Cambodia has evacuated hundreds of its citizens from a village on the disputed border it shares with Thailand as tensions between the neighbours are flaring, threatening a ceasefire agreed in July.
About 250 families from Prey Chan in Cambodia’s northwestern province of Banteay Meanchey were taken on Thursday to a Buddhist temple 29km (18 miles) from the border, according to provincial Vice Governor Ly Sovannarith.
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The evacuation took place a day after a man identified as Dy Nai was said to have been killed in a shootout between Cambodian and Thai soldiers around the same frontier village.
Three others were injured in the incident, according to Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet.
Both sides blamed the other for what happened on Wednesday, claiming they were not the first to open fire.
Thai Major General Winthai Suvaree said Cambodian soldiers initiated the shooting while Cambodia’s Ministry of National Defence said Thai soldiers began the gunfight about 3:50pm (08:50 GMT).
The shooting lasted for about 10 minutes, according to the Thai army.
Residents of Prey Chan village in Cambodia’s Banteay Meanchey province carry a coffin on November 13, 2025, with the body of a civilian believed to have been killed in gunfire between Thai and Cambodian soldiers on their disputed border [Agence Kampuchea Press via AP]
The deadly incident is just the latest to raise questions about the Thai-Cambodian ceasefire that went into effect in July after five days of fighting killed dozens of people and temporarily displaced thousands.
Earlier in the week, Thailand accused Cambodia of laying new landmines after saying one of its soldiers had lost a foot when a mine exploded on Monday near their border in Thailand’s Sisaket province.
The Cambodian Defence Ministry has denied the allegation, insisting that the mine must have been placed there during previous confrontations. In response, Bangkok called Phnom Penh’s response insufficient.
After saying its soldier was wounded on Monday, Thailand announced that it was suspending an enhanced ceasefire that the two sides signed in late October with the support of United States President Donald Trump.
As part of this suspension, Bangkok said it was halting the release of 18 Cambodian soldiers, which had been scheduled to take place on Wednesday.
The development came less than three weeks after Trump cosigned the deal in Kuala Lumpur along with Malaysia’s, Cambodia’s and Thailand’s prime ministers at a summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
“We did something that a lot of people said couldn’t be done,” the US president boasted.
Twenty-six days before a huge blast ripped through a crowded thoroughfare in Delhi, killing 13 people, a pamphlet with a green letterhead had appeared in Nowgam, a staid neighbourhood of cinder-block homes and rutted streets on the outskirts of Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir’s main city.
Drafted in broken Urdu, the letter proclaimed affiliation with Jaish-e-Muhammad, a proscribed armed group based in Pakistan.
The text was loaded with warnings directed at Indian government forces stationed in the region, and at those in the local population seen as having betrayed Kashmir’s separatist movement.
“We warn the local people of strict action who do not adhere to this warning,” the poster read, cautioning shopkeepers on the highway between Srinagar and Jammu, another key city, against sheltering government forces.
Such missives were once common from local and Pakistan-backed armed groups at the height of the region’s movement to break from Indian control in the 1990s and the early 2000s.
But after the Indian government revoked Kashmir’s special status, scrapped its statehood, and split the area into two federally ruled territories in August 2019, such posters have been less common – and armed violence has fallen, too. Armed attacks came down from 597 in 2018 to 145 in 2025, according to the South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP), a platform that tracks and analyses attacks in South Asia.
The emergence of the pamphlet set off a three-week manhunt spanning Kashmir and multiple Indian regions. It was this investigation, say officials, that connected the threads between multiple individuals plotting an attack – including a doctor believed to have been driving the car that exploded on a packed street junction in New Delhi on Monday, barely metres (a few feet) from the ramparts of the Red Fort, a famous Mughal-era monument.
The case and its coverage in large parts of the Indian media have also prompted a wave of Islamophobia and anti-Kashmiri sentiment.
The scholar and the doctors
As security officials looked to track the source of the pamphlet in Nowgam, they zeroed in on clips from CCTVs. Based on what they saw, they “picked up a couple of suspects, among whom was a Muslim scholar from the Shopian district of South Kashmir”, a police official based in Kashmir told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity as he wasn’t authorised to talk to the media.
