Cambodia says Thai troops kill one in fresh border clashes
The clash near a disputed village killed one civilian and wounded three, with both sides blaming each other for breaching a US-brokered ceasefire, officials said.
- Three people were wounded and one person killed in fresh border clashes between Thai and Cambodian troops.
- The clashes occurred despite a recent ceasefire agreement facilitated by the US, China and Malaysia to resolve the territorial dispute.
- Thailand accused Cambodian troops of firing into its territory, while Cambodia claimed Thai troops initiated the attack against civilians.
63 Articles
63 Articles
Cambodia Reports Villager Killed by Thai Soldiers in Latest Sign of Faltering Peace
Cambodia’s government has accused Thai forces of firing on a Cambodian border community on Nov. 12, killing at least one villager and raising fresh doubts about the uneasy peace between the two Southeast Asian countries. According to a statement from Cambodia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Thai soldiers fired on the Cambodian village of Prey Chan late on Wednesday afternoon, killing one villager and injuring three more in what the ministry descr…
Cambodia and Thailand's border conflict heats up again as Cambodian villager is reported killed
Cambodia's prime minister says a villager was killed in a shooting along the border with Thailand on Wednesday. This comes as a ceasefire, partly brokered by U.S.
Thai-Cambodia border tensions escalate, at least one dead
At least one person was killed in Cambodia amid a flare-up of conflict with Thailand on Wednesday as the neighbors accused each other of opening fire along a disputed part of their border, threatening a US-brokered truce.
Thai-Cambodia Border Tensions Escalate, at Least One Dead
Cambodia and Thailand traded accusations of fresh clashes along their border on Wednesday (Nov 12), with Phnom Penh reporting one civilian shot dead in hostilities flaring after Bangkok paused the implementation of a United States-backed peace deal.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 37% of the sources lean Left, 37% of the sources lean Right
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

























