Thailand says over 100,000 civilians flee clashes with Cambodia

Update Thailand says over 100,000 civilians flee clashes with Cambodia
1 / 3
Evacuees line up for food they take shelter in a gymnasium on the grounds of Surindra Rajabhat University in the Thai border province of Surin on July 25, 2025. (AFP)
Update Thailand says over 100,000 civilians flee clashes with Cambodia
2 / 3
Thai Army soldiers are pictured on armored vehicles on a road in Chachoengsao province on July 24, 2025. (AFP)
Update Thailand says over 100,000 civilians flee clashes with Cambodia
3 / 3
A Thai soldier (L) takes picture as Cambodian soldiers (L) speak with Thai soldiers (R) at the disputed ancient Khmer temple Prasat Ta Muen Thom, or Prasat Ta Moan Thom in Khmer, on the Cambodian-Thai border in Oddar Meanchey province on March 26, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 25 July 2025

Thailand says over 100,000 civilians flee clashes with Cambodia

Thailand says over 100,000 civilians flee clashes with Cambodia
  • Fighting took place after a land mine explosion along the border wounded five Thai soldiers
  • UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged both sides “to exercise maximum restraint”

SURIN, Thailand: More than 100,000 people have fled the bloodiest border fighting between Thailand and Cambodia in a decade, Bangkok said Friday, as the death toll rose and international powers urged a halt to hostilities.

A long-running border dispute erupted into intense fighting with jets, artillery, tanks and ground troops on Thursday, and the UN Security Council is set to hold an emergency meeting on the crisis later Friday.

The Thai interior ministry said more than 100,000 people from four border provinces had moved to nearly 300 temporary shelters, while the health ministry said the death toll had risen to 15 – 14 civilians and one soldier – with 46 wounded, including 15 troops.

Cambodian authorities have not released any casualty figures from their side.

In the Cambodian town of Samraong, 20 kilometers from the border, AFP journalists reported hearing distant artillery fire on Friday morning.




Evacuees take shelter in a hall on the grounds of Surindra Rajabhat University, in the Thai border province of Surin on July 24, 2025, amid fighting between Thail and Cambodian forces on July 24, 2025 over a disputed border zone. (AFP)

As the guns started up, some families packed their children and belongings into vehicles and sped away.

“I live very close to the border. We are scared because they began shooting again at about 6:00 am,” Pro Bak, 41, said.

He was taking his wife and children to a Buddhist temple to seek refuge.

“I don’t know when we could return home,” he said.

AFP journalists also saw soldiers rushing to man rocket launchers and speeding off toward the frontier.

Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, whose country currently holds the chair of regional bloc ASEAN, said he held talks with both countries PMs on Thursday and called for a ceasefire and dialogue.

“I welcome the positive signals and willingness shown by both Bangkok and Phnom Penh to consider this path forward,” he said in a Facebook post late on Thursday.

But despite Anwar’s optimism, fighting resumed in three areas around 4:00 am on Friday (2100 GMT Thursday), the Thai army said.

Cambodian forces carried out bombardments with heavy weapons, field artillery, and BM-21 rocket systems, the army said, and Thai troops responded “with appropriate supporting fire.”

The fighting marks a dramatic escalation in a long-running dispute between the neighbors – both popular destinations for millions of foreign tourists – over their shared 800-kilometer frontier.

Dozens of kilometers in several areas are contested and fighting broke out between 2008 and 2011, leaving at least 28 people dead and tens of thousands displaced.

A UN court ruling in 2013 settled the matter for over a decade, but the current crisis erupted in May when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a new clash.

Fighting on Thursday was focused on six locations, according to the Thai army, including around two ancient temples.

Ground troops backed up by tanks battled for control of territory, while Cambodia fired rockets and shells into Thailand and the Thais scrambled F-16 jets to hit military targets across the border.

Both sides blamed each other for firing first, while Thailand accused Cambodia of targeting civilian infrastructure, including a hospital hit by shells and a petrol station hit by at least one rocket.

Thursday’s clashes came hours after Thailand expelled the Cambodian ambassador and recalled its own envoy after five members of a Thai military patrol were wounded by a land mine.

Cambodia downgraded ties to “the lowest level” on Thursday, pulling out all but one of its diplomats and expelling their Thai equivalents from Phnom Penh.

At the request of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet, the UN Security Council will hold an emergency meeting on Friday to discuss the deadly clashes, diplomatic sources said.