The 24-year-old scholar, Irfan Ahmad, preached at a local mosque in Srinagar where the posters had appeared.
His interrogation led police to another name: Adeel Rather, a doctor living in Wanpora village, Kulgam, 20km (12 miles) away.
But when police reached Rather’s house, he wasn’t there. They eventually traced and arrested him some 500km (300 miles) away in the dusty town of Saharanpur in the state of Uttar Pradesh, where Rather was working at a private hospital. The police claim they also found an assault rifle in his locker in Government Medical College Anantnag, in Kashmir, where he worked until October 2024.
When Rather was questioned, he named another associate: Muzammil Shakeel Ganai, yet another Kashmiri doctor working in Al-Falah University in Faridabad, one of the key satellite cities around New Delhi.
Indian police claim that when they raided two homes rented in Ganai’s name in Faridabad, they recovered incendiary chemicals and weaponry weighing 2,900kg (6,400lb).
Investigators examine the site of Monday’s car explosion near the historic Red Fort, in New Delhi, India, Tuesday, November 11, 2025 (AP Photo)
‘Transactional terror module busted’
These arrests, Indian police in Kashmir claim, have helped them unearth what they describe as a “transnational terror module” linked to Jaish-e-Muhammad and Ansar Ghazwat-ul-Hind (AGuH), another proscribed fighter outfit linked to al-Qaeda.
AGuH was founded in Kashmir by Zakir Rashid, a local fighter commander who was shot by government forces in May 2019. Although its activities have since quietened, Indian police claim that the group has been revived by new leaders from neighbouring Pakistan.
“In a major counterterrorism success, Jammu and Kashmir police have busted an inter-state and transactional terror module,” police said in a statement.
“During the ongoing investigation, searches were conducted at multiple locations by Jammu and Kashmir police,” the statement read. It also said that seven accused were arrested from different locations, including Ganai and Rather, the doctors; Ahmed, the scholar; and four other people.
Those others include a woman from Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh state.
But officials say their investigations also led them to another Kashmiri doctor, Umar Nabi.
Before they could arrest Nabi, though, the Indian capital was rocked by Monday’s explosion. Driving the white sports car laden with explosives, say investigators, was 29-year-old Nabi.
Family members of a car explosion victim grieve as they arrive at a hospital mortuary to collect the body in New Delhi, India, Tuesday, November 11, 2025 [AP Photo]
‘Crackdown across Kashmir’
CCTV recordings from New Delhi released by police show a young man in a black mask driving the Hyundai hatchback passing through a toll booth in Delhi. Another clip reveals the same vehicle moving slowly through the traffic-clogged junction before a yellow flash of light appears on the screen.
Amid a nationwide security alert following the explosion, police have launched a crackdown across parts of Kashmir. On November 12, heavily armoured police and members of the paramilitary roamed the streets in Srinagar, pushing their way into homes for searches.
In the Kulgam district of South Kashmir alone, security forces conducted 400 search operations, rounding up about 500 people for questioning. Similar raids were reported from the districts of Baramulla, Handwara, Sopore, Kulgam, Pulwama and Awantipora.
In Koil village of south Kashmir’s Pulwama district, the family of Nabi – the alleged driver of the car that exploded – is in shock.
“On Monday evening, police took away my brother-in-law and then my husband,” said Nabi’s sister-in-law, Muzamil Akhtar. “We were taken aback when we saw the media and police here; we did not know anything.”
She said police had also taken away Nabi’s mother for DNA sampling.
“Our whole house was thoroughly searched. I spoke to Umar last week on Friday. He was normal and told me he would be coming home after three days. We were all excited about his visit. We did not expect any of this,” she said.
Relatives described Nabi as an exceptional student in his school and medical college in Srinagar. One relative said the family used to look upon Umar with pride for his achievements.
“He was always carrying a book in his hand. He was always reading and engrossed in books. He was our hope,” the relative said through the blur of tears, requesting anonymity. “He was a calm person.”
Less than a kilometre (half a mile) from Nabi’s home, there is an eerie silence at the home of Ganai, the doctor arrested in Faridabad.
