Zürcher Nachrichten - Displaced Cambodians return home after Thailand truce

EUR -
AED 4.299352
AFN 73.753055
ALL 95.660061
AMD 432.747364
ANG 2.095397
AOA 1074.691924
ARS 1644.545257
AUD 1.634446
AWG 2.108702
AZN 2.001372
BAM 1.956014
BBD 2.358658
BDT 143.685726
BGN 1.952827
BHD 0.441831
BIF 3484.066451
BMD 1.170688
BND 1.495357
BOB 8.091886
BRL 5.837515
BSD 1.171028
BTN 111.01315
BWP 15.828665
BYN 3.297461
BYR 22945.487384
BZD 2.355258
CAD 1.600846
CDF 2718.92081
CHF 0.923521
CLF 0.026502
CLP 1043.04829
CNY 8.004521
CNH 8.002789
COP 4227.436792
CRC 532.558289
CUC 1.170688
CUP 31.023235
CVE 110.27707
CZK 24.382977
DJF 208.531933
DKK 7.47451
DOP 69.187573
DZD 155.167019
EGP 62.047678
ERN 17.560322
ETB 182.852413
FJD 2.576444
FKP 0.866451
GBP 0.866491
GEL 3.155027
GGP 0.866451
GHS 13.104434
GIP 0.866451
GMD 86.046709
GNF 10276.124722
GTQ 8.946941
GYD 245.005769
HKD 9.174162
HNL 31.128407
HRK 7.536069
HTG 153.376787
HUF 363.870355
IDR 20312.960982
ILS 3.465179
IMP 0.866451
INR 110.898877
IQD 1534.167915
IRR 1540625.581816
ISK 143.607979
JEP 0.866451
JMD 183.630098
JOD 0.830009
JPY 187.125719
KES 151.186547
KGS 102.352442
KHR 4690.493342
KMF 492.859786
KPW 1053.580295
KRW 1730.499869
KWD 0.36035
KYD 0.975903
KZT 542.409367
LAK 25708.81383
LBP 104927.484316
LKR 374.150951
LRD 214.89352
LSL 19.419826
LTL 3.456738
LVL 0.708138
LYD 7.434814
MAD 10.835486
MDL 20.16012
MGA 4867.532752
MKD 61.667297
MMK 2458.42118
MNT 4189.759565
MOP 9.453335
MRU 46.678109
MUR 54.82358
MVR 18.087029
MWK 2030.622252
MXN 20.365409
MYR 4.627144
MZN 74.818927
NAD 19.419826
NGN 1614.285623
NIO 43.094717
NOK 10.86264
NPR 177.620682
NZD 1.998084
OMR 0.450142
PAB 1.171028
PEN 4.11455
PGK 5.087557
PHP 72.151261
PKR 326.405325
PLN 4.252115
PYG 7285.797431
QAR 4.268967
RON 5.098466
RSD 117.429391
RUB 87.801985
RWF 1716.180506
SAR 4.390862
SBD 9.395867
SCR 15.839951
SDG 702.995979
SEK 10.838992
SGD 1.495349
SHP 0.874037
SLE 28.828172
SLL 24548.740292
SOS 669.270393
SRD 43.859778
STD 24230.880719
STN 24.502682
SVC 10.247122
SYP 129.636266
SZL 19.413042
THB 38.223364
TJS 10.978655
TMT 4.103262
TND 3.416374
TOP 2.818736
TRY 52.762331
TTD 7.962872
TWD 36.984964
TZS 3046.859814
UAH 51.615649
UGX 4362.477473
USD 1.170688
UYU 46.605101
UZS 14026.535205
VES 567.337203
VND 30854.656403
VUV 138.576893
WST 3.179443
XAF 656.026
XAG 0.016107
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.163843
XCG 2.110531
XDR 0.81681
XOF 656.028802
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.384771
ZAR 19.427923
ZMK 10537.593458
ZMW 22.103419
ZWL 376.961101
  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    22.83

    -0.13%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5300

    63.47

    -0.84%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.81

    -0.16%

  • RELX

    -0.3800

    36.01

    -1.06%

  • RIO

    -1.4600

    98.49

    -1.48%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    23.5

    -0.26%

  • BCC

    -1.2500

    82.61

    -1.51%

  • AZN

    -0.8300

    186.68

    -0.44%

  • NGG

    0.2200

    87.45

    +0.25%

  • GSK

    0.2500

    54.47

    +0.46%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    15.3

    -0.65%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.2

    -0.26%

  • BTI

    1.1500

    58.47

    +1.97%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    15.49

    -0.13%

  • BP

    0.3800

    46.35

    +0.82%

Displaced Cambodians return home after Thailand truce
Displaced Cambodians return home after Thailand truce / Photo: TANG CHHIN Sothy - AFP

Displaced Cambodians return home after Thailand truce

As Cambodia and Thailand's ceasefire held Tuesday, Lat Laem hared back home -- one of the first evacuees to return to the frontier since deadly cross-border clashes sent more than 300,000 people fleeing.

Text size:

The territorial conflict, which ignited into open combat on Thursday, stems from an obscure cartographical dispute dating back decades, and the truce was sealed after interventions from world leaders including US President Donald Trump.

Back in his Cambodian village of Kouk Khpos -- about 10 kilometres (six miles) from the Thai border -- 30-year-old farmer Lat Laem is grateful for his homecoming, and more quotidian concerns.

"I feel happy to be back to my newly built home so I can clean the floor," he told AFP, after a two-hour trip trailing his family home on a tractor through shuttered villages and empty streets.

Lat Laem said he was working in his rice field when the first blasts broke out, heralding the start of fighting that was waged with artillery, rockets, jets and ground troops.

At least 43 people have been killed on both sides in the deadliest clashes in years over a scattering of ancient contested temples on Thailand and Cambodia's 800-kilometre border.

The truce came into effect at midnight on Monday, and while Thailand accused Cambodia of violating the pact with skirmishes, peace has generally prevailed.

- Hope intact -

When the strikes started raining down around his home, Lat Laem says he took refuge in his brother's bunker -- built because border residents are accustomed to sporadic strife.

He was initially reluctant to abandon his simple white home, so recently constructed that he has yet to hold a house-warming.

When the drumbeat of blasts became too much to bear, he fled -- joining around 140,000 others in Cambodia, and 180,000 more in Thailand who were forced to quit their homes.

He left with his wife and daughter, his sister-in-law and her children on a tractor-drawn wagon known locally as an "iron cow" -- piled with a few scant belongings including cooking gear and a fan -- and headed to a shelter 50 kilometres away.

While they were gone the border was scarred by destruction, as both sides traded fire and allegations about the use of cluster bombs, the targeting of civilian homes and even of hospitals.

Evacuated far from his prized property, Lat Laem was consumed by anxiety it would be claimed by the conflict.

"I was worried that my house that I spent all that money to build might be damaged -- that would upset me," said Lat Laem. "I could not sleep."

But pacing the perimeter of his own patch of land back near the contested frontier he confirms it is free of shrapnel scars -- totally undamaged by the turmoil.

"It was not hit, it is intact," he marvelled. "Now I am happy that it is all good."

S.Scheidegger--NZN