Thailand delays release ‍of Cambodian troops over alleged truce breaches

Due to alleged breaches of a renewed truce, Thailand has stated that it is putting off the release of 18 Cambodian soldiers as a result of a ceasefire that was supposed to have broken the 72-hour window that was supposed to set them free.

Following the Sunday night intrusion of Cambodian drones into Thai airspace, Thai Foreign Ministry spokesman Nikorndej Balankura stated on Tuesday that Bangkok had reconsidered the timing of the handover of the captured soldiers.

At a press conference, he said, “The security side is responsible for the decision regarding the release’s date and time,” adding that the handover might take place “early.”

More than 250 drones reportedly entered Thailand’s territory on Sunday night, according to a statement released on Monday from the Thai military, who had previously accused Cambodia of breaking the ceasefire’s terms.

Cambodian government spokesman Pen Bona said the situation was being looked at and there was no immediate response, according to a Reuters news agency.

If the ceasefire, which took effect on Saturday at noon (05:00 GMT), had been observed for 72 hours, the troops would have been handed over, as had earlier been the case in the most recent conflict between the two nations.

More than half a million people have been displaced and over 100 have been killed by both sides since the truce ended 20 days of fighting, which was officially ended by the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Cambodia following a landmine explosion at a border area on Monday that left a Thai soldier without a limb.

The most recent outbreak of conflict, which came to an end after five days of fighting in July, was brought under control by an American and Malaysian truce.

Sihasak Phuangketkeow, the country’s foreign minister, earlier said the ceasefire was fragile and needed to be resolved by both sides to avert rising tensions.

According to Sihasak, “there is fragility because the ceasefire has only just been agreed.” He advised caution against initiating or doing anything that might compromise the ceasefire.

Despite a ceasefire, many people are still living.

According to Assed Baig, a journalist from Poipet, a city in Cambodia, close to the Thai-Bahrain border, the ceasefire has caused an uneasy state of calm.

In the heat, hundreds of people waited for the truce’s onset to distribute necessary aid.

Some Cambodians reported being able to return to their homes despite their own fears or incapacity.

Some people say they will remain in the camps for internally displaced people because they are still unsure whether this ceasefire will end, he said.

They’ve witnessed ceasefires before, they claim. They’ve already witnessed them fail.

He claimed that some people were unable to return home because Thai soldiers remained stationed in or close to their villages, while others’ homes were destroyed in the fighting.

The two sides agreed that their troops would continue to be in their current positions in the terms of the ceasefire agreement on Saturday.

Alaa Abdelfattah and Britain’s selective outrage

The current backlash against Alaa Abdelfattah in Britain is so intense that it exposes how selectively outrage is used, not because it highlights a renewed concern for justice.

After the uprising that overthrew President Hosni Mubarak in 2011, Alaa, an Egyptian-British writer and activist, spent more than a decade in and out of Egyptian prisons. His detention was marked by protracted hunger strikes, discrimination against fundamental rights, and treatment that human rights organizations described as cruel and degrading. Following a year-long campaign by his mother, sister, and close friends, he was finally free on September 23. He was only permitted to travel in the UK on December 26 and his family was only allowed to travel there this month.

Alaaa fled Cairo after ten years of oppression only to be met with public outbursts, a petition for his removal from the British citizenship, and his deportation. Alaa said he considered “killing any colonialists… heroic,” including Zionists, in a 2010 social media post that caused public hostility.

The tweet has received a lot of negative feedback from politicians calling for tough measures, as well as being subject to scrutiny from the counterterrorism police.

The UK’s response is moving at a much faster pace and intensity than the silence surrounding much more significant statements and actions that it actively encourages.

Selective outrage can be seen in this manner.

The UK continues to host and work with senior Israeli officials who have been accused of participating in and inciting genocide, even though Alaa’s words are dissected and framed as a moral emergency.

For instance, Israel’s air force chief Tomer Bar, who has overseen the carpet bombing of Gaza, the destruction of hospitals, schools, and homes, and the extermination of entire families, was granted special legal immunity to travel to the UK in July. He was protected from arrest for war crimes while he was on British soil, according to reports from Declassified UK.

No comparable outcry has been expressed about this.

