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Thailand and Cambodia Agree to ‘Immediate and Unconditional’ Ceasefire

Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, center, Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Manet left and Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai pose for photos after talks on a possible ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia in Putrajaya, Malaysia, Monday, July 28, 2025. (Mohd Rasfan/Pool Photo via AP)

By EILEEN NG, JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI and SOPHENG CHEANG

PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia (AP) — Thailand and Cambodia have agreed to an “unconditional” ceasefire starting at midnight, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said Monday, a significant breakthrough to resolve five days of deadly border clashes that have killed dozens and displaced tens of thousands of people.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thai Acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai hailed the outcome of the meeting and shook hands along with Anwar at the conclusion of the brief press conference in Malaysia.

The fighting began Thursday after a land mine explosion along the border wounded five Thai soldiers. Both sides blamed each other for starting the clashes, that have killed at least 35 people and displaced more than 260,000 people on both sides.

Anwar, who hosted the talks as annual chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations regional bloc, said both sides have reached a common understanding to take steps to return to normalcy following what he called frank discussions.

“This is a vital first step towards de-escalation and the restoration of peace and security,” Anwar said.

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Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, center, speaks as he mediates talks with Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thailand’s acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai on a possible ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia in Putrajaya Monday, July 28, 2025.(Mohd Rasfan/Pool Photo via AP)

The Malaysian meeting followed direct pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump, who warned that the U.S. might not proceed with trade deals with either country if hostilities continue, giving both sides a face-saving justification for backing away from the fighting. In a statement later Monday on social media, Trump said the two sides had “reached a CEASEFIRE and PEACE… I am proud to be the President of PEACE!”

As part of the ceasefire deal, military commanders from both sides will hold talks Tuesday to defuse tensions while Cambodia will host a border committee meeting on Aug. 4. Anwar said. The foreign and defense ministers of Malaysia, Cambodia and Thailand have also been instructed to “develop a detailed mechanism” to implement and monitor the ceasefire to ensure sustained peace, he added.

Hun Manet said he hoped that bilateral ties could return to normal soon so that almost 300,000 villagers evacuated on both sides could return home.

It is “time to start rebuilding trust, confidence and cooperation going forward between Thailand and Cambodia,” he said.

Phumtham said the outcome reflected “Thailand’s desire for a peaceful resolution.”

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Thailand’s acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai, center, speaks during a press conference next to Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Manet, left and Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim after talks on a possible ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia in Putrajaya, Malaysia, Monday, July 28, 2025. (Mohd Rasfan/Pool Photo via AP)

The joint statement on the agreement said that the United States was a co-organizer of the talks, with participation from China. The Chinese and American ambassadors to Malaysia attended the meeting that lasted over two hours.

In a press statement, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was involved in arranging the meeting, applauded the ceasefire declaration. Rubio said he and Trump “are committed to an immediate cessation of violence and expect the governments of Cambodia and Thailand to fully honor their commitments to end this conflict.”

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt posted news of the ceasefire on X and wrote: “President Trump made this happen. Give him the Nobel Peace Prize!”

Phumtham said after his return to Bangkok that Trump had called to offer congratulations for making a move toward peace. He also said Trump told him that Thailand’s talks with Washington to set tariff levels on Thai exports could now proceed and that he would seek to make them as favorable as possible.

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Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Manet, left and Thailand’s acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai, right shake hands as Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim gestures after talks on a possible ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia in Putrajaya, Malaysia, Monday, July 28, 2025. (Mohd Rasfan/Pool Photo via AP)

A summary of the call from Phumtham’s office said the prime minister thanked the preisdent for his “important role” in seeking to resolve the crisis and declared that Trump would be honored and remembered in Thailand for his effort.

The violence of recent days marked a rare instance of open military confrontation between ASEAN member states, a 10-nation regional bloc that has prided itself on non-aggression, peaceful dialogue and economic cooperation. Both countries recalled their ambassadors and Thailand shut all border crossings with Cambodia, with an exception for migrant Cambodian workers returning home.

News of the ceasefire brought relief and hope to evacuees from both sides. Some women at a crowded evacuation shelter in Surin, Thailand, shouted for joy.

“I’m happy about that, and feeling a bit relieved,” said Usa Dasri, a vendor and farmer. “We miss our home. There are many small things I’m worried about, livestock and rice fields. I don’t know what might’ve happened to them. I want to go home, so I’m happy. I also think about our soldiers at the frontline. I want them to be safe and have a good sleep like us.”

She also credited outside diplomacy for the breakthrough.

“Without them, our two countries would have had a hard time negotiating — both sides have quite a hard time talking and understanding each other,” she added.

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Local villagers wait to receive supplies donated by a charity, in Srey Snam district, Siem Reap province, Cambodia, Monday, July 28, 2025, amid the fighting between Thailand and Cambodia. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

Cambodian evacuees echoed the sentiment.

Chhuot Nhav, 42, who fled her home in Oddar Meanchey province, a frontline for the fighting, said she was happy but also wary.

“I am happy because I can go home and take care of my pig, dog, chickens and my kids can now go back to school,” said Chhuot Nhav, from under a series of green tarps that stretched out to the length of a school bus. But she said she will “wait until the fighting really stops” before heading back.

Another farmer Kong Sin, however said he would head back home Tuesday if the ceasefire took place as agreed.

The 800-kilometer (500-mile) frontier between Thailand and Cambodia has been disputed for decades, but past confrontations have been limited and brief. The latest tensions erupted in May when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a confrontation that created a diplomatic rift and roiled Thailand’s domestic politics.

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Jintamas reported from Surin, Thailand, and Sopheng Cheang from Samrong, Cambodia. Associated Press writers Chalida Ekvitthayavechnukul and Grant Peck in Bangkok contributed to this report.

