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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Megan Howe

Thailand launches airstrikes against Cambodia as border clashes reignite

Thailand has launched fresh airstrikes on Cambodia, as tensions reignite over the neighbouring countries’ shared border.

Fighting has broken out in multiple areas along the border, after both countries accused the other of breaching a ceasefire deal brokered by US President Donald Trump.

At least one Thai soldier has been killed and eight others wounded, according to a Thai army spokesperson, adding that air support was called in to hit Cambodian military targets.

Thailand’s Air Force said this came in response to Cambodia mobilising heavy weaponry and repositioning combat units to “escalate military operations”.

In Cambodia, Met Measpheakdey, deputy governor of Oddar Meanchey province, wrote in a Facebook post that three civilians had been seriously injured.

Camvbodia’s defence ministry said in a statement that the Thai military had launched dawn attacks on its forces at two locations, following days of provocative actions, and added that Cambodian troops had not responded.

Cambodia's influential former longtime leader Hun Sen, father of current premier Hun Manet, said Thailand's military was "aggressors" seeking to provoke a retaliatory response and urged Cambodian forces to exercise restraint.

Residents evacuating following clashes along the Cambodia-Thailand border in Preah Vihear province (AFP via Getty Images)

"The red line for responding has already been set," Hun Sen said on Facebook, without elaborating. "I urge commanders at all levels to educate all officers and soldiers accordingly."

A simmering border dispute between the countries erupted into a five-day conflict in July, before a ceasefire deal brokered by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim and Trump, who also witnessed the signing of an expanded peace agreement between the two countries in Kuala Lumpur in October.

Anwar, chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations bloc, urged both sides to exercise maximum restraint and maintain open channels of communication.

"The renewed fighting risks unravelling the careful work that has gone into stabilising relations between the two neighbours," Anwar said in a post on X.

Southeast Asian countries have rarely engaged in military clashes among themselves in recent decades, with the use of cross-border air strikes even rarer.

Phichet Pholkoet, a resident of Thailand's Ban Kruat district which adjoins Cambodia, said he has heard gunfire since early Monday morning.

"It startled me. The explosions were very clear. Boom boom!" he said via telephone. "I could hear everything clearly. Some are heavy artillery, some are small arms."

Smoke rises from the site, after Thailand launched air strikes along its disputed border with Cambodia (via REUTERS)

In Thailand, more than 385,000 civilians across four border districts were being evacuated, with more than 35,000 already housed in temporary shelters, the Thai military said.

Across the border in Cambodia, opposition politician Meach Sovannara said civilians were also moving away from the fighting along the frontier.

"I heard the artillery shelling," he told Reuters in an audio message from Samroang town, the capital of Oddar Meanchey Province, which abuts Thailand.

More than 1,100 families in Oddar Meanchey had been evacuated, authorities there said.

At least 48 people were killed and an estimated 300,000 temporarily displaced during the July clashes, with the neighbours exchanging rockets and heavy artillery fire for five days.

Thailand and Cambodia have for more than a century contested sovereignty at undemarcated points along their 817-km (508-mile) land border, first mapped in 1907 by France when it ruled Cambodia as a colony.

Residents evacuating along the Thailand-Cambodia border (AFP via Getty Images)

The long-standing dispute has occasionally exploded into skirmishes, such as a weeklong artillery exchange in 2011, despite attempts to peacefully resolve overlapping claims.

Tensions began rising in May this year, following the killing of a Cambodian soldier during a brief exchange of gunfire, and steadily escalated into diplomatic spats and armed clashes.

Although Anwar and Trump were able to halt the fighting within days and then cemented a ceasefire agreement at a regional summit in October. Thailand said it was halting the implementation of the truce with Cambodia last month, following a landmine blast that maimed one of its soldiers.

Thailand has repeatedly accused Cambodia of planting fresh landmines along parts of their disputed border, which have seriously injured at least seven Thai soldiers since July.

Phnom Penh denies the charge.

Some of the mines found along the frontier were likely newly laid, Reuters reported in October, based on expert analysis of material shared by Thailand's military.

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