“Mom! Where are we going now?”
A heartbreaking footage of Cambodian refugees fleeing their homes in the midnight to escape renewed threats of armed aggression by Thailand. These young children struggle to eat rice from bowls while traveling on carts along the road to safe place in Oddor Meanchey province.
These boys and girls should not have to suffer like this. Right now, they should be full from a good meal, fast asleep, and waking up in the morning to wash and get dressed for school. But their current situation is far from normal.
A ceasefire is already in place. The Cambodian side has strictly adhered to it and desires peace—working diligently to resolve the situation based on legal principles, believing that the Thai side will also respect the ceasefire agreement reached on July 28, 2025, and uphold the spirit of the extraordinary meeting of the Cambodia–Thailand General Border Committee GBC held on August 7. Cambodia calls for continued peaceful and lasting efforts to bring normalcy and security to the people of both countries.
Image from social media @ams1minute
The Thai army captured nearly 20 Cambodian soldiers. When two were returned, they were no longer in the same healthy condition—they were weak, possibly abused, and clearly mistreated.
This is a violation of human rights and dignity. Soldiers are not enemies—they are human beings
On the morning of July 30, 2025, CMAC explosive ordnance disposal experts responded to an emergency request from local civilians whose homes were struck by a massive aerial bomb. The bomb has been identified as an MK-84, one of the largest in the MK-series (MK-81, MK-82, MK-83, and MK-84). It weighs approximately 1,000 kilograms, stretches about 3.5 meters long, and contains over 500 kilograms of explosive material.
This MK-84 bomb was reportedly dropped by the Royal Thai Air Force in a recent violation of Cambodian territory. It is important to note that the use of MK-84 bombs has been extremely rare in this region, even during the height of the Indochina War. #ExposeThailandLies
Laughing at the suffering of others is not comedy — it’s inhumanity.
You may act like you don’t care, but the world is watching, and history never forgets cruelty.
#JusticeForCambodia#ExsposeThailandLies