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Cambodian and Thai Leaders Hold Ceasefire Talks in Malaysia As Border Violence Enters Fifth Day

Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, center, looks on as Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Manet, left, and Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai, right, take part in talks on a possible ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia, in Putrajaya Monday, July 28, 2025. (Mohd Rasfan/Pool Photo via AP)

By EILEEN NG, JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI and SOPHENG CHEANG

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Ceasefire talks have started between Thai and Cambodian leaders in Malaysia in an urgent effort to resolve deadly border clashes that entered a fifth day despite mounting international calls for peace.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thai Acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai gathered Monday for the meeting at the official residence of Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim who is hosting the negotiations as chair of the regional bloc, Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

The fighting flared last Thursday after a land mine explosion along the border wounded five Thai soldiers. Both sides blamed each other for starting the clashes, that have killed at least 35 people and displaced more than 260,000 people on both sides. Both countries recalled their ambassadors and Thailand shut all border crossings with Cambodia, with an exception for migrant Cambodian workers returning home.

Troops from both sides reported ongoing fighting Monday along border areas. Gunfire could be heard as dawn broke in Samrong in Cambodia’s Oddar Meanchey province, Associated Press reporters covering the conflict said.

Maly Socheata, a Cambodian defense ministry spokesperson, said the Thai assault was “ongoing and strong” on Monday.

Anwar said late Sunday that both sides would present their conditions for peace but “what is important is immediate ceasefire.”

“I hope this can work,” Anwar was quoted as saying by Malaysian national news agency Bernama. “Although it’s not as bad as many other countries, we have to put a stop (to the violence).”

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Thailand’s acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai takes part in talks with Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Manet, mediated by Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, on a possible ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia in Putrajaya Monday, July 28, 2025.(Mohd Rasfan/Pool Photo via AP)

The meeting followed direct pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump, who has warned that the United States may not proceed with trade deals with either country if hostilities continue.

Before departing for Kuala Lumpur, Phumtham told reporters in Bangkok that representatives from China and the U.S. will also attend as observers. He said the key focus would be on an immediate ceasefire, but noted trust could be an issue as Cambodia has not stopped its strikes.

“We have informed that we don’t have trust in Cambodia. All they have done reflect that they are not sincere in solving this problem. So they have to show the detail how they will do to prove their sincerity,” he said.

Officials later said that the Chinese and American ambassadors to Malaysia are attending the meeting.

The violence marks a rare instance of open military confrontation between ASEAN member states, a 10-nation regional bloc that has prided itself on non-aggression, peaceful dialogue and economic cooperation.

In a statement Monday, ASEAN foreign ministers reiterated concern over the rising death toll, destruction of public properties and displacement of a large number of people along the disputed border areas. They urged the two countries to resolve their disputes through negotiations and expressed support for efforts to find a middle ground during Monday’s talks.

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Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Manet, center, looks on during talks with Thailand’s acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai, mediated by Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, on a possible ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia in Putrajaya Monday, July 28, 2025.(Mohd Rasfan/Pool Photo via AP)

The conflict also drew the attention of Pope Leo XIV. At the Vatican on Sunday, the pontiff said he was praying for all those affected by war in the world, including “for those affected by the clashes on the border between Thailand and Cambodia, especially the children and displaced families.”

At an evacuation shelter in Cambodia’s Siem Reap province far away from the border, Ron Mao, 56, prays for a ceasefire deal during the leaders’ meeting Monday. She and her family fled their home a kilometer (0.6 mile) away from the front line when fighting broke out Thursday. They took refuge in a shelter but moved again to another camp further away after hearing artillery shelling.

“I don’t want to see this war happen. It’s very difficult and I don’t want to run around like this,” she said, “When I heard our Prime Minister go to negotiate for peace, I would be very happy if they reached the deal as soon as possible, so that I and my children can return home as soon as possible.”

Thai evacuees shared the sentiment.

“I beg the government. I want it to end quickly,” said farmer Nakorn Jomkamsing at an evacuation camp in Surin hosting more than 6,000 people. “I want to live peacefully. I miss my home, my pets, my pigs, dogs and chicken,” the 63-year-old woman said.

The 800-kilometer (500-mile) frontier between Thailand and Cambodia has been disputed for decades, but past confrontations have been limited and brief. The latest tensions erupted in May when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a confrontation that created a diplomatic rift and roiled Thailand’s domestic politics.

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Jintamas reported from Surin, Thailand, and Sopheng Cheang from Samrong, Cambodia. Associated Press writers Chalida Ekvitthayavechnukul and Grant Peck in Bangkok contributed to this report.

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Body of Saudi Tourist Found in Phuket Waters After Two-Day Search

Lifeguards discover the body of a Saudi tourist at Laem Singh National Park Beach, Phuket Province, on the morning of July 28, 2025.

PHUKET — Lifeguards in Phuket province recovered the body of a Saudi Arabian tourist on Monday morning after a two-day search operation following a drowning incident at Bang Tao Beach.

Police Lieutenant Colonel Kittipong Noopeng, an investigator at Cherng Talay Police Station in Thalang District, Phuket, received the initial report on July 26 at 5:30 p.m. about a tourist who had gone missing in the waters off Bang Tao Beach, behind the Kubor area. The incident occurred after good Samaritans had rescued two other Saudi tourists from the same group.

Authorities launched an extensive search for the missing person, identified as Mr. Dhaher, age 22. His body was discovered on the morning of July 28, washed ashore at Laem Singh National Park Beach, approximately 2.7 kilometers from Bang Tao Beach.

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Rescuers retrieve the body of a Saudi tourist at Laem Singh National Park Beach, Phuket Province, on the morning of July 28, 2025.

Following the discovery, officials coordinated with the Kusontham Phuket Foundation’s Maikhao branch and Cherng Talay police to transport the body for forensic examination.

