HomeAmericaUS to provide $45 million to help implement Cambodian-Thai accords

US to provide $45 million to help implement Cambodian-Thai accords

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Jan 9 (Reuters) - The United States ​will provide $45 million in assistance to Cambodia and Thailand, the senior U.S. diplomat for East Asia said on Friday during a visit to the region, to help solidify ⁠President Donald Trump's peace-making efforts between the two.

"The United States will continue to support the Cambodian and Thai governments as they implement the Kuala Lumpur Peace Accords and pave the ‍way for a return to peace, prosperity, and stability for their people and the region," Michael DeSombre, ​the U.S. assistant secretary for East Asia, said in a statement.

A senior State Department official said DeSombre would meet senior Thai and Cambodian officials in Bangkok and Phnom Penh on Friday ​and Saturday to discuss implementation of the peace accords "and broader efforts to promote our shared interests in a safer, stronger and more prosperous Indo-Pacific."

DeSombre said the United States, which has slashed its global foreign assistance programs under Trump, would provide $15 million for border stabilization to help communities recover and to support people displaced by the recent conflict, and $10 ‌million for demining and clearing of unexploded ordnance.

The U.S. would also provide $20 million for ‌initiatives that will help Cambodia and Thailand combat scam operations and drug trafficking, and other programs, DeSombre said.

The Trump administration ​has made combating the so-called scam centers based in Southeast Asia a priority, as U.S. citizens have been targeted by their financial fraud operations.

Border clashes between Cambodia and Thailand ‌flared up again last month after the collapse of a previous ceasefire deal brokered in July by ⁠Trump and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to end a previous round ‌of conflict.

The Southeast Asian neighbors agreed on ​another ceasefire at the end of last year, halting 20 days of fighting that killed at least 101 people and displaced more than half a million on both sides. The more ⁠recent clashes included fighter-jet sorties, ⁠exchanges of rocket fire and artillery barrages.

Thailand is a long-time U.S. ally, while the United ​States has sought to improve relations with Cambodia to try to woo it away from strategic rival China.

(Reporting by David Brunnstrom ‌and Daphne Psaledakis; Editing by Tom Hogue)

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