Asia - Pacific

Thousands of Cambodians hold peace rally, urge respect for ceasefire amid border clashes with Thailand

Demonstration takes place in Phnom Penh amid ongoing Thailand-Cambodia border conflict, which has killed at least 55 people on both sides since Dec. 7

Berk Kutay Gökmen  | 18.12.2025 - Update : 18.12.2025
Thousands of Cambodians hold peace rally, urge respect for ceasefire amid border clashes with Thailand Displayed Cambodians take refuge at a wet market-turned refugee center, as fighting between Cambodian and Thai forces along the border continues, in Mongkol Borey, Banteay Meanchey province, Cambodia, on December 18, 2025. More than half a million Cambodians including infants, children, pregnant mothers and elderly people have been displaced in Cambodia as the Thai-Cambodian border conflict forced them to flee dangerous areas. Hostilities between the two Southeast Asian nations resumed earlier this month, with them trading missile strikes and artillery rounds along border areas, killing civilians and soldiers on both sides. This followed a ceasefire deal brokered by United States President Donald Trump and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim after Cambodia and Thailand engaged in a military conflict over territorial disputes

  • UN Human Rights chief Volker Turk voices ‘alarm’ over reports that areas around villages and cultural sites ‘being struck by fighter jets, drones, and artillery’

ISTANBUL

Thousands of Cambodians held a peace rally on Thursday amid ongoing border conflict with Thailand, where the participants urged respect for a ceasefire agreement.

Tens of thousands of Cambodians gathered in the capital, Phnom Penh, to call for peace following the ongoing conflict that began on Dec. 7 and dragged on to its 12th day, killing at least 55 people from both sides.

According to Thailand's authorities, 21 Thai soldiers and 16 civilians have been killed in the conflict, while Cambodia’s Interior Ministry said 18 Cambodian civilians were killed and 78 others injured.

The event, organized by the Union of Youth Federations of Cambodia (UYFC), aimed not only to demonstrate “Cambodia’s commitment to peace but also to urge respect for the ceasefire and the peace agreement between Cambodia and Thailand,” according to state-run Agence Kampuchea Presse.

Leading the march, UYFC chief Hun Many said: “We are all witnessing the consequences of war. This is the second border clash in the seven-month conflict, and the Cambodian people are fully aware of the dangers of war.”

Separately, UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk said he is alarmed by reports that “areas around villages and cultural sites are being struck by fighter jets, drones, and artillery.”

“Under international humanitarian law, it is very clear that protection of civilians and civilian infrastructure is paramount,” the High Commissioner said, urging both sides to “cease fire immediately and return to dialogue.”

The clashes have continued despite US President Donald Trump saying last week that the leaders of Thailand and Cambodia had agreed to halt the renewed fighting.

The two countries signed a peace agreement in October in Kuala Lumpur in the presence of Trump and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, but that was later suspended after Thai soldiers were seriously injured in a landmine explosion in a border province.

Thailand and Cambodia have a long-running border dispute that has repeatedly erupted into violence, including clashes in July in which at least 48 people were killed.

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