from working at some casinos inside Cambodia in fresh fallout from a border dispute sparked by a 10-minute firefight last month.
Cambodia's Ministry of Information said that starting at 9:00 a.m. on Tuesday, authorities along the border with Thailand closed gates to block the import of Thai agricultural products.
Prime Minister Hun Manet declared Tuesday that Cambodia will only allow the Thai imports if the Thai military reopens all border checkpoints and resumes normal operations. He also set that as a condition for discussing reductions in troops numbers at the border.
Tensions and military deployments have spiked since Thai forces shot dead a Cambodian soldier on May 28. Thailand says Cambodian forces dug a trench on the Thai side of the border.
'Thailand must first show genuine goodwill and comply with our basic condition, which is to reopen the border crossings on both sides to the way they were. Only then will we talk about troop matters,' Hun Manet said Tuesday.
Since June 7, Thailand has restricted border openings to 8am to 4pm. Usually they are open from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Thailand's military was planning to propose a reduction in troop deployments along the border during a Thailand-Cambodia Regional Border Committee meeting scheduled for June 27-28. But Deputy Defense Minister Natthaphon Narkphanit said Cambodia, which was due to host the meeting, has indefinitely postponed it, The Nation reported.
On Tuesday, the Thai military banned Thais from crossing the border to work at casinos and entertainment venues in Poipet, which lies on the Cambodian side of the main land border crossing point between the two countries, opposite the eastern Thai town of Aranyaprathet.
Casinos are not legal in Thailand, so gambling establishments proliferate near at key border crossings in neighboring countries like Cambodia.
The Bangkok Post newspaper reported that the order took effect on Tuesday at 8 a.m. and is in place until further notice. It is aimed at guaranteeing the safety of Thai people, the report said.
Police Col. Napatrapong Supaporn, immigration police chief in Sa Kaeo province, was quoted as saying that Thais who are still in Poipet should return home for their own safety.
Meanwhile, authorities in the Cambodian border provinces including Pursat and Preah Vihear announced on Facebook that hundreds of families had been evacuated from frontline areas to safer locations.
This week, Cambodia submitted a request for the International Court of Justice in The Hague to rule on the demarcation of four locations at the border, including near the scene of last month's clash.
The border dispute has historical roots and the two sides differ over which maps to use in demarcating territory. The last time there was a serious and bloody flare-up in tensions was between 2008 and 2011, over a disputed 11th century temple at Preah Vihear. The International Criminal Court has granted sovereignty over the temple to Cambodia.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Thai PM Paetongtarn Defies Calls to Quit as Border Spat Escalates
Thai PM Paetongtarn Defies Calls to Quit as Border Spat Escalates

Bloomberg

time4 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

Thai PM Paetongtarn Defies Calls to Quit as Border Spat Escalates

Thai leader Paetongtarn Shinawatra looks poised to brazen out a political crisis engulfing her government, with a cabinet expansion to keep her coalition intact and a tougher stance in a simmering border dispute with Cambodia. The prime minister on Sunday made clear her intention to stay on, despite speculation that a key party in her ruling alliance was pushing for her resignation. Her Pheu Thai Party said she will neither resign nor dissolve parliament.

Cambodia, Thailand wage tit-for-tat as border rift widens
Cambodia, Thailand wage tit-for-tat as border rift widens

American Military News

time5 hours ago

  • American Military News

Cambodia, Thailand wage tit-for-tat as border rift widens

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission. Cambodia on Tuesday blocked imports of Thai vegetables and fruit, and Thailand banned its nationals from working at some casinos inside Cambodia in fresh fallout from a border dispute sparked by a 10-minute firefight last month. Cambodia's Ministry of Information said that starting at 9:00 a.m. on Tuesday, authorities along the border with Thailand closed gates to block the import of Thai agricultural products. Prime Minister Hun Manet declared Tuesday that Cambodia will only allow the Thai imports if the Thai military reopens all border checkpoints and resumes normal operations. He also set that as a condition for discussing reductions in troops numbers at the border. Tensions and military deployments have spiked since Thai forces shot dead a Cambodian soldier on May 28. Thailand says Cambodian forces dug a trench on the Thai side of the border. 'Thailand must first show genuine goodwill and comply with our basic condition, which is to reopen the border crossings on both sides to the way they were. Only then will we talk about troop matters,' Hun Manet said Tuesday. Since June 7, Thailand has restricted border openings to 8am to 4pm. Usually they are open from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Thailand's military was planning to propose a reduction in troop deployments along the border during a Thailand-Cambodia Regional Border Committee meeting scheduled for June 27-28. But Deputy Defense Minister Natthaphon Narkphanit said Cambodia, which was due to host the meeting, has indefinitely postponed it, The Nation reported. On Tuesday, the Thai military banned Thais from crossing the border to work at casinos and entertainment venues in Poipet, which lies on the Cambodian side of the main land border crossing point between the two countries, opposite the eastern Thai town of Aranyaprathet. Casinos are not legal in Thailand, so gambling establishments proliferate near at key border crossings in neighboring countries like Cambodia. The Bangkok Post newspaper reported that the order took effect on Tuesday at 8 a.m. and is in place until further notice. It is aimed at guaranteeing the safety of Thai people, the report said. Police Col. Napatrapong Supaporn, immigration police chief in Sa Kaeo province, was quoted as saying that Thais who are still in Poipet should return home for their own safety. Meanwhile, authorities in the Cambodian border provinces including Pursat and Preah Vihear announced on Facebook that hundreds of families had been evacuated from frontline areas to safer locations. This week, Cambodia submitted a request for the International Court of Justice in The Hague to rule on the demarcation of four locations at the border, including near the scene of last month's clash. The border dispute has historical roots and the two sides differ over which maps to use in demarcating territory. The last time there was a serious and bloody flare-up in tensions was between 2008 and 2011, over a disputed 11th century temple at Preah Vihear. The International Criminal Court has granted sovereignty over the temple to Cambodia.