A medical examiner will conduct an autopsy to confirm the victim’s identity and determine the exact cause of death. Saudi Arabian embassy officials have been contacted to coordinate with the family for body repatriation.

Tourist drowning incidents have occurred periodically in Phuket waters, particularly during monsoon season when strong winds and waves create dangerous conditions. Authorities regularly post red warning flags along beaches during hazardous weather to alert swimmers of the dangers.

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Phuket Authorities regularly post red warning flags along beaches during hazardous weather to alert swimmers of the dangers.

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Thailand Sets Up Safe Spaces for Pets Whose Owners Fled Border Violence

Apisit Noosuk holds his dog named "Khawtom," meaning boiled rice in Thai, after coming to meet him at a temporary shelter for pets whose owners fled homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers, unable to take their animals with them, in Surin province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

By JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI

SURIN, Thailand (AP) — As residents along Thailand’s border with Cambodia fled the ongoing fighting, many tried to take their animals with them. For those who were unable to do so, livestock officials stepped in to help.

Thailand’s Livestock Department asked its local offices to provide safe space for animals whose owners have had to evacuate, and the offices in several border provinces announced they were ready to do so.

In Surin province, several cages were placed under cover at the front of the local Livestock Breeding and Research Center as temporary kennels. Five dogs and two cats were staying at the center as of Sunday. The capacity is around 20 animals.

Sornchai Kongsook, director of the livestock center, said owners can leave their pets for free, but they have to be able to visit every day to take care of the animals.

“We have opened our space for cats and dogs that the residents, or farmers, can’t take into an evacuation center,” he said. “There are also some owners who have chosen to stay at a hotel, which doesn’t allow pets.”

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A dog is at a temporary shelter for pets whose owners fled homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers, unable to take their animals with them, as Nunthinee Kongkam, back right, plays with a dog in Surin province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
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Apisit Noosuk, left, with his dog named “Khawtom,” meaning boiled rice in Thai, and his wife Wilawan Duangvao with her dog named “Khaitun,” meaning steamed egg in Thai, play with them after coming to meet them at a temporary shelter for pets whose owners fled homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers, unable to take their animals with them, in Surin province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

He said livestock are welcome at the center, although none has been left there so far. Officials have prepared food to be distributed to cows and buffaloes left behind in danger zones. Many northeastern Thais are farmers and usually own livestock. Several of them roam the fields in areas that are now largely deserted.

The armed clashes between Thailand and Cambodia since last week have killed dozens of people and displaced thousands.

Wilawan Duangvao, an elementary school teacher, left her dogs, Khawtom and Khaitun, at the shelter Saturday after she received an order to evacuate her home in Prasat district.

She was able to return to check on them the following day. As she approached the cage they were being kept in, they stood up barking, wagging their tails and jumping around excitedly.

A tearful Wilawan picked up Khawtom, a 2-year-old mix of shih tzu and poodle. Khaitun, a younger mix of American bully and Thai street dog, stood on his hind legs inside the cage as Wilawan and her husband played with both dogs and comforted them.

Wilawan said it was a difficult decision to leave her pets, but she couldn’t stay at home and needed to find a safe place for them.

“At our home now, water and electricity have been cut. I don’t feel comfortable leaving them at home. I’m afraid they’ll go into shock,” she said. Wilawan said she is now taking care of evacuees staying at her school, which has been converted to a temporary shelter, which does not allow animals.

She said she can’t thank officials enough for offering a safe space for her pets.

“I’m so grateful. Everyone here is very welcoming. They took them in and I’m relieved. They didn’t ask for anything in return,” she said.

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Thai Police Target 3 Suspects in Case of 25 Firearms Shipped to Moscow

Forensic officers examine firearms found hidden inside microwave ovens that were packaged for shipment to Moscow, Russia, at Bang Na Police Station, Bangkok, on July 26, 2025.

BANGKOKThai police are preparing to arrest three foreign suspects connected to a package containing 25 semi-automatic firearms that was intercepted before being shipped to Moscow, Russia.

Officers from Bang Na Police Station are investigating the case after a representative from a private international shipping company filed a complaint. The company discovered suspicious packages destined for Moscow containing 25 semi-automatic firearms concealed inside microwave ovens.

On July 27, police revealed they have identified the perpetrators through CCTV footage analysis and are currently seeking court approval from the Bangkok South Criminal Court to issue arrest warrants for three foreign nationals, including one woman.

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Eight packages containing microwave ovens and electrical appliances were found to contain 25 firearms and accessories, serving as evidence in the investigation at Bang Na Police Station, Bangkok, on July 26, 2025.

The case began when CDEK BKK, an international shipping service provider with offices on Udom Suk 31 Road in Phra Khanong District, Bangkok, reported the discovery. Company employees were inspecting packages from Lalamove, another delivery service provider, when they found weapons in 8 boxes before 11 AM on July 25.

During the investigation ordered by Pol. Lt. Gen. Siam Boonsom, Metropolitan Police Commissioner, authorities discovered the shipment contained:

  • 25 semi-automatic pistols total
  • 13 registered firearms
  • 12 illegal firearms
  • 19 complete firearms
  • 2 firearms with mismatched serial numbers between barrels and grips
  • 3 firearms with matching serial numbers but separated barrels and grips in different boxes
  • 1 firearm with non-matching serial numbers in separate boxes
  • 5 silencers
  • 5 optical sights
  • 7 component parts
  • 3 cleaning kits
  • 1 instruction manual
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Firearms and accessories serving as evidence in the investigation are shown at Bang Na Police Station, Bangkok, on July 26, 2025.

CCTV footage from the Udom Suk 31 branch revealed suspicious activities:

  • July 15, 7:03 PM: Bald man delivered 1 microwave box
  • July 22, 12:39 PM: Man in Toyota Altis delivered 1 box (confirmed to be microwave)
  • July 22, 7:04 PM: Man in 4-door pickup truck delivered 2 boxes (microwave and grill)

Additional activity was recorded at the Silom branch:

  • July 22, 3:06 PM: Woman delivered 1 battery charger box
  • July 23, 10:49 AM: Two men on motorcycle delivered 3 battery charger boxes

The investigation continues as authorities work to apprehend the suspects involved in this international arms trafficking attempt.