The United States urged an “immediate” end to the conflict, while Cambodia’s former colonial ruler France made a similar call.

The EU and China – a close ally of Phnom Penh – said they were “deeply concerned” about the clashes, calling for dialogue.


France’s town halls told to remove Palestinian flags flown to mark Macron’s recognition

France’s town halls told to remove Palestinian flags flown to mark Macron’s recognition
Updated 3 sec ago

France’s town halls told to remove Palestinian flags flown to mark Macron’s recognition

France’s town halls told to remove Palestinian flags flown to mark Macron’s recognition
  • Dozens of town halls across France hoisted the Palestinian flag in celebration of recognition- defying instructions by Macron’s interior ministry not to do so
  • By Wednesday, some had taken the flag down after regional authorities initiated legal proceedings
NANTERRE, France: As French President Emmanuel Macron recognized Palestine statehood earlier this week, dozens of town halls across France hoisted the Palestinian flag in celebration — defying instructions by Macron’s interior ministry not to do so.
By Wednesday, some had taken the flag down after regional authorities initiated legal proceedings — an episode which some mayors said undermined the message of solidarity Macron sought to make with his largely symbolic recognition.
“For me it’s a complete misunderstanding,” Raphael Adam, mayor of Nanterre outside Paris, told Reuters. “You can’t have a government asking its representatives to oppose raising a flag at the same time it’s recognizing the state.”
The city raised the flag in a ceremony on Monday but a day later, the Nanterre administrative court ruled it should be removed after the city defied an order by the regional representative, known as the prefect, to take it down.
Under French law, public buildings cannot be used as platforms for expressing political, religious or philosophical opinions. Local officials noted, however, that Ukrainian flags have been displayed and even projected on the Eiffel Tower.
“When we raised a Ukrainian flag, no one told us anything!” said Gilles Poux, mayor of La Courneuve, northeast of Paris, who planned to take down the flag late on Tuesday after his administration was fined for flying one earlier this year.
“Speaking of neutrality is hypocritical. Liberty, equality, fraternity: there’s nothing neutral about these values,” he said.
Asked about the allegations of double standards, the interior ministry told Reuters the Gaza war had provoked protests and tensions in France, and that displaying Palestinian flags on public buildings could trigger public unrest.
As of Tuesday night, 86 town halls across France had flown the Palestinian flag, according to the interior ministry, which last week told regional government representatives to block such moves for contravening France’s “neutrality principle.”
Anne Tuaillon, head of the France Palestine Solidarity Association, said there was no room for neutrality “in a situation of oppression,” referring to Israel’s military onslaught on Gaza since the 2023 Hamas attack on Israel.
Lionel Crusoe, a lawyer specialized in French public law, said the interior ministry ruling made little sense.
“This neutrality principle for public services does not prevent a municipality from being able to occasionally show solidarity toward a people who are the target of a military aggression, or a terrorist attack, for example,” he said.

Russia says ‘no alternative’ to continuing Ukraine offensive

Russia says ‘no alternative’ to continuing Ukraine offensive
Updated 37 min 11 sec ago

Russia says ‘no alternative’ to continuing Ukraine offensive

Russia says ‘no alternative’ to continuing Ukraine offensive
  • The comments come a day after Trump said Ukraine could win back all of its territory from Russia, which he characterised as a “paper tiger” with a failing economy

MOSCOW: The Kremlin on Wednesday said it had no choice but to continue its military offensive on Ukraine, as Moscow rejected US President Donald Trump’s claim that Russia was a “paper tiger.”
The comments come a day after Trump said Ukraine could win back all of its territory from Russia, which he characterised as a “paper tiger” with a failing economy — a major pivot in his stance on the three-and-a-half-year conflict.
“We are continuing our special military operation to ensure our interests and achieve the goals,” set by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday, using Moscow’s term for its assault on Ukraine.
“We are doing this for both the present and the future of our country. For many generations to come. Therefore, we have no alternative,” he added in a radio interview with a Russian newspaper.
He also pushed back against Trump’s “paper tiger” remark, but conceded the economy — slowing after three years of rapid growth and with stubborn inflation — was facing some headwinds.
“Russia maintains its macroeconomic stability,” Peskov said, adding: “Yes, Russia is experiencing tensions and problems in various sectors of the economy.”
The Kremlin also offered a downbeat assessment of wider efforts to boost relations between Moscow and Washington.
A rapprochement ushered in when Trump returned to the White House in January has yielded “close to zero” results, Peskov said.
“This track is sluggish, very sluggish,” he said of the efforts to reset ties.
Moscow has sought to cast negotiations with the United States as broader than just the Ukraine conflict, trying to promote possible economic and diplomatic cooperation between the two nuclear powers.


