Tens of thousands flee Thai-Cambodia border after deadly clashes
Agencies
Published: 08 Dec 2025, 08:15 PM
Evacuated Thai residents gather at a temporary shelter following clashes along the Thailand-Cambodia border in Buriram province on 8 December 2025. Photo: AFP
The reignition of fighting along the disputed Thai-Cambodian
border has led to a new wave of displacement as tens of thousands of people
fled their areas on Monday.
According to Thailand’s army, more than 50,000 people have
left areas near the border for shelters.
In Cambodia, meanwhile, Information Minister Neth Pheaktra
said tens of thousands of residents had been displaced from several villages
near the border.
Thailand's army has set a target of crippling Cambodia's
military capability with the aim of neutralising its threat for a long time to
come, the army's chief of staff said on Monday.
Separately, Thai Foreign Ministry spokesperson Nikorndej
Balankura said military action against Cambodia will continue until Thailand's
sovereignty and territorial integrity are secured.
Both sides have each accused the other of starting the violence,
which is the most serious confrontation between the two countries since they
agreed to a ceasefire in July.
Thailand's Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul says his
country "never wanted violence" but will "use necessary means to
preserve its sovereignty", while Cambodia's former leader Hun Sen accused
Thai "invaders" of provoking retaliation.
Since May, escalating tensions between the neighbours have
led to more than 40 deaths, as well as import bans and travel restrictions
On Monday, the Thai army said its troops had responded to
Cambodian fire in Thailand's Ubon Ratchathani Province, including by launching
air strikes along the disputed border; while Phnom Penh's defence ministry said
it was the Thai forces that attacked first, in Cambodia's Preah Vihear
province.
At least one Thai soldier and four Cambodian civilians have
been killed, and about a dozen wounded as a result of Monday's fighting,
according to officials on either side.
For Thai teacher Siksaka Pongsuwan, though, there are other,
hidden victims of the clashes: the children living near the border, he warns,
are "losing opportunities and... precious time" compared to their
peers living in relatively peaceful cities.
Nearly 650 schools across five Thai provinces have been
ordered to shut for safety reasons, Thailand's education minister said,
following the fresh tensions that have simmered since Sunday.
Meanwhile, videos on social media show chaotic scenes at
schools in Cambodia's border provinces as parents rushed to take their children
home.
And this is not the first time these children have had their
education interrupted in recent months.
In July, in the midst of the children's examinations, five
days of intense fighting broke out between the two nations.
In the aftermath, Pongsuwan's school switched to online
classes, but not all students could access them - some lived in households with
no internet, while iPads distributed by the schools did not reach everyone.
In Cambodia, former journalist Mech Dara shared several
clips of children frantically running out of their schools on his X account.
"How many times [do these] kids have to suffer the
shocking environment?" he wrote. "The nonsense fighting bring kids
[a] horrible nightmare."
He also shared a picture of a boy, still in his school
uniform, having some food in an underground bunker. "Why does the kid and
his family have to eat their meal in the bunker...?" he wrote.
Meanwhile, Pongsuwan told the BBC that he and his neighbours
are now torn about whether to evacuate - even as gunfire can be heard every now
and then in his village.
"If you ask whether we're scared, yes we are... Should
we leave? Will it really be safer? Or should we stay?" he tells the BBC.