Philippines Facilitates Trilateral Meeting; Thailand and Cambodia Reach Partial Agreement on Border Issues
Through the mediation of the Philippines, leaders of Cambodia and Thailand held a trilateral meeting on border issues during the ASEAN Summit, reaching a partial agreement. Philippine President Marcos Jr. emphasized the positive attitude shown by both countries towards a peaceful resolution.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: May 8, 2026 at 10:28
- 🔍 Collected: May 8, 2026 at 11:02 (33 min after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: May 9, 2026 at 02:08 (15h 6m after Collected)
Central News Agency
(Central News Agency reporter Lin Hang-chien, Manila, 8th exclusive report) Under the mediation of the Philippines, Cambodian and Thai leaders utilized the opportunity of attending the ASEAN Summit to hold a closed-door meeting to discuss how to resolve border issues and reached a partial agreement.
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wrote on Facebook: "The Philippines facilitated 'frank and constructive' discussions between Cambodia and Thailand on the border situation."
He added that the Philippines, as the rotating chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), will continue to assist in maintaining regional stability and unity, and believes that Cambodia and Thailand can amicably resolve disputes and peacefully manage border differences in the spirit of ASEAN unity.
The 48th ASEAN Summit and related meetings are being held in Cebu City. Marcos, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet, and Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul held a closed-door meeting on the sidelines yesterday.
The Philippine Presidential Communications Office (PCO) quoted Marcos as saying that both sides discussed many issues, reached consensus on some, and explored future directions; the two also confirmed the importance of maintaining direct communication, exercising restraint, and avoiding actions that could escalate border tensions.
Marcos said that such a result can be attributed to the Cambodian and Thai leaders believing that now "should be a time for peace, not war."
On the other hand, Hun Manet praised President Marcos's "constructive" leadership in promoting regional peace, stability, and unity; Anutin expressed gratitude to Marcos for facilitating the frank discussions between the two sides.
The Philippine Presidential Communications Office stated that the two leaders agreed to continue pursuing peace through dialogue, and the foreign ministers of both countries have also been instructed to advance more concrete confidence-building measures and continue diplomatic engagement. (Editor: Chen Huiping) 1150508
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(Central News Agency reporter Lin Hang-chien, Manila, 8th exclusive report) Under the mediation of the Philippines, Cambodian and Thai leaders utilized the opportunity of attending the ASEAN Summit to hold a closed-door meeting to discuss how to resolve border issues and reached a partial agreement.
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. wrote on Facebook: "The Philippines facilitated 'frank and constructive' discussions between Cambodia and Thailand on the border situation."
He added that the Philippines, as the rotating chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), will continue to assist in maintaining regional stability and unity, and believes that Cambodia and Thailand can amicably resolve disputes and peacefully manage border differences in the spirit of ASEAN unity.
The 48th ASEAN Summit and related meetings are being held in Cebu City. Marcos, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet, and Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul held a closed-door meeting on the sidelines yesterday.
The Philippine Presidential Communications Office (PCO) quoted Marcos as saying that both sides discussed many issues, reached consensus on some, and explored future directions; the two also confirmed the importance of maintaining direct communication, exercising restraint, and avoiding actions that could escalate border tensions.
Marcos said that such a result can be attributed to the Cambodian and Thai leaders believing that now "should be a time for peace, not war."
On the other hand, Hun Manet praised President Marcos's "constructive" leadership in promoting regional peace, stability, and unity; Anutin expressed gratitude to Marcos for facilitating the frank discussions between the two sides.
The Philippine Presidential Communications Office stated that the two leaders agreed to continue pursuing peace through dialogue, and the foreign ministers of both countries have also been instructed to advance more concrete confidence-building measures and continue diplomatic engagement. (Editor: Chen Huiping) 1150508
Stand with the facts, every sponsorship you make is a force to protect press freedom.
Download the Central News Agency "First-hand News" APP to stay updated with the latest news.
The text, images, and videos on this website may not be reproduced, publicly broadcast, or publicly transmitted and used without authorization.