Judge orders embezzlement trial for Spain PM’s wife

Judge orders embezzlement trial for Spain PM’s wife
Updated 9 min 19 sec ago

Judge orders embezzlement trial for Spain PM’s wife

Judge orders embezzlement trial for Spain PM’s wife
  • PM Sanchez has dismissed the allegations against his wife as an attempt to undermine his government by the right, which has demanded his resignation

MADRID: A judge investigating Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s wife Begona Gomez for alleged embezzlement has ordered that she face trial in a case roiling national politics, a court document showed on Wednesday.
The long-running probe is one of several into Sanchez’s family and former close allies that have embarrassed the Socialist leader and heaped pressure on his minority coalition.
The embezzlement investigation centers on whether an official employed in the premier’s office, Cristina Alvarez, worked for Gomez during her past academic job at Madrid’s Complutense University at the expense of her public duties.
Judge Juan Carlos Peinado said in a ruling dated Tuesday that his preliminary investigation showed that a jury trial was warranted and summoned her to appear in court on Saturday.
He cited emails sent by Alvarez to third parties that “clearly seem to exceed her duties” and constituted “sufficient evidence.”
Gomez’s “personal friendship” with Alvarez was “the reason for her appointment to the position of highest trust,” Peinado wrote in his ruling.
The appointment, which aimed to serve and improve Gomez’s private activities, “could represent a diversion of public resources in favor of private interests,” Peinado said.
Gomez can appeal and the ruling is not yet definitive.
Gomez denied wrongdoing during a court appearance before Peinado in Madrid two weeks ago.
She told her lawyer Alvarez never helped her in her private professional activities, though she occasionally sent messages that did not affect her primary work, according to legal sources.
Gomez said spouses of previous prime ministers hired staff to coordinate their agenda and security, the sources added.
Peinado set off the saga in April 2024 by opening an investigation to determine whether Gomez exploited her position as Sanchez’s wife for private benefit after complaints by groups with far-right ties.
Sanchez has dismissed the allegations against his wife as an attempt to undermine his government by the right, which has demanded his resignation.
This month he said there were “judges who do politics and politicians who try to do justice” and denounced spurious complaints by groups with far-right links.
Separate corruption probes have ensnared two former Socialist heavyweights, Santos Cerdan and ex-transport minister Jose Luis Abalos, as well as the prime minister’s younger brother David Sanchez.
The legal troubles compound woes for the minority government which engages in laborious negotiations with an array of fringe and regional separatist parties to try to pass legislation.


Typhoon Ragasa batters Hong Kong and southern China after causing deaths in Taiwan and Philippines

Typhoon Ragasa batters Hong Kong and southern China after causing deaths in Taiwan and Philippines
Updated 24 September 2025

Typhoon Ragasa batters Hong Kong and southern China after causing deaths in Taiwan and Philippines

Typhoon Ragasa batters Hong Kong and southern China after causing deaths in Taiwan and Philippines
  • Typhoon Ragasa, one of the strongest in years, was whipping waves taller than lampposts onto Hong Kong promenades and halted life on the southern Chinese coast after leaving destruction in Taiwan and
  • Taiwan reported 14 deaths in a flooded township and 10 deaths occurred in the Philippines