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Thai and Cambodian Leaders to Meet in Malaysia for Talks to End Deadly Border Dispute

A house is seen damaged after Cambodia fired artillery shells in Surin Province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

By JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI and SOPHENG CHEANG

BANGKOK (AP) — Thai and Cambodian leaders will meet in Malaysia for talks to end hostilities, a spokesperson for the Thai prime minister’s office said on Sunday. This comes following pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to end a deadly border dispute, now in its fourth day, which has killed at least 34 people and displaced more than 168,000.

Jirayu Huangsap said Acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai will attend Monday’s talks in response to an invitation from Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim “to discuss peace efforts in the region.”

The spokesperson also said Phumtham’s Cambodian counterpart Hun Manet will also attend the talks, though this was not immediately confirmed by the Cambodian side. He added that Anwar was acting in his capacity as chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, held on an annual rotating basis by its 10 members.

Trump posted on Truth Social on Saturday that he spoke to the leaders of Thailand and Cambodia and suggested he would not move forward with trade agreements with either country if the hostilities continued. He later said both sides agreed to meet to negotiate a ceasefire.

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A house is seen damaged after Cambodia fired artillery shells in Surin Province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Both sides agree to discuss a ceasefire

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet said earlier Sunday his country agreed to pursue an “immediate and unconditional ceasefire.” He said Trump told him that Thailand had also agreed to halt attacks following the U.S. president’s conversation with Phumtham.

He said he tasked his deputy, Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn, to coordinate next steps with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and to engage directly with Thailand’s foreign minister to implement the ceasefire.

Thailand expressed cautious support. Phumtham thanked Trump and said that Thailand agreed in principle to a ceasefire but stressed the need for “sincere intention” from Cambodia, the Thai Foreign Ministry said. Phumtham called for swift bilateral talks to discuss concrete steps toward a peaceful resolution, it said.

Both sides blame the other for the clashes

The fighting flared Thursday after a land mine explosion along the border wounded five Thai soldiers. Both sides blamed each other for starting the clashes. Both countries recalled their ambassadors and Thailand closed its border crossings with Cambodia.

Despite the diplomatic efforts, fighting continued Sunday along parts of the contested border, with both sides refusing to budge and trading blame over renewed shelling and troop movements.

Col. Richa Suksowanont, a Thai army deputy spokesperson, said Cambodian forces fired heavy artillery into Surin province, including at civilian homes, early Sunday. He said Cambodia also launched rocket attacks targeting the ancient Ta Muen Thom temple, claimed by both countries, and other areas in a bid to reclaim territory secured by Thai troops. Thai forces responded with long-range artillery to strike Cambodian artillery and rocket launchers.

Richa said Trump’s efforts to mediate were a “separate matter.” The battlefield operations will continue and a ceasefire can only happen if Cambodia formally initiates negotiations, he added.

“Any cessation of hostilities cannot be reached while Cambodia is severely lacking in good faith and repeatedly violating the basic principles of human rights and humanitarian law,” Thailand’s Foreign Ministry said separately.

Cambodian Defense Ministry spokesperson Lt. Gen. Maly Socheata accused Thai forces of escalating the violence with bombardment of Cambodian territory early Sunday, followed by a “large-scale incursion” involving tanks and ground troops in multiple areas.

“Such actions undermine all efforts toward peaceful resolution and expose Thailand’s clear intent to escalate rather than de-escalate the conflict,” she said.

Thailand on Sunday reported a new death of a soldier, bringing the total number of fatalities to 21, mostly civilians. Cambodia said 13 people have been killed. More than 131,000 people in Thailand have evacuated to safe locations and over 37,000 people fled from three Cambodian provinces. Many border villages are mostly deserted, with many schools and hospitals shut.

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Local villagers wait to receive supplies donated by a charity, in Wat Phnom Kamboar, Oddar Meanchey province, Cambodia, Sunday, July 27, 2025, amid the fighting between Thailand and Cambodia. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

Evacuees hope for a swift end to the fighting

Pichayut Surasit, an air-conditioning technician in Thailand, said the sudden outbreak of fighting meant leaving his work in Bangkok to return home to protect his family.

“I didn’t have the heart to continue with my work when I heard the news. I wanted to come back as soon as possible, but I had to wait until the evening,” he said. Now at a shelter in Surin housing some 6,000 evacuees, Pichayut worries for his wife and twin daughters, hoping the conflict will end soon so they can return to their home in Kap Choeng district, one of the hardest hit by shelling.

Bualee Chanduang, a local vendor who moved to the same shelter Thursday with her family and pet rabbit, is counting on swift negotiations to end the violence. “I pray for God to help so that both sides can agree to talk and end this war,” she said.

The U.N. Security Council has called on ASEAN, a regional bloc, to mediate peace between the two members. Human Rights Watch has condemned the reported use of cluster munitions, weapons banned by International law, in populated areas, and urged both governments to protect civilians.

The 800-kilometer (500-mile) frontier between Thailand and Cambodia has been disputed for decades, but past confrontations have been limited and brief. The latest tensions erupted in May when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a confrontation that created a diplomatic rift and roiled Thailand’s domestic politics.

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Monks, Dancers and Volunteers Offer Respite As Thailand-Cambodia Violence Escalates

Thai Buddhist monks who fled clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers take shelter in Surin province, Thailand, Saturday, July 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

By JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI, SOPHENG CHEANG, ANTON L. DELGADO and GRANT PECK

SURIN, Thailand (AP) — Long-festering tensions over border territory have escalated into armed conflict between Cambodia and Thailand, leading to dozens of deaths on both sides and displacing tens of thousands of people.

