India Condemns Hindu Statue Demolition Amid Thailand-Cambodia Border Clashes

India has expressed deep concern over reports of the demolition of a Hindu deity statue in an area affected by the ongoing border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia. The Ministry of External Affairs stated that such acts disrespect shared civilizational heritage and hurt the sentiments of followers worldwide. The statue, believed to be of Lord Vishnu, was allegedly demolished by Thai authorities in a disputed border region. India has urged both nations to return to dialogue and diplomacy to avoid further loss of life and damage to heritage.

Key Points: India on Hindu deity statue demolition in Thailand-Cambodia clash

  • Viral video of statue demolition
  • MEA urges dialogue and diplomacy
  • Border clashes result in 80+ deaths
  • Shared Hindu-Buddhist heritage at risk
2 min read

Disrespectful act: MEA on demolition of Hindu deity statue during Thai-Cambodia border clashes

India expresses concern over demolition of a Hindu deity statue amid Thailand-Cambodia border clashes, calling it a disrespectful act that hurts global sentiments.

"Such disrespectful acts hurt the sentiments of followers around the world, and should not take place. - MEA Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal"

New Delhi, Dec 24

India on Wednesday expressed concerns over reports of demolition of a Hindu deity statue in an area affected by the ongoing border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia, asserting that such "disrespectful acts" hurt the sentiments of followers around the world.

The video of a Lord Vishnu statue, allegedly being demolished by Thai authorities, has gone viral on social media with the act being severely criticised, not just in India and southeast Asia but also all over the world.

Cambodian officials in Preah Vihear cited that the statue was built in 2014 and stood inside the An Ses area of Cambodian territory.

Reacting to media queries, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) acknowledged Wednesday evening that it is aware of reports on the demolition of a statue of a Hindu religious deity, built in recent times, and located in an area affected by the ongoing Thai-Cambodia border dispute.

"Hindu and Buddhist deities are deeply revered and worshipped by people across the region, as part of our shared civilizational heritage. Notwithstanding territorial claims, such disrespectful acts hurt the sentiments of followers around the world, and should not take place," said MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal.

"We once again urge the two sides to return to dialogue and diplomacy, to resume peace and avoid any further loss of lives, and damage to property and heritage," he added.

Bangkok and Phnom Penh have engaged in military clashes along their land border for a third week, so far resulting in at least 80 deaths, after truce talks collapsed.

The two countries agreed at Monday's meeting of ASEAN's top diplomats to hold talks between their defence officials on resuming the ceasefire.

Both countries have clashed over their shared land border, a dispute that remains unresolved due to competing territorial claims dating back to the French colonial era.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While the act is condemnable, I hope our MEA's statement doesn't get misinterpreted as taking sides in the territorial dispute. The focus should be on protecting shared heritage and urging dialogue, which the statement does well.
P
Priya S
Heartbreaking to see. Thailand and Cambodia both have beautiful Hindu-Buddhist histories. To destroy a statue from 2014, which isn't even ancient, shows pure malice. Hope ASEAN mediation works and this stops. Our culture connects us, it shouldn't be a casualty of war.
R
Rohit P
Respectfully, India should be more proactive. We have strong ties with both nations. Can't we offer to be a neutral mediator? Just issuing statements feels weak when people are dying and our shared heritage is being smashed.
V
Vikram M
The colonial-era borders are causing problems everywhere. 80 lives lost is tragic. The statue demolition is a symbolic attack on the cultural fabric of the region. Hope sense prevails soon.
K
Kavya N
As an Indian, it hurts. But let's also remember the human cost—80 families have lost someone. The MEA's call for dialogue to save lives and heritage is the only way forward. Jai Shree Vishnu. 🕉️

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