His father, Shakeel Ganai, told Al Jazeera they were informed by the police on Tuesday that their son had been brought to Kashmir from Faridabad for questioning.
“We did not know what was happening; we had no idea about any of this,” Shakeel said.
Ganai studied at a local school in Koil village and later cleared the competitive exam for a degree in medicine from Jammu. He also pursued a master’s course in medicine from Sher-e-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences (SKIMS) in Srinagar and later joined Al-Falah University in Faridabad, where he had been working for two years.
“He visited home in July when I went through a kidney surgery. We would talk to him almost every day,” Shakeel, the father, said, adding that police searched their house and detained his other son as well.
Ganai’s sister, who is also studying medicine and was scheduled to be married in November, said the case should be properly probed.
“My brother worked hard his whole life. He was very ambitious. We cannot believe he is involved in this,” she said.
An Indian soldier stands guard in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Wednesday, November 12, 2025 [Mukhtar Khan/AP Photo]
‘Lists of Kashmiri residents’
But even as investigations continue, Islamophobia and anti-Kashmiri sentiments have swept several urban communities around India.
On November 12, police in the Indian city of Gurgaon called up housing societies to compile a list of the Kashmiri residents living among them, causing a sense of panic.
Social media sites in India have in recent days been inundated with calls for violence against Kashmiris, with some users also pledging to evict Kashmiri tenants living in cities like Delhi and Noida.
Nasir Khuehami, a student activist from Kashmir, said about 150,000 Kashmiri students are studying in different parts of India. “They are currently plagued by the thoughts of safety and security,” Khuehami said.
The explosion and investigations into it have also raised new questions about India’s approach to Kashmir and fighting armed groups, say experts.
Earlier this year, Amit Shah, India’s home minister, had boasted about how there was now “zero recruitment” into the ranks of armed rebels in Indian-administered Kashmir. In a speech in Parliament, he said all fighters killed by government forces in Kashmir in the first half of 2025 were foreigners.
But experts now believe such statements were misleading.
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A woman in Gaza blinded in an Israeli air strike has opened a bakery to make ends meet and keep her hopes for the future alive, she tells Al Jazeera.
Warda Abu Jarad, 51, is one of 170,698 Palestinians who have been wounded in Gaza since Israel began its genocidal war on the territory in October 2023.
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Abu Jarad explained that she lost her sight when her house was bombed by the Israeli military, causing debris to fall into her eyes.
“The smoke from the bombing blinded me completely,” she said.
Speaking from a tent in Deir el-Balah in central Gaza, the mother told Al Jazeera that she was still adjusting to being blind and needs someone to guide her whenever she wants to move from one place to another.
“Even when I want to move inside the tent, I wait for someone to help me cross,” she said. “I tried to enter the tent once, hit my head and fell, … so now I feel the ground with my feet to know what’s in front of me.”
Her daughter has been her biggest support, she said.
Warda Abu Jarad and others prepare baked goods [Screengrab/ Al Jazeera]
Her blindness has been hard for her to take. “The most precious thing in life is sight. Every time I struggle to reach something I need, I start crying,” Abu Jarad said.
Despite such challenges, Abu Jarad is, like other Palestinians in Gaza, trying to rebuild her life amid the ruins, ongoing Israeli bombardment, restricted aid and grief.
“I decided to open a business to provide for my family. I opened a bakery and started to grow it. I started baking ma’amoul [filled butter cookies] and bread,” she said one month into a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
“I need to keep going because the situation here is so hard,” she added.
Since the ceasefire came into effect on October 10, there have been some small improvements in daily life in Gaza, but the United Nations and NGOs have warned that the amount of aid Israel is letting into Gaza remains wholly insufficient.
Israel claims it has adhered to the truce by permitting entry to 600 aid trucks each day while Hamas says the daily number is actually about 150.
On Wednesday, Israel said it had reopened the Zikim crossing to the northern Gaza Strip.
“The opening of direct crossings to the north is vital to ensure that sufficient aid reaches people as soon as possible,” the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said recently.
“All I want in life is to have my sight restored, and I want to see my daughter as a bride in her wedding dress. This is my greatest wish from God,” Abu Jarad said.
Warda Abu Jarad, 51, says she started her business to provide for her family [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]
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