Neither side is prepared to claim responsibility for the first volley on Thursday, and they each blame the other for the continuing skirmishes. While regional and international allies and organizations have called for a ceasefire, scant attempts at mediation had resulted in no peace talks as of early Sunday.

It’s a grim situation, but there is some light amid the darkness. On both sides of the border, some people are working around the destruction, intent on creating a safe space or finding normalcy.

A Buddhist temple with a homemade bomb shelter

A temple in Thailand ’s northeastern province of Surin has something most of the country’s 27,000 active Buddhist monasteries do not: a concrete bunker to shelter from bombs and shelling.

The temple, which asked not to be identified by name because of safety concerns, is about 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the border with Cambodia.

The temple’s abbot, Phut Analayo, said the decision to build a bunker was made shortly after a brief armed clash between Thai and Cambodian soldiers in May inflamed cross-border relations, culminating in the current fighting.

Phut Analayo said donations paid for materials and equipment for the bunker, and the temple’s monks and nearby villagers built it in four or five days. Construction was speedy because the bunker is made from large precast concrete drainage pipes a little over a meter (yard) in diameter, protected by mounds of earth, metal frames and sheeting.

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Abbot Phut Analayo, left, and a dog named Jumbo stand in front of a shelter in Surin province, Thailand, Saturday, July 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

It’s divided into two tubular rooms, each about four meters (yards) long, and wired with electricity. There’s a kitchen with a kettle, an electric rice cooker and basic cookware.

It’s a tight fit, but because most of the nearby residents have fled to safer areas, there is enough space for the temple’s six monks and the dozen or so villagers who sleep there every night.

“When we need to use the bathroom, we have to wait to make sure if things are quiet. If it’s quiet out there, we will go out,” Phut Analayo said.

He said his temple has ceased religious activities for now but that the remaining monks stayed out of concern for the monastery and the people it serves.

“If I leave, the people who rely on us will lose their spirit,” he said. “I’m scared too, but I’ll just stay here for now, when I can.”

Thai monasteries frequently serve as sanctuaries for stray dogs, and the more than 10 living at the temple are seemingly unbothered by the crisis.

“If I leave them behind, how will they live? What will they eat? So I have to stay to take care of them. Every life loves their lives all the same,” Phut Analayo said.

Ballroom dancers heed the call to help their countrymen

Learning ballroom dancing is how some senior citizens in northeastern Thailand usually spend their leisure hours, but the latest border conflict has motivated them to try to help some of the thousands of people displaced by the fighting.

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Thai residents who fled homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers rest at an evacuation center in Surin province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

About a dozen members of the Ballroom Dance for Health of the Elderly of Surin Province club went Saturday to a shelter housing about 1,000 evacuees, where they handed out clothes, toiletries, blankets and pillows.

Retired civil servant Chadaporn Duchanee, the ballroom teacher, initiated the project. On Friday, she gathered with friends at her home to fill small yellow plastic bowls with toiletries and other goods to give to the evacuees.

The 62-year-old posted on Facebook about the donation she made on Thursday, and her pupils proved happy to participate, too.

“We want to help, said Chadaporn. “Everyone left in a hurry, without bringing their belongings, just trying to escape the line of fire, so they fled empty handed,”

Prapha Sanpote, a 75-year-old member of Chadaporn’s donation team, said she hopes the conflict is resolved quickly.

“Our people couldn’t go home. They have to leave home, and it’s not just the home they had to leave,” he said. “It’s their belongings, their cattle, or their pet dogs, because they left without anything. How will those animals live? Everything is affected.”

A pop-up stall to feed those fleeing fighting and those headed into battle

It looks just like your typical roadside stall found commonly all over Southeast Asia, but this one seems exceptionally well-provisioned.

Also, it’s not selling anything, even though there are boxes of bottled water, plastic bags filled with fruit and vegetables and the occasional packet of instant noodles. It is there to solicit donations of food and other essentials to give to evacuees escaping fighting along the border. It also gives handouts to members of the armed forces headed in the other direction, toward the front lines.

This pop-up operation is at the border of Siem Reap, home to Cambodia’s Angkor Wat temple complex, and Oddar Meanchey province, which is an active combat zone. It’s a one-stop shop on a key road that convoys of police and military vehicles roar along with sirens blaring.

Chhar Sin, a 28-year-old self-described youth volunteer, mans the stall, which is located in her home Srey Snam district.

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A Cambodian youth volunteer Chhar Sin, front right, welcomes villagers who donate their personal belongings for the displacing people at a sidewalk in Srey Snam district in Siem Reap province, Cambodia, Saturday, July 26, 2025, during fighting between Thailand and Cambodia. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

“We’re used to seeing people bustling around, we’re not surprised by that,” she said, between handing out parcels to eager hands.

But even here, 100 kilometers (60 miles) from the border with Thailand, she senses people don’t feel safe, as the streets seem emptier than usual.

She and other volunteers, are spending the weekend collecting supplies from ordinary Cambodians to dole out to the less fortunate. Families drive by on tractors to donate vegetables, while others swing by on motorbikes carrying bananas, dragon fruit and rambutans.

“For today and tomorrow, we are standing here waiting to give gifts to the people who are displaced from war zones and are seeking safety,” Chhar Sin said Saturday. “We will provide them with food because they have nothing, and some of them come with only a few clothes and a hat.”

When she woke up Saturday morning, Kim Muny, made the decision not to open her convenience store, but instead cook rice for members of the Cambodian military and fleeing civilians.

“Cambodians have a kind heart. When we heard that soldiers and displaced people needed help, we decided to help with an open heart,” said the 45-year-old after donating parcels of rice wrapped in banana leaves at the stall. “We know our soldiers don’t have time to cook, so we will do it for them.”