Two Tibetan Buddhist monastery leaders sentenced for Dege dam protests
Two Tibetan Buddhist monastery leaders sentenced for Dege dam protests

American Military News

time9 hours ago

  • American Military News

Two Tibetan Buddhist monastery leaders sentenced for Dege dam protests

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission. Authorities have sentenced two senior Tibetan monastic leaders to three- and four-year prison terms for their roles in rare 2024 public protests against a planned Chinese hydropower dam project, two sources in the region told Radio Free Asia. Sherab, the abbot of Yena Monastery in Dege county's Wangbuding township in Kardze Tibet Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan province, was sentenced to four years in prison and Gonpo, the chief administrator, sentenced to three years, said the sources, who requested anonymity for fear of reprisals. It wasn't immediately clear when the sentences were handed down. The sources said Gonpo was in critical condition due to torture in detention and has been transferred to an intensive care unit in Chengdu's West China Hospital. The two heads of Yena Monastery were detained with hundreds of Tibetan monks and local residents in February 2024 for peacefully appealing for a halt to the construction of the 1,100-megawatt Gangtuo dam on the Drichu river (or Jinsha, in Chinese) that would submerge several monasteries of historical significance, including Yena and Wonto monasteries, and force the resettlement of communities in at least two major villages. Many of the protestors who were detained were reportedly severely beaten during interrogations with some requiring medical attention, sources told RFA at the time. Most were released by the following month but key monastic and village leaders whom authorities suspected of playing a leading role in the protests – like Wonto Monastery's senior administrator Tenzin Sangpo and village official Tenzin – were transferred to a larger county detention center. Yena Monastery has faced particularly severe repression. Authorities have targeted monks for 'focused rectification and re-education' of their political ideologies and for their role as 'serious informants,' sources told RFA. 'The government really went all-out against Yena Monastery, as if venting their anger,' the first source told RFA. Officials said the two monastery leaders should be 'severely punished' specifically for their decision to seek and hire legal representation. In 2024, video emerged of Yena Monastery's abbot Sherab holding both his thumbs up in the traditional Tibetan gesture of begging, as he, other Tibetan monks and local residents publicly cried and pleaded before visiting officials on Feb. 20 not to proceed with the planned project. Collective imprisonment The area on either side of the Drichu river remains under strict surveillance more than a year after the protests, with movement restrictions imposed on the monks and residents of the monasteries and villages at Wangbuding township, sources told RFA. Authorities have established multiple checkpoints at the border between Tibetan areas in Sichuan and the Tibet Autonomous Region, strictly controlling all entry and exit, they said. Only Tibetans holding transit permits issued by the police are allowed passage through the checkpoints installed on roads leading to monasteries like Yena and Wonto that are located near the river, sources said. Even ethnic Han Chinese with transit permits are prohibited from entering, they added. 'The whole area has been effectively sealed off, with nearly 4,000 residents and monks in the villages and monasteries near the river in a state of collective imprisonment, having lost all freedom of movement,' said the second source. During periods considered politically sensitive by Chinese authorities – such as around the anniversary of the March 10 Tibetan Uprising Day of 1959 or the birthday of the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, on July 6 – surveillance is even more heightened, sources said. During 'sensitive periods,' Tibetans without local household registration are refused entry, while local villagers traveling from rural areas to Dege county seat must apply for transit permits, and are often still refused, sources said. The Gangtuo Dam – which is planned to be located at Kamtok (Gangtuo, in Chinese) in Dege county – is part of a Chinese government project to build a massive 13-tier hydropower complex on the Drichu, with a total planned capacity of 13,920 megawatts. Chinese officials had indicated after last year's protests that the project would proceed as planned but sources said there's no clarity yet on when the construction would be started or if it would at all. 'Even if the project ultimately does not move ahead, the monks and residents of the surrounding villages have already been deeply harmed,' said the first source.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store