Thailand frees 18 Cambodian soldiers under new ceasefire deal

Southeast Asian neighbours agreed to halt fighting on Saturday, ending about 20 days of clashes that killed at least ‌101 people

A Cambodian soldier who had been captured by Thai soldiers in July smiles after his release in Cambodia's Pailin province. Photograph: AFP/Getty
A Cambodian soldier who had been captured by Thai soldiers in July smiles after his release in Cambodia's Pailin province. Photograph: AFP/Getty

Thailand released 18 Cambodian soldiers on Wednesday under a renewed ‍ceasefire agreed by the two countries at the weekend, authorities from both countries said, easing tensions ‍after weeks of deadly border clashes.

The Southeast Asian neighbours agreed to halt fighting on Saturday, ending about 20 days of clashes that killed at least ‌101 people and displaced more than half a million civilians on both sides.

The ⁠clashes included fighter jet sorties, exchanges of rocket fire and artillery ‌barrages.

A Cambodian ​defence ‍ministry spokesperson said the soldiers were transferred at a border checkpoint on Wednesday after 155 days in Thai custody.

The governor of Cambodia’s ⁠Battambang province, Sok Lou, described the returnees as “heroic soldiers”.

Thailand’s foreign ministry ⁠said the detainees had been treated “in accordance ⁠with international humanitarian law and principles” during their detention.

The border clashes flared up again this month after ‍a previous ceasefire deal brokered by US president Donald Trump and Malaysian prime minister Anwar Ibrahim collapsed.

As part of Saturday’s deal to halt the fighting, Thailand agreed to release the 18 soldiers in its custody if the ceasefire held for 72 hours. However, the handover was delayed by one day after Thailand made allegations ‌of ceasefire violations ‌by Cambodia, which Cambodia denied.

“Today’s release and repatriation of prisoners of war allows families to be reunited and marks an ‌important step in translating the commitments outlined in the joint statement into action,” said Mirjana ⁠Spoljaric, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, which supervised the handover. – Reuters

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