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Displaced Cambodians receive water at the Battkhao Resettlement Camp in Oddar Meanchey Province, Cambodia, Saturday, July 26, 2025 as border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia entered its third day. (AP Photo/Anton L. Delgado)

The city empties but its temple’s top monk isn’t moving

Alone in a mostly evacuated pagoda, Tho Thoross began a Buddhist chant to express gratitude for all that is good in life.

The 38-year-old Tho Thoross is one of the last monks in the city of Samrong, the provincial capital of Cambodia’s Oddar Meanchey province, which is on the front line of the cross-border fighting. Most civilians have fled the town, spooked by the sounds of artillery and what they suspect was a Thai military drone hovering above them.

All but seven of the 40 monks at the monastery have left. As chief monk of Wat Prasat Samrong Thom, Tho Thoross ordered more than a dozen of the temple’s novices — young monks in training — to evacuate to displacement camps farther from the border with Thailand, which is 40 kilometers (25 miles) away.

The temple is the largest in the town of Samrong, as well as the oldest, dating back over a century.

Its distance from the border does not keep it protected from artillery and aerial attacks, but it nonetheless is considered a relatively safe place. Most Cambodians and Thais are Buddhists.

Nine monks from other temples that felt more insecure are also staying at Wat Prasat Samrong Thom.

In the Buddhist tradition, temples are community centers and almost always places of sanctuary, and on Thursday, several displaced villagers stopped by briefly on their way to a government-arranged safety zone. Tho Thoross provided them with food.

He said the latest fighting is “10 times bigger” than prolonged clashes over similar issues in 2008 and 2011, when the clashes were confined to certain areas.

“But today, the fighting is happening everywhere along the border.” said Tho Thoross, who has lived in Oddar Meanchey for nearly three decades.

“As a Buddhist monk living in a province bordering Thailand, I would like to call on both sides to work together to find a solution that is a win-win solution for all,” he declared Saturday.

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Sopheng Cheang and Delgado reported from Samrong, Cambodia; Peck reported from Bangkok. Associated Press video journalist Tian Macleod Ji in Surin, Thailand contributed to this report.

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A Note from Day 2-4 of Undeclared War Between Thailand and Cambodia

Artillery shells from the Cambodian side hit civilian homes in Surin Province, on July 27, 2025.

DAY 2 of the undeclared war between Thailand and Cambodia

On Friday night, Day 2 of the undeclared war between Thailand and Cambodia, a Thai socialist activist contacted me and informed me about the first anti-Thai-Cambodian war protest in Bangkok. The person added, however, that it’s likely to just be a handful of demonstrators as the tide of Thai ultranationalist sentiment has spread so widely by now, almost two months after the initial military skirmish between soldiers from the two nations, which led to the death of one Cambodian officer.

I told the activist that someone will have to take the first step, no matter how small; that that first step, full of conviction, is very crucial.

DAY 3

The activist was right, and the following day, after the demonstration at Suan Santiphab, or Peace Park in Bangkok, the activist admitted to me that no more than 15 people showed up, with as many, if not more, news photographers and reporters, in a nation of 70 million or so people.

Thais are on a war footing, and the number of public figures who publicly voice against this unfolding war can be counted on two, no, maybe on a single hand.

As the war seemed unstoppable by Saturday, hours later, very late that night of July 26, 2025, in Bangkok, US President Donald Trump entered the fray and called both Cambodian PM Hun Manet and Acting Thai PM Phoomtham Wechayachai, and threatened that he “did not want to make any Deal, with either country, if they are fighting” and added that “I am trying to simplify a complex situation. Many people are being killed in this War…”

After the phone calls were made to both Thai and Cambodian leaders, Trump soon posted another message, saying:

“I had a very good call with the Prime Minister of Cambodia, and informed him of my discussion with Thailand, and its Acting Prime Minister. Both Parties are looking for an immediate ceasefire and Peace. They are also looking to get back to the “Trading Table” with the United States, which we think is appropriate to do until such time as the fighting STOPS,” wrote Trump. “They have agreed to immediately meet and quickly work out a ceasefire and, ultimately, PEACE! It was an Honour to deal with both Countries. They will hopefully get along for many years to come. When all is done, and Peace is at hand, I look forward to concluding our Trading Agreements with both!”

While I saw a glimmer of hope, many ultranationalist Thais were outraged at Trump’s attempted intervention. One wrote that Thailand is about to achieve a decisive victory and to stop would allow Cambodia to regroup and “attack us again.”

Another posted a message to me on Facebook, saying:

“Some said Trump would try to end the Thai-Cambodian war. Why would he, when Trump is the one who started wars in the Middle East? Why do you trust Trump?.. It seems strangely contradictory.”

I replied: “Do you think America has oil interests in the Thai-Cambodian conflict, like in the Middle East?”

Then came his counter-argument: “No, they don’t. But America has geopolitical interests in the area to gain military advantage.”

My follow-up reply: “Exactly. That’s why they want to show their power over China, to show that they alone can stop this Thai-Cambodian war while China can’t. America doesn’t care if there’s peace or war, as long as they benefit.”

DAY 4

As I woke up early Sunday morning, July 27, 2025, before 7 am, I realised that any hope for an immediate ceasefire will have to wait.

Cambodia said Thailand attacked Cambodia first well before dawn, at 2:30 am, while the Thai Army said it started at 4 am but was started by the Cambodian side.

It is mind-boggling and disturbing to see how an estimated 99.999% of Thais and Cambodians simply believe the other side fired first before dawn today simply because they happened to be born a Thai or a Khmer.

If you ask me, even though I am Thai, I must admit that it is almost impossible for us to verify the matter.

Netizens from both Thailand and Cambodia started accusing one another of breaking Trump’s overture for an immediate ceasefire.

On Day 5, they might as well copy and paste a message from Day 4, saying the ‘enemy’ started the shooting first.