HONG KONG: Typhoon Ragasa, one of the strongest in years, whipped waves taller than lampposts onto Hong Kong promenades and turned seas rough on the southern Chinese coast on Wednesday after leaving deadly destruction in Taiwan and the Philippines.
In Taiwan, 14 people died in a flooded township, and 10 deaths were reported in the Philippines.
Nearly 1.9 million people were relocated across Guangdong province, the southern Chinese economic powerhouse. A weather station in Chuandao town recorded maximum gusts of 241 kph (about 150 mph) at noon, a high in Jiangmen city since record-keeping began. Huge waves battered Zhuhai city’s coastline and strong winds buffered trees under intense rain. Fallen branches were scattered on the streets.
The national weather agency forecast the severe typhoon would make landfall between the cities of Yangjiang and Zhanjiang on Wednesday evening. Schools, factories and transportation services were suspended in about a dozen cities.
The fierce winds, brought by Ragasa, once a super typhoon, woke Hong Kong residents in the early hours, and many went online to describe scenes like a kitchen ventilation fan being blown down and a crane swaying.
Strong winds blew away parts of a pedestrian bridge’s roof and knocked down hundreds of trees across the city. A vessel crashed into the shore, shattering a row of glass railings along the waterfront. Areas around some rivers and promenades were flooded, including cycling lanes and playgrounds. At several promenade restaurants, furniture was scattered chaotically by the winds. Over 60 injured people were treated at hospitals.
A video that showed waves of water crashing through the doors of a hotel and flooding its interiors went viral in the financial hub. The hotel has not immediately commented on the incident. But staff were seen cleaning up the lobby, with parts of its exterior damaged.
Hong Kong and Macao, a nearby casino hub, canceled schools and flights, with many shops closed. Hundreds of people sought refuge in temporary centers in each city. Streets in Macao turned into streams with various debris floating on the water. Rescue crews deployed inflatable boats to save those who were trapped. The gambling city’s local electricity supplier suspended its power supply in some flooded, low-lying areas for safety.
As winds gradually weakened in the afternoon, a few cities distant from the expected landfall location were preparing to resume normal operations.
Hong Kong’s observatory said Ragasa had maximum sustained winds near the center of about 195 kph (120 mph) and skirted around 100 kilometers (62 miles) to the south of the financial hub. It was forecast to continuing moving west or west-northwest at about 22 kph (about 14 mph).
The city categorizes cyclones with sustained winds 185 kph or stronger as super typhoons to make residents extra vigilant about intense storms.
The government previously said the rise in water levels could be similar to those recorded during Typhoon Mangkhut in 2018 — estimated to have caused the city direct economic losses worth 4.6 billion Hong Kong dollars ($592 million).
Ragasa earlier caused deaths and damage in Taiwan and the Philippines after the typhoon took a path between them.
In Taiwan, heavy rain caused a barrier lake in Hualien County to overflow Tuesday and torrents of muddy water destroyed a bridge, turning roads in Guangfu township into churning rivers that carried vehicles and furniture away. Guangfu has about 8,450 people, more than half of whom sought safety on higher floors of their homes or on higher ground. Local authorities said 14 people died and contact was lost with 124 others in the township. Taiwan’s Central News Agency said rescuers were going door-to-door to check on these residents.
Separately, 34 people were injured across the self-ruled island.
At least 10 deaths were reported in the Philippines, including seven fishermen who drowned after their boat was battered by huge waves and fierce wind and flipped over on Monday off Santa Ana town in northern Cagayan province. Five other fishermen remained missing, provincial officials said.
Nearly 700,000 people were affected by the onslaught in the main northern Philippine region of Luzon, including 25,000 people who who fled to government emergency shelters.


China gives up developing-country treatment in bid to boost WTO in face of Trump tariffs

China gives up developing-country treatment in bid to boost WTO in face of Trump tariffs
Updated 24 September 2025

China gives up developing-country treatment in bid to boost WTO in face of Trump tariffs

China gives up developing-country treatment in bid to boost WTO in face of Trump tariffs
  • Commerce Ministry officials said the move was an attempt to boost the global trading system at a time when it is under threat from tariff wars and protectionist moves by individual countries to restrict imports

BEIJING: China has said it would no longer seek the special treatment given to developing countries in World Trade Organization agreements — a change long demanded by the United States.
Commerce Ministry officials said Wednesday the move was an attempt to boost the global trading system at a time when it is under threat from tariff wars and protectionist moves by individual countries to restrict imports.
They did not mention the United States by name or President Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs on many other countries this year, including China.
The US has long argued China should give up the developing-country status because it is the world’s second-largest economy. The advantages of that designation at the WTO include lower requirements to open their markets to imports and longer transition periods to implement such market-opening steps.
The WTO provides a forum for global trade talks and enforces agreements but has become less effective, prompting calls for reform.
The head of the Geneva-based organization described the Chinese move as “major news key to WTO reform” and applauded and thanked the country’s leaders in a post on X.
“This is a culmination of many years of hard work,” wrote Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the WTO director-general.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang announced the change in a speech in New York on Tuesday to a China-organized development forum at the annual meeting of the UN General Assembly.
China is a middle-income country, and the Commerce Ministry officials emphasized that it remains part of the developing world.
Increasingly, though, it has become a source of loans and technical assistance to other countries seeking to build roads, railways, dams and other major projects, often undertaken by major Chinese state-owned companies.