In September, Israeli President Isaac Herzog was able to visit the UK and hold high-level meetings. This is the same man who, at the start of the genocide, suggested that “the entire Palestinian] nation” is to blame and that “this rhetoric about civilians not aware, not involved – it’s not true.” Herzog’s statements and those of others have been gathered in a sizable database that currently supports the International Court of Justice (ICJ) genocide case against Israel.

However, Israeli President Keir Starmer welcomed the Israeli prime minister after being accused of inciting genocide and was unharmed when he entered the country. No outrage over the visit of a potential war criminal was displayed by those concerned about Alaa’s tweet.

British nationals who have traveled to Israel have been omitted from the Israeli military, including during Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza. Tens of thousands of civilian deaths have been caused by these operations, which have been documented by the UN, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch, as well as the destruction of hospitals and universities.

There hasn’t been a comprehensive investigation into whether British citizens have been involved in international law violations despite the extensive documentation of war crimes and crimes against humanity and the ICJ’s warning of the serious risk of genocide.

Again, there isn’t much outrage.

The UK continues to cooperate politically, militarily, and politically with Israel while granting arms export licenses to Israel. Even as international organizations have issued warnings about serious human rights violations and potential violations of international law, these policies continue. All of this occurs relatively unaffected politically.

The UK’s political panic is caused by a decade-old tweet, not a mass massacre, not a siege, not a massive destruction of civilian life, not an incite to genocide.

This contrast is not coincidental. It reveals a hierarchy of outrage where opposing voices are systematically silenced and punished while state violence is not, and where public hostility is directed at the wrongful people rather than the rightward ones. In Alaa’s case, it is apparent how moral language is used sparingly to control discomfort rather than restrain impunity.

The UK claims that the principles it defends are untrue because of this asymmetry. When limited protection of human rights is used, they become convenience tools rather than universal standards. When anger is loud but persistent, it becomes performance-driven. And impunity becomes a policy when powerful allies are denied accountability.

People who support this tactic frequently make use of “quiet diplomacy,” arguing that restraint is more successful than confrontation. There is little evidence that Alaa or other civilians in Gaza have been held accountable by silence, which is lacking. In both cases, discretion served more as a means of achieving goals than as a means of achieving them.

The UK has the resources to take a different course of action: halting arms exports, conducting internal investigations into suspected crimes committed by its citizens, imposing sanctions on cooperation and limiting visits by officials convicted of serious crimes. It is also revealing that these tools are still largely in use.

Without that change, outrage will remain constrained, subject to impunity, and remain limited, widening the gap between the values the UK professes and the violence it continues to support.

Tech giant Meta buys Chinese-founded AI firm Manus

In the midst of Washington and Beijing’s contentious tech conflict, tech giant Meta has made it known that it will buy artificial intelligence startup Manus.

Meta said the acquisition would allow it to integrate Manus’ self-directing AI agent technology into its own products.

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Manus, which was established in China in 2022 but relocated to Singapore earlier this year, describes its agent as a “virtual coworker” capable of “planning, executing, and delivering complete work products from start to finish.”

The deal, according to Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, will bring one of the “leading autonomous general-purpose agents” to billions of people around the world.

The California-based company announced in a statement on Monday that “Manus’s exceptional talent will join Meta’s team to deliver general-purpose agents across our consumer and business products, including Meta AI.”

“We’re thrilled to welcome the Manus team, who will use their technology to improve the lives of millions of people and millions of businesses.”

As a response to those who oppose autonomous AI, Manus, founder and CEO, and Xiao Hong, the deal was welcomed.

“It was too early, too ambitious, and too hard,” we were told. However, we maintained building. Through the doubts, the failures, and the countless nights of pondering whether we were pursuing the impossible. We “weren’t,” Xiao said on social media.

The AI era is only just beginning, Xiao said, adding that “the one that acts, creates, and delivers is not just talking.”

We will now begin to build it at a scale we haven’t yet imagined.

The deal’s financial details were not made public.

Manus, which claims to have developed more than 80 million virtual computers, drew comparisons to the ferocity of the DeepSeek, a chatbot developed by China, when it first launched in March.

Tech analysts have provided varying evaluations of Manus’ agent, who has the ability to create travel plans and analyze stocks without requiring any human intervention.