The tragedy is, nationalism is like a religion that doesn’t tolerate doubt and skepticism – there can only be one God, or one nation, to believe in.

By Day 4 it became clear that Thais who questioned what the government, and the Thai Armed Forces in particular, are doing, are facing scrutiny over whether they are loyal to Thailand.

After all, 99.5 percent of Thais “trust the Armed Forces in defending Thailand”.

I guess I am the 0.5 percent, or less.

One of my Facebook ‘friends’ posted a message, asking me: “So, which side will you be with?”

Then I wrote the following: “I am a human being and choose not to abandon my humanity. I believe that people from all nations are the same – they are all human. I refuse to believe in one-sided information just because it comes from the government of the country I was born in. I don’t see people labelled as enemies as those we should gloat over when they are killed.

I stand with peace and humanity.

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Thailand and Cambodia Agree to Ceasefire Talks After Trump Steps In, But Border Clashes Persist

A Cambodian military vehicle carries rocket launcher in Oddar Meanchey province, Cambodia, Saturday, July 26, 2025, as border fighting between Thailand and Cambodia entered its third day, heightening fears of an extended conflict. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

By JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI and SOPHENG CHEANG

SURIN, Thailand (AP) — Thailand and Cambodia on Sunday signaled their readiness to negotiate an end to a deadly border dispute following mediation efforts by U.S. President Donald Trump. The fighting, now in its fourth day, has killed at least 33 people and displaced more than 168,000.

Trump posted on Truth Social on Saturday that he spoke to the leaders of Thailand and Cambodia and suggested he would not move forward with trade agreements with either country if the hostilities continued. He later said both sides agreed to meet to negotiate a ceasefire.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet said Sunday his country agreed to pursue an “immediate and unconditional ceasefire.” He said Trump told him that Thailand had also agreed to halt attacks following Trump’s conversation with Acting Thai Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai.

“This is positive news for the soldiers and people of both countries,” Hun Manet said in a statement.

He said he tasked his deputy, Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn, to coordinate next steps with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and to engage directly with Thailand’s foreign minister to implement the ceasefire.

Thailand expressed cautious support. Phumtham thanked Trump and said that Thailand agreed in principle to a ceasefire but stressed the need for “sincere intention” from Cambodia, the Thai Foreign Ministry said. Phumtam called for swift bilateral talks to discuss concrete steps toward a peaceful resolution, it said.

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Thai family take care of their kids who fled homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers rest at an evacuation center in Surin province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

The fighting first flared Thursday after a land mine explosion along the border wounded five Thai soldiers. Both sides blamed each other for starting the clashes. Both countries recalled their ambassadors and Thailand closed its border crossings with Cambodia.

Despite the diplomatic efforts, fighting continued Sunday along parts of the contested border, with both sides refusing to budge and trading blame over renewed shelling and troop movements.

Col. Richa Suksowanont, a Thai army deputy spokesperson, said Cambodian forces fired heavy artillery into Surin province, including at civilian homes early Sunday. He said Cambodia also launched rocket attacks targeting the ancient Ta Muen Thom temple claimed by both countries, and other areas in a bid to reclaim territory secured by Thai troops. Thai forces responded with long-range artillery to strike Cambodian artillery and rocket launchers.

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Thai residents who fled homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers rest at an evacuation center in Surin province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Richa said Trump’s efforts to mediate was a “separate matter.” The battlefield operations will continue and a ceasefire can only happen if Cambodia formally initiates negotiations, he added.

“Any cessation of hostilities cannot be reached while Cambodia is severely lacking in good faith and repeatedly violating the basic principles of human rights and humanitarian law,” Thailand’s Foreign Ministry said separately.

Cambodian Defense Ministry spokesperson Lt. Gen. Maly Socheata accused Thai forces of escalating the violence with bombardment of Cambodian territory early Sunday, followed by a “large-scale incursion” involving tanks and ground troops in multiple areas.

“Such actions undermine all efforts toward peaceful resolution and expose Thailand’s clear intent to escalate rather than de-escalate the conflict,” she said.

Thailand has reported 20 deaths, mostly civilians, while Cambodia said 13 people have been killed. More than 131,000 people in Thailand have evacuated to safe locations and over 37,000 people fled from three Cambodian provinces. Many border villages are mostly deserted, with many schools and hospitals shut.

Pichayut Surasit, an air-conditioning technician in Thailand, said the sudden outbreak of fighting meant leaving his work in Bangkok to return home to protect his family.

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Thai residents who fled homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers rest at an evacuation center in Surin province, Thailand, Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

“I didn’t have the heart to continue with my work when I heard the news. I wanted to come back as soon as possible but I had to wait until the evening,” he said. Now at a shelter in Surin housing some 6,000 evacuees, Pichayut worries for his wife and twin daughters, hoping the conflict will end soon so they can return to their home in Kap Choeng district, one of the hardest hit by shelling.

Bualee Chanduang, a local vendor who moved to the same shelter Thursday with her family and pet rabbit, is counting on swift negotiations to end the violence. “I pray for God to help that both sides can agree to talk and end this war,” she said.

The U.N. Security Council has called on the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, a regional bloc, to mediate peace between the two members. Human Rights Watch has condemned the reported use of cluster munitions, weapons banned by International law, in populated areas, and urged both governments to protect civilians.

The 800-kilometer (500-mile) frontier between Thailand and Cambodia has been disputed for decades, but past confrontations have been limited and brief. The latest tensions flared in May when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a confrontation that created a diplomatic rift and roiled Thailand’s domestic politics.

_________

Associated Press writers Chalida Ekvitthayavechnukul and Grant Peck in Bangkok, and Eileen Ng in Kuala Lumpur contributed to this report. Sopheng Cheang reported from Samrong, Cambodia.

