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Recent Border Conflict Shows Thailand’s Pattern of Abuses Against Cambodians Requires Global Attention

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PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (Dec. 8, 2025) — Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, urged the international community Monday to scrutinize Thailand’s treatment of Cambodians, warning that recent border clashes reflect a decades‑long pattern of human rights violations.

In a statement posted on Facebook, Youk called the resignation of U.N. Special Rapporteur on human rights in Cambodia Vitit Muntarbhorn “regrettable,” but said the greater concern was the persistent lack of accountability for Thailand’s actions.

Youk Chhang and

“Cambodia, like most countries, has many areas to improve. But Thailand’s treatment of Cambodian people deserves heightened attention today, particularly given the recent conflict,” he wrote.

Youk said allegations arising from the latest Cambodia–Thailand border tensions are neither new nor isolated, noting that the same locations, violations and perpetrators — including the Thai military — have reappeared across multiple crises.

He recalled abuses against Cambodian refugees in the 1980s, documented by the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights in 1985. “It has been 40 years since these events — possibly amounting to crimes — occurred, and yet nothing has been done to raise awareness,” he said.

With similar reports emerging again, Youk warned that history risks repeating itself if Thailand’s actions remain unexamined. He stressed that accountability and international attention are necessary to prevent further violations.

Reflecting on the rapporteur’s resignation, he added: “Human rights is not circumscribed by borders, politics, circumstances, or even time — and given recent events between Cambodia and Thailand, there is much more to do.”

His remarks add historical and humanitarian weight to rising concerns over the border conflict, urging global actors to confront patterns of abuse that have persisted for decades.

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