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Thailand and Cambodia Trade Fresh Attacks and Accusations as Allies Call for a Ceasefire

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Displaced Cambodians receive water at the Battkhao Resettlement Camp in Oddar Meanchey Province, Cambodia, Saturday, July 26, 2025 as border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia entered its third day. (AP Photo/Anton L. Delgado)

By JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI and SOPHENG CHEANG

SURIN, Thailand (AP) — Thailand and Cambodia traded accusations of fresh attacks Saturday as deadly border clashes entered a third day and international pressure mounted for a ceasefire. The fighting has killed at least 33 people and displaced more than 168,000.

Artillery and small arms fire were reported near several border villages, expanding the area of the fighting that flared Thursday after a land mine explosion along the border wounded five Thai soldiers. Cambodian and Thai officials blamed each other for starting the clashes.

Both countries recalled their ambassadors and Thailand closed its border crossings with Cambodia.

Cambodian authorities reported 12 new deaths on Saturday, bringing its toll to 13, while the Thai military said a soldier was killed, raising the number of dead to 20, mostly civilians.

Cambodia’s Information Minister Neth Pheaktra said Saturday that the clashes have forced 10,865 Cambodian families, or 37,635 people, in three border provinces to evacuate to safe locations. Thai officials said more than 131,000 people have fled their border villages.

The 800-kilometer (500-mile) frontier between Thailand and Cambodia has been disputed for decades, but past confrontations have been limited and brief. The latest tensions flared in May when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a confrontation that created a diplomatic rift and roiled Thailand’s domestic politics.

International allies call for peace

On Saturday, President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that he has talked with the leaders of Thailand and Cambodia and suggested he would not conclude a trade agreement with either country if the cross-border hostilities continued. He later said both sides have agreed to meet to negotiate a ceasefire.

Officials from the two countries did not immediately confirm any plan to meet.

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President Donald J. Trump speaks at a roundtable discussion at the Community Emergency Operations Center in Kerrville, Texas, Friday, July 11, 2025. (Ricardo B. Brazziell/Austin American-Statesman via AP)

Trump’s comments followed increasing pressure on the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to defuse the tensions between its two members.

During an emergency meeting on Friday, members of the U.N. Security Council called for a de-escalation and urged ASEAN to mediate a peaceful solution. The council didn’t issue a resolution on the crisis, but Thai Foreign Minister Maris Sangiampongsa said Saturday that the group’s 15 members called for restraint, an end to hostilities and a peaceful resolution.

The leader of Malaysia, ASEAN’s current chair, has said Thailand and Cambodia are open to a ceasefire proposal. Malaysian media said Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has tasked the country’s foreign minister with mediating peace talks, but no concrete plans have been announced.

Maris said earlier Saturday that his country has agreed in principle to ASEAN’s ceasefire proposal, but insisted Cambodia must first cease hostilities. He said Thailand continues to engage with Malaysia on the matter.

“Thailand reaffirms its commitment to resolving the conflict peacefully and in accordance with international law,” he said, urging Cambodia to “return to the negotiating table with sincerity and in good faith.”

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A convenience store at a gas station is damaged after Cambodia fired artillery shells in Sisaket province, Thailand, Friday, July 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Sides trade accusations and deny responsibility

Cambodia’s Defense Ministry condemned what it called an expanded Thai offensive early Saturday after five heavy artillery shells were fired into Pursat province. It said the attack was an “unprovoked and premeditated act of aggression.”

Ministry spokesperson Lt. Gen. Maly Socheata said tensions flared in the coastal province of Koh Kong and expressed concern about the possibility of confrontations at sea.

Maly Socheata said seven Cambodian civilians and five soldiers have been killed in two days of fighting. Another man was reportedly killed when a pagoda he was hiding under was hit by Thai rockets.

The Thai army has denied targeting Cambodian civilians and accuses Phnom Penh of using “human shields” by positioning their weapons near residential areas.

In a statement Saturday, Thailand’s navy accused Cambodian forces of initiating a new attack in the province of Trat, which shares a border with Koh Kong, saying Thai forces responded swiftly and “successfully pushed back the Cambodian incursion at three key points.” The navy warned that “aggression will not be tolerated.”

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Thai residents evacuate from their homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers in Sisaket province, Thailand, Friday, July 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Thai authorities also alleged several Cambodian artillery shells damaged homes and property in neighboring Laos. Lao officials have not publicly responded to the claim.

Call to protect civilians amid claim of cluster bomb use

Human Rights Watch urged the U.N. Security Council and other nations to press Thailand and Cambodia to abide by international humanitarian law and take all steps to protect civilians. Children have been harmed and Thailand has closed at least 852 schools and seven hospitals for safety reasons, the rights group said in a statement Saturday.

Both sides have fired rockets and artillery, and after initially denying Cambodian claims that internationally prohibited cluster munitions were being used, a Thai military spokesperson said Friday that such weapons can be utilized “when necessary” to achieve military objectives. Human Rights Watch condemned the use of cluster munitions in populated areas.

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Cambodians sit on a cart of tractor as they take refuge in Batthkoa primary school in Oddar Meanchey province, Cambodia, Saturday, July 26, 2025, as border fighting between Thailand and Cambodia entered its third day. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

Neither Thailand nor Cambodia is party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which bans the use of the weapon. Thai authorities used them during a border dispute with Cambodia in February 2011 that left 20 people dead.

“Neither Thailand nor Cambodia appears to be paying attention to international humanitarian law at great expense to civilians,” John Sifton, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement. “Diplomatic efforts underway need to prioritize protecting civilians and civilian infrastructure.”

Thai officials acknowledged it has used F-16 jets and drones to launch airstrikes.

___

Associated Press writers Chalida Ekvitthayavechnukul and Grant Peck in Bangkok, and Eileen Ng in Kuala Lumpur contributed to this report. Sopheng Cheang reported from Oddar Meanchey, Cambodia.

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